The one-time Johnny Rotten of the Sex Pistols was the most recognizable face and voice of British punk rock in the mid 1970s, and, as John Lydon, he went on to lead one of the best, most musically diverse and challenging post-punk groups, Public Image Ltd. (PiL), which has been a going concern off and on since 1978. This is PiL, the bandโs first album since 1992, came out in May, and the group is playing Renoโs Knitting Factory on Friday, Oct. 26.
Is this John?
Yes, speaking.
Hi, itโs Brad from the Reno News & Review.
Where?
The Reno News & Review.
You mumbled that again [laughs].
Sorry, itโs early. Itโs 8:20. This is earlier than I usually get up. Itโs the Reno. News. And Review.
Oh, Reno!
Where are you right now?
Iโm in Miami, getting ready to do a gig tonight.
Howโs Miami?
Itโs different. Every time I come here thereโs a whole new bunch of high rises. Itโs a strange place. I donโt know. I canโt relate to it. Itโs like a lunar land base.
Where do you live now?
I live in Los Angeles.
Howโs L.A.?
L.A. is fine. I feel myself somewhat a Californian Iโve been there long enough. I love the variety and dexterity of Californians.
Weโre quite close to California, we have kind of a love-hateโ-
I know. Iโve been to Reno quite a few times. I went to go skiing from Reno up to Squaw Valley.
Have you played in Reno before?
Yeah, I have, years back. Years and years back. It was in one of those casinos, very strange. I donโt like doing gambling venues.
Why not?
I donโt believe in gambling.
Whyโs that?
Well, why? If thereโs such a thing as temperate as luck, I think itโs pointless putting money on it. I think it will either happen or it wonโt. I think gambling leads to all kinds of social problems. And if you came from a British working class family, youโd understand that.
You live in California, so I assume you follow American politics pretty closely.
Well, you have to, because they relate directly to the rest of the world.
Did you watch the presidential debate a couple of nights ago?
I was very disappointed with it. I thought it was tedious, overblown and pointless. Youโve got one man yelling incorrect statements and another just like mumbling. It all seemed very silly to me. And both of them looked a bit haggard and stressed in the eyes, I noticed that.
Well, theyโre arguing in front of millions of people, so it seems pretty stressful.
Yeah, it is. Something I know I can relate directly to. I call it concerts.
Are you disappointed with Obama generally?
No, not at all, just his performance there. I think what took eight years to unravel will take a hell of a lot longer to tie back up. Have you ever opened a Christmas present and tried to reseal it? Believe me, the paper doesnโt fold quite the same way, and as for the ribbon, forget it. And thatโs the position he was put in. And thatโs how I see it.
So, PiLโs new album came out not too long ago. How long ago was the last one? Twenty years or so?
Yep, I was under commitment to record labels there that were holding me back and kept a debt over me that made it impossible for me to function, so for nearly two decades, I had to try to raise money elsewhere. Finally, Iโve been able to independently raise enough to put some against that outstanding debt, and then reform PiL, to the point that Iโve been able to get off the labels and now form our own record company, which is a hell of a lot of work.
Itโs also kind of empowering, because you have control over everything?
Youโve got full control, but you donโt have the access to the funds that you could quite get attached to [laughs]. Isnโt that a polite way of putting it?
Listening to the new album, it seems like part of the tradition of PiL, but a little bit of a departure too.
If PiL has a tradition at all, itโs that every album sounds very different from the one before, but there is a constant thread and thatโs the character of me. Iโm there. Thatโs the maypole which all this dances around, because, you know, itโs the story of my lifeโs experiences, and thatโs the unification necessary for it to work. Thatโs the substantive matter, and of course my life story is very, very close to Bruce [Smith], the drummerโs, or Lu Edmonds or the bass player, Scott [Firth]. At the same time, weโre vastly different characters, but weโve all been through the grind of what we know is humanity and life, and come out somehow smiling. The point being donโt let the bastards grind you down no matter what.
That said, youโve had a pretty unique life story.
