August 4th Buzzcocks
supported by Wire play the Marquee club in London . The gig attracts the highest
attendance
in the club's history.
Mark Perry of Sniffin GLue fame
is by now involved in the record business with Miles Copeland and running two
labels, Deptford Fun City and his own Step Forward. Step Forward open with two
releases, one by Bristol's Cortinas and the other, Man of the Year and the
Freeze by the Models. Marco Pirroni of the Models had been involved with the
Banshees at the end of 1976 before going on to do his own thing in 1977. The
Freeze contained lyrics which some journalists had interpreted as fascist but
Pirroni insisted that they were intended ironically.
August 5th
Whilst crossing
Piccadilly Gardens after a night at the Ranch club Pete Shelley of Buzzcocks is
attacked with a friend of his. As all the late buses in Manchester left town
from this point it remained a scene of skirmishes between punks and other
nightclub goers for many years.
Most of the London scene had decamped to Mont
Marsan in France for the Second European Punk Festival. The bill featured The
Clash, the Damned, the Jam , the Boys , Dr Feelgood and Eddie and the HotRods.
The strained relations between the Clash and the Damned were patched up although
the Jam still harboured grudges from the White Riot tour earlier in the
year.
August 16th Buzzcocks
play a free night at the Electric Circus in Collyhurst Manchester.
News of the death of Elvis Presley meets with mixed reactions. Richard Boon
who had been managing Buzzcocks since their beginning over 12 months before
had been in discussion with several major labels about signing the band. Despite
their success releasing the Spiral Scratch EP on the self-funded New Hormones
label, the band sign to United Artists. the New Hormones label continues however
releasing local talent from the Manchester area such as Ludus and Pete Shelley's
side project , the Tiller Boys. Andrew Lauder from the label signs the band
at the bar of the Electric Circus after the gig for £75,000 over 2 years.
Granada TV film the bands performance for future use on Tony Wilson's 'So
It Goes' programme.
In another deal , Slaughter and the Dogs signed to Decca almost
straight after releasing Cranked Up Really High /The Bitch on hometown small
label Rabid records.
August 19th
After the success of the Swedish
tour and the associated coverage in the UK music press the Sex Pistols were
in the unheard of position of being in huge demand but unable to get a gig
anywhere. Despite the Top of the Pops appearance for Pretty Vacant, the Pistols
were still banned from playing in most areas of the UK. In order to get round
this the band booked six gigs at venues they had previously played under assumed
names. Tonight the secret tour opened at the Lafayette Club in Wolverhampton
under the name 'the Spots' ( allegedly short for Sex Pistols On Tour Secretly)
. The secret was not well kept and purely to beat the coucil bans so a huge
turn out arrived to see the band. Read the NME review of the gig here
August 23rd
Buzzcocks
record
4 tracks for Manchester's independent Piccadilly Radio.(What Ever Happened
To?, Orgasm Addict,
What Do I Get? and Oh Shit). In so doing they preview the two tracks which
will be their first release on UA at the end of October.
In London the Slits play a gig at
Clouds in Brixton with Steel Pulse billed as a night of Funky Punk Reggae.
Already they are attracting a different audience to the more 'mainstream' punk
bands. Headed by Don Letts the crowd is multi-racial and although punky in
appearance lots of reggae references such as the two sevens clash motive appear
on leather jackets.
August
24th The Sex
Pistols take to the stage of the Outlook Club in Doncaster as ' the Tax
Exiles'.
The eleventh issue of Sniffin Glue comes out , edited by Danny Baker
it is made up of 'guest' contributions and lacks the immediacy and news
distributing status of previous issues. A lot of space is given to introspective
debate about the direction of punk and 'where it all went wrong and what should
we do ' polemic.
August 25th Buzzcocks
cross the Pennines to play Leeds Polytechnic. Unthinkingly Shelley wears a
Manchester United shirt which causes
a near riot amongst the Leeds
United followers in the audience. Bass player Garth Davies had been drinking
and is immortalised on the Razor Cuts bootleg offering the audience out for
a fight and taunting them to 'come and have a go'. Deciding enough was enough
the band make a run it and only just escape as the back window of their car
is smashed. This is the last night Shelley plays his wrecked Starway guitar
which had become his trademark from the bands early days. In Scarborough the
Penthouse is host to the Sex Pistols under the name of Special Guest .
August 26th The Sex Pistols play Middlesborough Rock Garden as Acne Rebble. The Adverts release 'Gary Gilmoores Eyes' the second single of their 9 month career. The record comes out on Anchor records and leaps into the top twenty as September gets under way. Slaughter and the Dogs play Middleton Civic Hall ,another venue which has started booking punk bands in the Manchester area. This is the second date on their 'Slaughter on the Streets' tour which features the Drones as support plus a different local band each night.
August 27th A busy day for Warsaw (soon to become Joy Division), supporting X-Ray Spex in an afternoon matinee gig at Eric's in Liverpool before returning to Manchester to support Scottish punk pioneers the Rezillos at the Electric Circus. Meanwhile Slaughter and the Dogs play Wigan Casino and Adam and the Ants and the Models play Crayford Town Hall.
August 28th The Adverts headline at the Electric Circus supported by 999 and London. Adam and the Ants play an unlikely double bill with the Tom Robinson band at Jacksons Lane Community Centre in London.
August 29th Glen Matlock's new band , the Rich Kids plays at the Vortex on Wardour Street. as the line up is not complete, Mick Jones of the Clash plays guitar. Support is from Chelsea and New York band Neo.
August 30th United Artists book Buzzcocks into Indigo Studios with Martin Rushent at the controls for a couple of days. They demo Orgasm Addict, What Do I Get, No Reply and What Ever Happened To?
August 31st The Woods Centre in Plymouth, one of the few venues to stick by the Pistols during their ill-fated 'Anarchy in the UK' tour hosts another secret gig by them . Tonight they take to the stage as 'the Hamsters'