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Johnny Rotten and
Sid Vicious were obviously the most attention-grabbing members of
the Sex Pistols, but it was guitarist
Steve Jones who led the charge musically. Born September 3, 1955 in London, England,
Jones took up the guitar in the early '70s -- inspired by such acts as
T. Rex,
the Faces,
the Stooges, and
the New York Dolls. Since he was penniless,
Jones acquired a wide variety of musical equipment by stealing from others (including
David Bowie's
Spiders from Mars during the group's farewell shows at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1973). It was around this time that
Jones befriended drummer Paul Cook, and the duo formed a local band to jam on their favorite covers. By 1975, Cook and
Jones (plus a small group of London teenagers) began frequenting a clothing shop called Sex, owned by
Malcolm McLaren, who had briefly managed the
New York Dolls and possessed a love for controversy.
McLaren offered to manage the duo if they would put together a proper band, which quickly led to the entrance of bassist
Glen Matlock and singer Johnny Rotten. The same year
the Sex Pistols were formed, a confrontational and thought-provoking band that was the complete antithesis of the bloated dinosaur that rock had become (especially overblown progressive rockers), and along with such U.S. outfits as
the Ramones, helped create punk rock. Nearly all of the songs that the newly formed quartet penned around this time would go on to become punk rock classics, which was no mean feat, especially since
Jones was still learning how to write songs at the time (he'd usually play along to songs by other groups, then be inspired to come up with his own riffs). The Sex Pistols were a magnet for publicity due to their then-shocking antics, which resulted in the group being signed by several record companies, then dumped before they could make any full-length albums.
Matlock exited the group before sessions could begin for their debut album (with Warner Bros. Records' backing), and was replaced by Rotten's friend
Sid Vicious.
The group's one and only officially released studio recording, 1977's
Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols, is often considered to be one of rock's all-time great recordings. Spawning such timeless punk anthems as "Holidays in the Sun," "Anarchy in the U.K.," "God Save the Queen," and "Pretty Vacant," all contained instantly memorable guitar riffs courtesy of
Jones -- which were subsequently copied by countless other players over the years. But despite all the hoopla, a volatile mix of drug problems, ego conflicts, and poor management created tension between the bandmembers, leading to their breakup in early 1978 after an inaugural tour of the U.S. had wrapped up.
Jones and Cook decided to remain together in the wake of
the Pistols' split, as they contributed session work to ex-
New York Dolls guitarist
Johnny Thunders' star-studded 1978 solo release,
So Alone. The pair also completed several Rotten-less tracks for a post-mortem
Sex Pistols film, The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle (a few of which featured the debut of
Jones on lead vocals) -- "Silly Thing," "Lonely Boy," "Here We Go Again," "Black Leather," and "Friggin' in the Riggin'." By the end of the year,
Jones had produced an EP for the San Francisco punk outfit
the Avengers (The American in Me), while
Jones and Cook had teamed up with
Thin Lizzy members
Phil Lynott,
Scott Gorham, and
Brian Downey for a short-lived solo project, the Greedy Bastards (the band would issue a lone single, "A Merry Jingle," in 1979, under the truncated name of
the Greedies).
In early 1979,
Jones and Cook supplied backup to several tracks by ex-
Runaway Joan Jett ("You Don't Own Me" and "Don't Abuse Me"), which would turn up on her debut album,
Bad Reputation, while a Cook/
Jones demo of her eventual breakthrough hit, "I Love Rock N' Roll," would later surface on
Jett's 1994 rarities set, Flashback. A proposed new band with
Sham 69 members
Jimmy Pursey (vocals) and
Dave Tregunna (bass) ultimately failed to get off the ground, which led to Cook and
Jones cutting demos with bassist Andy Allen. 1980 began with the duo appearing in the movie Ladies & Gentleman, The Fabulous Stains (alongside
Clash bassist
Paul Simonon), in addition to
Jones contributing guitar to a pair of tracks on the
Siouxsie and the Banshees' release,
Kaleidoscope. By the summer, the Cook-
Jones-Allen outfit, officially called
the Professionals, had signed with Virgin Records and issued a self-titled debut the same year. Before a supporting tour could be launched, Allen was replaced by ex-
Subway Sect bassist
Paul Myers, while second guitarist
Ray McVeigh was welcomed on-board, as well. A sophomore effort, I Didn't See It Coming, was issued in 1981, but a serious car accident in the U.S. ended its supporting tour prematurely, and would lead to the dissolution of
the Professionals the following year.
Jones developed a dangerous drug addiction around this time, but it didn't prevent him from forming the new wave supergroup Chequered Past in late 1982, comprised of ex-
Silverhead and
Detective frontman
Michael Des Barres, plus ex-
Blondie members
Clem Burke,
Nigel Harrison, and
Frank Infante (with
Infante being replaced by ex-
Iggy Pop bassist
Tony Sales). But like
the Professionals, Chequered Past had a very short shelf life, as they split after issuing a lone self-titled studio album in 1984. By the mid- to late '80s,
Jones had cleaned up his act; as he co-wrote several songs for ex-
Duran Duran guitarist Andy Taylor (Taylor's 1987 solo debut, Thunder) and
Iggy Pop (1987's
Blah Blah Blah and 1988's
Instinct).
Jones had also launched a brief solo recording career around this time, issuing a pair of heavy metal-esque releases -- 1987's
Mercy and 1989's
Fire and Gasoline (which included songs co-written by
Mötley Crüe's
Nikki Sixx and
the Cult's
Ian Astbury, with guest appearances by
Guns N' Roses Axl Rose and
the Cult's
Billy Duffy).
Jones steady recording schedule continued throughout the '80s and '90s, as he worked with
the Nothings,
Bob Dylan,
Don Johnson, and the short-lived
Johnny Depp/
Gibby Haynes project,
P.
Jones formed another rock supergroup in the '90s,
the Neurotic Outsiders, which featured ex-
Guns N' Roses bassist
Duff McKagan and drummer
Matt Sorum, plus ex-
Duran Duran bassist
John Taylor. Predictably, the quartet lasted for only a single release, a 1996 self-titled debut. Further studio work came
Jones way (
Suicidal Tendencies singer
Mike Muir, an
Alice Cooper tribute album,
Insane Clown Posse, etc.), while
Jones co-produced the 1999 self-titled debut by
AC/DC/
Guns N' Roses-disciples
Buckcherry. Surprisingly, the original
Sex Pistols lineup reunited in 1996 for a world tour and live album,
Filthy Lucre Live, before splitting up once more. Also around this time,
Jones and his ex-bandmates were all extensively interviewed for
the Sex Pistols superb bio-movie, 2000s The Filth and the Fury. ~ Greg Prato