Sex Pistols memorabilia worth millions to go up in flames

Son of punk band’s manager claims he will burn collection instead of selling it


Reuters November 26, 2016
Sex Pistols are widely regarded as one of the greatest British bands of all time. PHOTO: FILE

LONDON: The son of Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren said he would set fire to millions of dollars of punk memorabilia on Saturday, in protest against the musical scene’s appropriation by the mainstream.

Joe Corre threatened he would burn Sex Pistols records, clothing and other ephemera on the 40th  anniversary of the release of the band’s debut single Anarchy in the UK. “I’ve been wondering for a long time, what to do with it all and I think this is the right opportunity to say ‘You know what, punk is dead. Stop conning a younger generation that it somehow has any currency to deal with the issues that they face’,” he said in a news conference on Thursday. “It’s dead and it’s time to think about something else.”

Britain has organised a series of events to mark 40 years of punk under the banner of ‘Punk.London,’ an official celebration that has angered many veterans of the anti-establishment musical and cultural explosion.

The collection, which includes rare recordings, posters and clothes sewn by his mother, designer Vivienne Westwood, is valued between £5 million and £10 million pounds ($6.24 million - $12.5 million), said Corre.

Sex Pistols lead singer, John Lydon, also known as Johnny Rotten, has criticised Corre, telling British media he should sell the memorabilia and donate the funds to charity. Asked why he had not taken that action, Corre said, “Who is actually going to buy it? It would end up going on some banker’s wall. That’s who’d buy it and that wouldn’t satisfy me very much. I think die-hard fans are confused and they don’t interest me at all. Why would I give it to them? They are just conformists in another uniform.”

Corre said his mother, who played an integral part of the 1970s punk scene, would attend the burning and that his late father would have approved. “I think he’d think it was kind of hilarious.”

Corre stated he would keep a few items of sentimental value, including clothing he helped his mother sew as a boy.

Published in The Express Tribune, November 27th, 2016.

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