Well, you can say that about every human being on the planet, which is why I find us all as a species utterly, totally fascinating. No man could be my enemy, because anyone you sit down withโI donโt know, you go to a pub and sit down with a really old fella in the corner, his story will be fascinating, if you can get him to open up. Thatโs what life is to me. Iโm interested in everybodyโs life experiences.
Who are some of your favorite specimens?
Specimens [laughs]? I donโt very much like that โฆ none of us belong in a measuring jar.
Yeah, even if theyโre your favorites, you donโt want to quantify people.
Well, I donโt know, my fatherโs storyโI wish Iโd known more about it when I was younger. I wouldnโt have been quite such a horrible sod of a kid to him, you know? Always wondering when I was young why I could never get on with him. It was partially my fault too. He left England when he was 13, 13 and a half to 14, and drove lorries at 15, and formed a family. I did not know any of that until years and years later. And I would have respected him totally if I would have known.
You didnโt get along with him when you were younger, I take it.
Yeah, I donโt think kids usually do with their parents, until they realize that, you know, parents are people, too [laughs]. Itโs so easy to just be the demanding, selfish brat, isnโt it? But then again, when I was young, I had some terrible illnesses which nearly killed me and that was very hard on them. I was constantly a sickly thing, so it was very, very hard for them. My dad was such a hard worker and he couldnโt understand how heโd sired such an unhealthy little worm. But what I lack physically, I make for mentally.
What illnesses?
Meningitis, nearly died from it. Coma, the lot.
How old were you?
Seven. I was always before then. Physically, Iโm a bit dilapidated. But mentally Iโm very astute, so thatโs what gets me through. None of us are born perfect creatures. None of us are born with all of the capabilities. This is what we do as a human being. We learn to get by on what weโve got.
When you started out you were kind of an iconoclast, and now youโre sort of an icon โฆ
I wouldnโt know the difference between those two words [laughs]. They sound similar to me! Either one of them really isnโt anything Iโd looking out for. Thatโs the monikers that other people put on you, the labels. Thatโs all well and fine, but at the same time itโs all a bit silly, isnโt it? Iโm just a human being trying to get by and tell his life experiences in the most honest way possible. Short, sharp, to the point and directly. I donโt have no time for lies and liars, and thatโs something that only childhood illnesses brought out in me. But my mum and dadโs ethics were, you know, donโt lie. Thatโs a constant thing there, and I respect that, and Iโm determined to stay that way. Itโs the only healthy way.
Would you say that thing that you like least is dishonesty?
Yep.
Where do you see dishonesty?
Every politician, every institution, and every political party, because once you get that amalgamation of juxtapositions, what they deal with then is compromise, and in compromise really lies the roots of deceit. That can be very challenging for me, because I donโt see the need for it. For me, the more varied we all are, the better it is. Why can we not agree to disagree? Some of my best friends donโt agree with anything I have to say on anything at all, and thatโs fantastic company for me.
Why?
Because it keeps you constantly alert and aware that your agenda is not other peopleโs, and that can be fine. Weโve all got very many different interest or points of view or opinions, but when you open yourself to debate with people that have challengingly different points of view, itโs educational, because from time to time, you can actually learn that you might be wrong. And learning to admit that youโre wrong is one of your greatest achievements, itโs certainly been mine.
What are some times youโve been wrong?
Off the top of my head, arguing at school with the teachers! But I found it very useful because I got to the answer at the end. I donโt like to lay down a proposition and it be based on just a belief system rather than a truth, and hence debate at all times. Songs are debates.
Thatโs interesting. How are songs debates?
Because youโre declaring your point of view or youโre trying to see the world through another personโs point of view, and you can either be wrong about this or you can be right about it, but either way it will spur other people into commenting. So what youโve done is that youโve opened a new subject to them. For me, the people that hate me and canโt stand whatever it is I get up to are just as valid as those that hero worship me. Itโs about the same thing. At least theyโre discussing something. Thatโs a hell of a lot more valid than just being called a nice person โฆ thatโs the worst insult you could ever face, โOh, heโs really nice.โ
Iโve always been curious what you think of that Neil Young song โHey Hey, My Myโ?
