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Public Image Ltd. - First Issue '1978/2013

First Issue
ArtistPublic Image Ltd. Related artists
Album name First Issue
Country
Date 1978/2013
GenrePost-Punk,New Wave,Dub
Play time 01:39:08
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 522 MB
PriceDownload $4.95
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       Released on December 8, 1978, First Issue by Public Image Limited (PiL)
was a groundbreaking album that helped shape post-punk. Following the Sex
Pistols' breakup, John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) sought to move beyond punk,
collaborating with Keith Levene, Jah Wobble, and Jim Walker to create a sound
combining dub, progressive rock, noise, and atonality. The album's reception was
mixed; critics were harsh, but it introduced innovative elements that influenced
future music.

 read more ~ Uncle Dave LewisLike it or not, Public Image Limited's First
Issue (aka Public Image) was an album that helped set the pace for what
eventually became known as post-punk. In England a vacuum had opened up in the
wake of the breakup of the Sex Pistols in January 1978, and many punk fans and
rival groups were impatient to see what ex-Sex Pistols frontman John Lydon aka
"Johnny Rotten" was going to roll out next. Disheartened owing to events in his
legal proceedings against the Sex Pistols management company Glitterbest, and
disgusted by the punk scene in general, Lydon was determined to create something
that was neither punk nor even really rock as it was known in 1978. Working with
ex-Clash guitarist Keith Levene, first-time bassist Jah Wobble, and Canadian
drummer Jim Walker, Public Image Limited produced an album that represented the
punk sound after it had shot itself in the head and became another entity
entirely. Embracing elements of dub, progressive rock, noise, and atonality and
driven by Lydon's lyrical egoism and predilection towards doom, death, and
horror, First Issue was among a select few 1978 albums that had something
lasting to say about the future of rock music. And not everyone in 1978 wanted
to hear it; contemporary critical notices for First Issue were almost uniformly
negative in the extreme.
Not all of the material on First Issue was necessarily forward-looking: "Attack"
and "Low Life" could almost pass muster as latter-day Sex Pistols songs if it
weren't for their substandard production values. These two numbers were recorded
late in the project, and on the cheap, as the fledgling Public Image Limited had
already been kicked out of practically every reputable studio in London. And
there was a bracing song about Lydon's pet peeve, "Religion," presented in both
spoken and sung incarnations. It is about as vicious and personal an
anti-Catholic diatribe as exists on record, and in its day was considered a high
holy turnoff by many listeners. But from there it gets better -- Public Image
Limited's debut single, "Public Image," was also included on First Issue, and
Keith Levene's guitar part, with its tasty suspensions and held-over-the-bar
syncopation, was an important departure from standard punk guitar language
absorbed so quickly by others (the Pretenders, U2, the Smiths) that listeners
and musicians alike forgot the source of the sound. First Issue's opener,
"Theme," was a force to be reckoned with, a grindingly slow dirge with wild,
almost Hendrix-like figurations on the guitar and Wobble's floor-splitting
foundation. This was punk with the power of Led Zeppelin, but none of the
pretension. Lydon's anguished mantra in "Theme," "...and I just wanna die," was
the exact reflection of what his generation was thinking about in the wake of
the collapse of classic punk. "Annalisa" is the hardest-kicking rocker on the
album, with nosebleed-strength guitar from Levene; it is so good that Nirvana in
all practical purposes purloined the whole number, with minor alterations, as
"Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" on In Utero.
But even with all of the calculated controversy seemingly built into the various
cuts on First Issue, none attracted quite so much attention as "Fodderstompf."
Faced with a serious shortage of material to fill out the album and with its
release date looming, Public Image Limited decided to conclude the project with
a track 12:55 in length, consisting of no more than a disco beat, chattering
synthesizers, a bassline, and Jah Wobble singing, shouting, and screaming the
phrase "we only wanted to be loved" in a joke voice. Rock critics savaged the
song as a deliberate attempt to rip off the public, but it became hugely popular
at the Studio 54 disco in New York; the drag queens and hipsters sang and
screamed right along with Wobble out loud on the dancefloor -- nothing like that
had ever happened at Studio 54. As it is perhaps the earliest extended dance mix
that has little to do with disco or dub, it is apparent that "Fodderstompf" is
an obvious precursor to the acid house and techno that began to evolve in the
mid-'80s, although it is seldom accredited that distinction.
After it was released in December 8, 1978, First Issue peaked at number 22 on
the British album charts, and import copies were snapped up in America
practically as soon as they were loaded off the boat. But Warner Bros., the
American label to which Public Image Limited were signed, was unhappy with the
album, particularly in that the label felt the bass was mixed too loudly -- no
one had ever recorded the bass so hot on a regular LP before. Public Image
Limited protested, but Warner Bros. stood fast and the band ultimately relented;
in the early weeks of January 1979 the whole of First Issue was re-recorded for
the American market. But the only portion of this project ever to surface
appeared on the backside of the U.K. 12" single of "Death Disco" in July 1979, a
mix of "Fodderstompf" minus the vocals, retitled "Megga Mix." Warner Bros. never
released the remade album, and the remainder of it has since disappeared. By
early 1980 Trouser Press was joking that the American issue of First Issue was
the "longest rush release in recorded music history," but clearly long before
First Issue was a "dead" issue with Warner Bros. Right after the remake session
concluded, drummer Jim Walker surprised Public Image Limited by departing with
no notice to join the interesting but now forgotten English group the Pack. In
came ex-101'ers drummer Richard Dudanski, and by their next album, Metal Box,
Public Image Limited had already worked out an entirely different sound and
approach.

Tracklist:
1-1. Public Image Ltd. - Theme (09:10)
1-2. Public Image Ltd. - Religion I (01:26)
1-3. Public Image Ltd. - Religion II (05:52)
1-4. Public Image Ltd. - Annalisa (06:05)
1-5. Public Image Ltd. - Public Image (03:01)
1-6. Public Image Ltd. - Low Life (03:37)
1-7. Public Image Ltd. - Attack (02:55)
1-8. Public Image Ltd. - Fodderstompf (07:48)
1-9. Public Image Ltd. - Cowboy Song (Bonus Track) (02:19)
1-10. Public Image Ltd. - Interview with John Lydon (Bbc Radio 1, Rock on, Oct.
28 1978) (56:55) 

Public Image Ltd.


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