By Will Whitby
Jun 4, 2017 13:45
“It was visceral, it was highly charged, it was alive, ” punk rock veteran and Buzzcocks’, Pete Shelley recounted on one night that truly changed music: The Sex Pistols’ show at Manchester’s Lesser Trade Hall on 4th June 1976. The show has been heralded as the day that punk music truly started in Britain and is considered a cornerstone in Manchester music folklore. The show was attended by only a handful of people but those cherished few included Morrissey, Ian Curtis, Mark E Smith, Peter Hook and Tony Wilson. Some consider this one gig to have shaped Manchester as we know it today.
“The band who eventually became Joy Division came up to me at the end of the show and asked me, ‘how do you do it? How do you make that music? Tell us the secret’,” says Shelley revealing his first encounter with a young Ian Curtis. “Because it was so simple we told them how to do it and told everybody the secrets. You wanted other people to be having the same fun that you were having,” he added.
The night in question has many accounts of what actually happened and Punktastic sat down with the man who put the gig on that night, Pete Shelley, to get a complete uncut story.
In 1976, Shelley was studying at the Bolton Institute where he met future Buzzcocks frontman, Howard Devoto. In his own words, Manchester in the 70s was “black and white and pretty grim.” The pair were “complete outsiders” to the popular Manchester music scene and were struggling to form and establish a band.
“Punk was completely unknown,” Shelley said. “It was hard enough to get the records. They were like hen’s teeth, you couldn’t go into a shop and find them all racked up. Thankfully Howard had some records by The Stooges.”
At the time, The Sex Pistols were far from the modern day icons they are today having only played a handful of gigs before the Manchester show. Shelley and Devoto found the Sex Pistols in the reviews section of a copy of NME in February 1976. It caught their eye because they covered a Stooges’ song. Devoto particularly like the quote: “We’re not after music, we’re after chaos!”
As it resonated with the aims he had musically. That night the duo borrowed a car and drove to Reading to stay at a friend’s house- future Buzzcocks manager, Richard Boon.
“We stayed the night and we went to London the next morning to find this mythical band,” Shelley gleefully reminisced. “There was no listing for them in Time Out so we phoned up NME and asked. They said their manager had a clothes shop at the end of the Kings Road, The World’s End.”
“So we headed off and it was nearly closing time when we got there. We walked in and said ‘we believe you’re the manager of the Sex Pistols’ to which Malcolm McLaren was like ‘what’s going on here?’ We asked if they were playing this weekend, they did and we went to the gigs and chatted to Malcolm and the band. He said they said were trying to get gigs outside of London so it was ideal,” he continued.