This is especially apparent on the band’s latest single, an an incendiary take on what is probably the most “punk” song of them all, The Sex Pistols’ “God Save The Queen”… released to coincide with Her Majesty’s silver jubilee, and accompanied by several tidal waves of media condemnation, not to mention physical attacks on the band members and a blanket broadcasting ban. Some retailers refused to stock the record, others omitted its name from the Top 30 chart. Has any piece of plastic ever caused so much fuss?
Eater shared producers with the Pistols for a time - Dave Goodman, who handled their early singles and debut album, also oversaw three of the Pistols’ demo sessions, including their very first, in July 1976, and the January 1977 session which brought the band their second record deal (after they were sacked by EMI) with A&M Records. (Who also sacked them, but that’s another story.)
And Eater got to hear all the demos, including “God Save The Queen” - although, at that time, it was still called “No Future.”
Blade expalins, “. My only problem with the song was the first bridge - 'don't be told what you want' etc. It didn't scan and, to my mind, it made Johnny Rotten sound like an old time British comedian called Norman Wisdom. Uncool.
“But the second bridge - 'when there's no future how can there be sin, we're the flowers in the dustbin' was genius, and I always wondered why they didn't just use the second bridge twice, like first time round and second time. So when we came to record it, I knew what I had to do - terribly sorry about that, Rotten/Jones/Matlock/Cook!”
It’s unlikely the song’s progenitors will be offended. Sex Pistols covers might be ten-a-penny, but how many (don’t even try to answer this) simply Xerox the original, with the only the occasional misheard lyric to distinguish them?
Eater retain the energy, the scorn and the anger that fueled the now-nearly half-century old original. But they add that same indefinable spark of - yes, youth, volume and rage - that was always the hallmark of Eater in their prime, but which a mere handful others of their contemporaries seem able to recapture.
To paraphrase an old song about Star Trek…”It’s punk, Jim. But not as we’ve heard it for a very long time.”
Track listing
1. Breakdown
2. Your Generation
3. Beat On The Brat
4. Outside View
5. I’m Stranded
6. God Save The Queen
7. White Riot
8. Chinese Rocks
9. New Rose
10. Another Girl, Another Planet
CLEOPATRA RECORDS, INC.
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