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The band rehearsed and rehearsed but it wasn’t until John Lydon joined them in 1975 that things really got serious. Malcolm knew Steve and Paul were on the look out for a reliable bass player and suggested Glen… Glen had already mentioned to Malcolm he’d started playing bass.
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#Born running glen matlock professional#
The band (which includes former Rich Kids guitarist Steve New, who died of cancer shortly after the Born Running sessions finished) is professional in absolutely the best sense of the term. But it sure does reek of defiance, and it sure does blow by like a two-ton pickup driving way too fast on a gravel road, and the hooks are indelible: just try not to pump your fist to 'Timebomb' or 'Hard Work,' or the euphorically powerful 'Way to Go.' Matlock's voice is perfect: plainspoken but just tuneful enough it sounds like that of a less-adenoidal and less-splenetic Graham Parker. While Sid flamed out in a frenzy of homicidal self-destruction that helped secure the Pistols a permanent place in the rock & roll history books, and made McLaren a rich man, Matlock went on to work with a string of highly competent but not world-shakingly popular bands (punk supergroup the Rich Kids, the Damned, Robert Gordon), and to pursue a solo career that has garnered him lots of respect but not a ton of renown. What Matlock's subsequent career arc suggests is that the Pistols did indeed lose a major talent, and also that from a pure marketing perspective, Sid may have been the better choice. Ultimately, both stories probably have a certain amount of truth to them.
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Matlock himself is on the record as saying that he left the band in disgust but under his own steam. Legend has it that the notorious punk impresario Malcolm McLaren orchestrated Matlock's ouster in favor of the much-more-punk Sid Vicious, who couldn't play a note but had the right look (dumb, damaged, drugged-up). Glen Matlock, as everyone knows, was the original bass player for the Sex Pistols. Original bassist for the Sex Pistols but was fired in favour of the late Sid Vicious. Glen Matlock, Soundtrack: Lost in Translation. And if you're not too cheap, just buy the later edition. Take it from a fan who's read it all, I Was a Teenage Sex Pistol is THE one to read. Sure, we all love Rotten, but Glen's pragmatic and honest assessment of a phenomenon endlessly mythologized and idealized makes for the definitive, end-all-be-all on the subject, AND BY COMPARISON, ROTTEN COMES OFF AS A PETULANT LITTLE TOSSER. And if you read JUST ONE book on the group, of all the myriad options, Glen's is the one to read. The fact is, Matlock is well-spoken, rational and widely talented. Long before any of the reunions, Glen sat quietly by as he was routinely slagged off in the press by anyone and everyone to whomever would listen.
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In any case, of all the books written by and about various members of the Sex Pistols, the fact is that Matlock's is by miles the best of the lot. Offered here is the first edition of This book and if he can, any reader should try to pick up the 2012 printing because that updated edition culminates with the Pistols' various reunions, which are fascinating to read about.