On Rust Never Sleeps? Hilarious. [Mocking, sing-song voice:]โThis is the story of Johnny Rotten. The king is gone but not forgotten.โ I wanted to know what Neil Young meant when he wrote that song, and I was doing a thing on VH1 at the time called Rotten TV, and we rang up his management, and I wanted to interview him and talk to him about it, and the response from their office was that they had no idea who Johnny Rotten was [laughs]. So my knowledge of that song is exactly that.
That is so weird. So youโve never had occasion to meet him?
Iโve always foundโhe would be one of my song heroes. I love the lyrics that the manโs put together over the years and the different approaches, particularly that album Zuma. Love it.
Thatโs a great record.
Yes, of course I would [like to meet him], but you always have to bear in mind that when you meet someone, youโve built them up into something you may just be disappointed at what you get. The other weekโI love the Beach Boys too, and we did a British live TV show and the Beach Boys were on and PiL, and I think thereโs a YouTube thing of it floating around. But while we were onstage, and Iโm singing, and I had terrible flu, so the voice was a bit honky donkey, and I was very aware that this was the Beach Boys, vocalists par excellence listening to me [laughs]. โฆ And Brian Wilson is sitting there and he starts tapping and nodding his head and grooving. Just really heartwarming. I loved it, just really pleased. And someone in the band wanted to introduce him to me after, and he was the strangest man Iโve ever met. He seemed so dissipated and removed from reality. He said, [stilted, ethereal voice] โIs this the photo opportunity?โ Take the photo, like a robot, and somebody led him back to a chair, and sat down and stared into a screen. That was him. โฆ I donโt want to believe that the fellow is falling apart because you know, I respect him highly. This is Mr. Rotten telling you, my musical tastes are extremely varied.
What are you listening to these days?
At the moment, for the last year, really quite frankly, nothing because weโre just too busy. Weโre touring, and the last thing we want is a Brittany Spears melody to creep into a song [laughs]!
Well, you donโt have to listen to that.
You canโt help it, can you? Leave the radio on, something somehow will creep into your psyche. You know like those horrible ditties on game shows? Thatโs how a lot of the top 30 can be, and it can be pretty damn soul destroying. It can be quite pervasive when youโre in the middle of your big bad ego onstage, and suddenly you know youโre singing a game show tune.
Has that every happened to you?
Sort of. The idea is there. The fear is there, but at the same time, being me, I kind of like it.
There was a skate video you hosted a few years ago โฆ
Oh yeah, the Flip thing! Great fun. A couple of the younger skateboarders had a big thing for PiL. One thing led to another, we met up, and I agreed to do a promo on a documentary for them. It was great fun. Thatโs like a PiL in California experience.
Do you ever skateboard?
Absolutely hopeless. Iโve got no sense of balance at all. I mean, none! Shocking bad. In a weird way, to the surfy lads and the skateboardwers, they found that kind of endearing. โCโmon, John, fall over again!โ
A big part of your legacy is obviously the Sex Pistols, and I know you did some reunion shows in recent years, but itโs basically a band you were in for just two or three years 30 years ago, is it weirdโ?
No, no, no. Itโs something Iโm very proud of because I came out of the gates yelling and screaming in an inappropriate way. Thatโs where I learned to write songs, and it set me in good stead. But, as a band, weโre never going to get back together. Weโre now in full agreement with each other. No one wants to do that. I canโt go back and write songs for that period, and the others feel the same way. Weโve all moved on from it. In my life so far, Iโve been in two great musical movementsโPistols, Pil. Thatโs a good thing.
Iโve always been curious about the formation of the Pistolsโ-
Not going to talk about them. Leave it alone, itโs gone!
Thatโs kind of what I meant earlier. Do you get sick of talking about it?
No, but it becomes too much. Itโs over, you know. And of course I miss it from time to time, but not really. I miss the company of the lads, but thatโs about it.
