Public Image Limited: Public Image/First Issue | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 8 December 1978 | |||
Recorded | July – November 1978 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | Post-punk [1] | |||
Length | 39:54 | |||
Label | Virgin | |||
Producer | Public Image Ltd | |||
Public Image Ltd chronology | ||||
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Singles from Public Image: First Issue | ||||
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Public Image: First Issue is the debut studio album by English rock band Public Image Ltd, released in 1978 by record label Virgin.
It is considered one of the pioneering records in the development of post-punk. [1]
"Public Image", the debut single, was recorded first. Recording started on a Monday in mid-July 1978 (most probably 10 or 17 July) at Advision Studios [2] with engineer John Leckie and assistant engineer Kenneth Vaughan Thomas. For mixing and overdubs, the band then went into Wessex Studios [3] with engineer Bill Price and assistant engineer Jeremy Green.
On Saturday, 22 July 1978, the music press reported that the band had been in the recording studio; [6] the following week, Virgin Records announced that PiL's debut single would be released on 8 September 1978. [7]
The entire first side of the record was recorded in the autumn of 1978 at Townhouse Studios [8] and The Manor Studio [9] with engineer Mick Glossop. [10]
The last three songs on the second side were recorded at Gooseberry Sound Studios, [11] a cheap reggae studio used because the band had run out of money, with engineer Mark Lusardi [12] and assistant engineer Jon Caffery. [13] Lydon knew the studio from the recording of Sex Pistols demos in January 1977.
By late September 1978, the recording of the album was finished. [14] The band had briefly considered including an alternative version of "Public Image" with different lyrics on the album, a plan that was finally rejected. [15]
In November or December 1978, Wobble and Levene returned to Gooseberry Sound Studios to record a 12-inch EP, Steel Leg V. the Electric Dread, with guest vocalists Vince Bracken and Don Letts.
For the final mix of the album tracks, the band returned to Townhouse Studios with Glossop, who remembers: "I do remember working on those other three [Gooseberry Studio] tracks, but I can't remember exactly what I did – probably mixing." [16]
"Theme":
"Religion I":
"Religion II":
"Annalisa":
"Public Image":
"Low Life":
"Fodderstompf":
"The Cowboy Song" (single B-side):
"You Stupid Person" (unreleased instrumental demo):
"Steel Leg V. the Electric Dread": [45]
In August 1978, a promotional video for the upcoming single "Public Image" was shot by Peter Clifton's production company Notting Hill Studio Limited, which had just completed The Punk Rock Movie .
The promo video was released on 15 September 1978 and shown on British TV twice in October 1978. [52] [53] In December 1986, it was released on VHS, [54] and on DVD in October 2005. [55]
On 9 February 1979, Warner Bros. Recording Studios in North Hollywood manufactured a test pressing of the album for PiL's American label, Warner Bros. Records. [56] The album's sound was considered too non-commercial for an American release, and PiL were asked to re-record parts of it. [57] Although the band recorded new versions of some tracks between March and May 1979, [58] the album was never released in the USA. However, in 1980 Warner Bros. released the song "Public Image" on the compilation album Troublemakers, the only album track released in the USA until the 2013 release of the entire album. [59]
The re-recorded version of "Fodderstompf" was released under the title "Megga Mix" as the B-side of the "Death Disco" 12" single (29 June 1979). The track was later included on the PiL compilations Plastic Box (1999) and Metal Box: Super Deluxe Edition (2016); to date, it is the only track from the February 1979 First Issue re-recording sessions to be officially released.[ citation needed ]
On 18 June 2013, the album was finally officially released in the US via Light in the Attic Records. [60]
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Blurt | [61] |
Clash | 9/10 [62] |
Pitchfork | 9.0/10 [63] |
PopMatters | 7/10 [64] |
Record Collector | [65] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | [66] |
Smash Hits | 5/10 [67] |
Sounds | [68] |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 8/10 [69] |
In 1979, NME reported that a court in Malta had halted sales of the album because the lyrics of "Religion" offended public morals and decency. [70]
Upon its release, Public Image: First Issue received a 2- (out of 5) star review in Sounds . Reviewer Pete Silverton said that the single is the "Only wholly worthwhile track on the album." He dubbed the rest of the songs as "morbid directionless sounds with Rotten's poetry running just behind it." [68] Nick Kent of NME was similarly negative, quipping that "unfortunately the 'image', public or otherwise, is a good deal less limited than many of the more practical factors involved in this venture." [71]
However, the album is now considered a groundbreaking post-punk classic. AllMusic critic Uncle Dave Lewis stated that the record "helped set the pace" for the post-punk genre, adding that it was "among a select few 1978 albums that had something lasting to say about the future of rock music." [1] Pitchfork 's Stuart Berman wrote, "First Issue's industrial-strength stompers anticipate the scabrous art-punk of the Jesus Lizard and Slint, while Levene's guitar curlicues on 'Public Image' are the stuff Daydream Nation s are made of." [63] Public Image: First Issue is, along with Metal Box , included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die . [72]
All lyrics are written by John Lydon; all music is composed by Public Image Ltd
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Theme" | 9:05 |
2. | "Religion I" | 1:40 |
3. | "Religion II" | 5:40 |
4. | "Annalisa" | 6:00 |
5. | "Public Image" | 2:58 |
6. | "Low Life" | 3:35 |
7. | "Attack" | 2:55 |
8. | "Fodderstompf" | 7:40 |
No. | Title | Length |
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9. | "The Cowboy Song" | 2:19 |
10. | "Interview with John Lydon (BBC Radio 1, Rock On, 28 October 1978)" | 56:54 |
Chart (1978/79) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (Kent Music Report) [73] | 77 |
New Zealand (RIANZ) [74] | 18 |
UK Albums Chart [75] | 22 |
Public Image Ltd are an English post-punk band formed by lead vocalist John Lydon, guitarist Keith Levene, bassist Jah Wobble, and drummer Jim Walker in May 1978. The group's line-up has changed frequently over the years; Lydon has been the sole constant member.
