Popiconic moments 4: "God save the Queen." (On The Daily Telegraph).
Urban Punk art in your own home by cult artist Sly.
God Save the Queen, a single by the band, The Sex Pistols, struck out against the blind adoration and veneration of public figures, who since then have been progressively more exposed as “just in it for themselves” and a cosy club of self enrichment at the tax payer’s expense. So entrenched was the adoration that the record was initially refused to be pressed and the cover refused to be printed by the very type of people that the Band sought to liberate.
The cosy club eager not to be exposed banned the record from playing on the radio even though it broke no censorship rules, the Pistols were arrested for playing it even though it broke no laws and later had to be released without charge. The record was prevented from becoming number one through, devious behind the scene manipulation of figures, even though is outsold the “number one record” two-to-one. When finally it was acknowledged as number one, it was not played at the climax of the chart show as was normal. The abuse was not all clandestine; nearly all the band were viciously attacked in a number of incidents. Rotten boasted, "We're the only honest band that's hit this planet in about two thousand million years." Jones shrugged off everything the song stated and implied—or took nihilism to a logical endpoint: "I don't see how anyone could describe us as a political band. I don't even know the name of the Prime Minister." The song, and its public impact, are now recognized as "punk's crowning glory".
Juan Sly has taken this stencil from the very, first time Rotten sings “God Save the Queen” on national tele, a Popiconic moment, indeed.
Spiel By Steeve with additional material lifted from Wikipedia.
Sly girl 3 (on The Daily Telegraph).
Spray & Newspaper
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Popiconic moments 4: "God save the Queen." (On The Daily Telegraph).
Urban Punk art in your own home by cult artist Sly.
God Save the Queen, a single by the band, The Sex Pistols, struck out against the blind adoration and veneration of public figures, who since then have been progressively more exposed as “just in it for themselves” and a cosy club of self enrichment at the tax payer’s expense. So entrenched was the adoration that the record was initially refused to be pressed and the cover refused to be printed by the very type of people that the Band sought to liberate.
The cosy club eager not to be exposed banned the record from playing on the radio even though it broke no censorship rules, the Pistols were arrested for playing it even though it broke no laws and later had to be released without charge. The record was prevented from becoming number one through, devious behind the scene manipulation of figures, even though is outsold the “number one record” two-to-one. When finally it was acknowledged as number one, it was not played at the climax of the chart show as was normal. The abuse was not all clandestine; nearly all the band were viciously attacked in a number of incidents. Rotten boasted, "We're the only honest band that's hit this planet in about two thousand million years." Jones shrugged off everything the song stated and implied—or took nihilism to a logical endpoint: "I don't see how anyone could describe us as a political band. I don't even know the name of the Prime Minister." The song, and its public impact, are now recognized as "punk's crowning glory".
Juan Sly has taken this stencil from the very, first time Rotten sings “God Save the Queen” on national tele, a Popiconic moment, indeed.
Spiel By Steeve with additional material lifted from Wikipedia.
Sly girl 3 (on The Daily Telegraph).
Spray & Newspaper
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