The Flowers of Romance was an early punk band, formed in mid-1976 by Jo Faull and Sarah Hall, girlfriends at the time of Steve Jones and Paul Cook of the Sex Pistols. The band did not release any recordings and, like London SS and Masters of the Backside, are more famed for the number of band members that later became well known, including: Sid Vicious of the Sex Pistols, Keith Levene, Palmolive and Viv Albertine of The Slits, and Kenny Morris. Morris replaced Palmolive on drums in the last months of the band's existence in late 1976. The band ended in January 1977 when Vicious joined Sex Pistols and Morris rehearsed with Siouxsie. Despite never playing live, they were interviewed by SKUM fanzine in which Sid Vicious proclaimed "I'll just be the yob that I am now".
John Joseph Wardle, known by the stage name Jah Wobble, is an English bass guitarist and singer. He became known to a wider audience as the original bass player in Public Image Ltd (PiL) in the late 1970s and early 1980s; he left the band after two albums.
Julian Keith Levene was an English musician who was a founding member of both the Clash and Public Image Ltd (PiL). While Levene was in PiL, their 1978 debut album Public Image: First Issue reached No 22 in the UK album charts, and its lead track "Public Image" broke the top 10 UK singles chart.
Metal Box is the second studio album by Public Image Ltd, released by Virgin Records on 23 November 1979. The album takes its name from the round metal canister which contained the initial pressings of the record. It was later reissued in standard vinyl packaging as Second Edition in February 1980 by Virgin Records in the United Kingdom, and by Warner Bros. Records and Island Records in the United States.
The Flowers of Romance is the third studio album by English post-punk band Public Image Ltd, released on 10 April 1981 by Virgin Records.
Jim Walker is a Canadian musician who was a founding director as well as the original drummer for the UK music group Public Image Ltd.
"Death Disco" is a song by Public Image Ltd. The record was released in both 7" and 12" single formats with a "½ Mix" of the song and "Megga mix" on the 12" version. It reached number twenty on the UK Singles Chart. The song was released in an alternative shorter version as "Swan Lake" on the group's second album, Metal Box, with slight changes at the end. The title change reflects the quote from Tchaikovsky's ballet score that surfaces in Keith Levene's guitar part.
9 is the seventh studio album by Public Image Ltd, but their ninth full-length release including the live albums Paris au Printemps and Live in Tokyo. It was released in May 1989 on the Virgin Records label.
Commercial Zone is an album of studio recordings by Public Image Ltd, recorded in 1982 and 1983, and released in 1984 by PiL founding guitarist Keith Levene. Commercial Zone includes five songs that were later re-recorded for PiL's fourth official studio album, This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get (1984) – for this reason, Commercial Zone is often considered to be an earlier/alternative version of that album.
This Is What You Want... This Is What You Get is the fourth studio album by the English post-punk band Public Image Ltd, released on 6 July 1984 by Virgin Records. It includes the single "Bad Life" and a re-recorded version of a "This Is Not a Love Song", which had been a No. 5 UK and international hit when released as a single in 1983.
Kenneth Lockie is an English singer-songwriter and producer, best known as the creative force behind English new wave band Cowboys International and as a sometime collaborator with John Lydon in Public Image Ltd.
That What Is Not is the eighth studio album by Public Image Ltd, released in 1992. It was the band's final album before a 20-year hiatus, and the final recordings with longtime members Allan Dias (bass) and John McGeoch.
John Joseph Lydon, also known by his former stage name Johnny Rotten, is a British-born singer, songwriter, author, and television personality. He was the lead vocalist of the punk rock band the Sex Pistols, which was active from 1975 to 1978, and again for various revivals during the 1990s and 2000s. He is also the lead vocalist of post-punk band Public Image Ltd (PiL), which he founded and fronted from 1978 until 1993, and again since 2009.
Paris au Printemps is a live album recorded by Public Image Ltd in 1980 on two consecutive dates in January in Paris, and released in November the same year. The title of the album is French for 'Paris in the Spring', with French names also given to the band itself and songs in the track listing. It is notable as the band's last full-length release featuring founding bass player Jah Wobble, as well as the Paris concerts being drummer Martin Atkins' first gigs with Public Image Ltd. The album reached number 61 on the UK album charts.
"Public Image" is the debut single by Public Image Ltd. It reached number nine on the UK Singles Chart. The lyrics were written when band co-founder John Lydon was a member of the Sex Pistols. The song addresses Lydon's feelings of being exploited in the Sex Pistols by Malcolm McLaren and the press. Along with being released as a single, it appeared on PiL's 1978 debut album Public Image: First Issue.
The Legend Lives On... Jah Wobble in "Betrayal" is the debut studio album by English bass guitarist Jah Wobble. Produced by musician Eddie Jobson, it was released in May 1980 through Virgin Records. A dispute over the use of rhythm tracks from his then band Public Image Ltd. on the album led to his departure from the band.
"Disappointed" is a 1989 song by post-punk group Public Image Ltd. It was the first single from 9, their seventh studio album. Lyrically, the song was inspired by John Lydon's experiences with friends within the band throughout its history, who he commented often let him down. Musically, guitarist John McGeoch used an alternate tuning courtesy of Who guitarist Pete Townshend to begin composing the song.
Gooseberry Sound Studios, also known as just Gooseberry Studios, were recording studios at 19 Gerrard Street, Chinatown, London, located in a cellar underneath a dental practice.