1282 No 1282 No Future Spunk Box Set with T-shirt, sticker and pen. (UK).Introduction

Recording Label: Virgin
Running Time: Disc 1: 38mins 28secs. Disc 2: 70mins 16secs.
Year: 1996

ISMN: 724384193720
Recording Company Code: Spunk 1.
Quality: 10

This is about as rare as it gets in the sex Pistols CD world this is the Spunk No future box set, this comes with a normal spunk 2 CD set and a No Future sticker and a pen shaped as a syringe. This also comes with a XL Sex Pistols No Future T-shirt.

In all my time collecting Sex pistols CD's this is the 1st time I have ever seen one of these box sets in fact I have only heard of 1 other.

The set is held in a plastic yellow cube with really good artwork. (Thanks eBay).

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The album comprises studio demos and talking recorded with Dave Goodman during 1976 and early 1977, while original bass player Glen Matlock was still a member of the band. Most of the songs would later be re-recorded and officially released on the group's album, Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols.

The alternative debut album

Several parties, including some journalists in the British music press, immediately suspected that the band's manager, Malcolm McLaren, was responsible for the original Spunk bootleg. This would have been in breach of the band's record contract with Virgin, which was readying the release of Never Mind the Bollocks when Spunk appeared. An October 1977 Sounds article by Chas de Whalley discussed Spunk and made reference to this conveniently coincidental timing.[2] In the Sounds article, Chas de Whalley makes reference to buying a copy in a record store on the Portobello Road. It was in fact a tiny little record store (ACME Records) in the back of the now famous ACME Attractions. The shop assistant who dealt with Whalley, identified in his article simply as "The Punk," was Doug McArthur, bassist for Killerhertz and Kid Rogers and the Henchmen. McArthur maintained the bootleg was a better quality record and claims to have sold many copies through that little record store.

The evidence for McLaren's involvement is speculative, although it can be noted that his company, Glitterbest, retained the rights to the demo recordings as well as the master tapes - and the demos appearing on Spunk were presented in excellent quality. Also, as evidenced by the original album's "LYN-" matrix number prefix, the record had clearly been pressed in the UK by Lyntone, a legitimate independent pressing plant that would presumably not handle anything that appeared to be a bootleg, and would certainly allow the bootlegger in question to be traced if enquiries had ever been made by the genuine copyright owner. McLaren always publicly denied responsibility for Spunk, but said that he preferred it to Never Mind the Bollocks.[2]

Some Sex Pistols fans concur with McLaren[2] - and producer Goodman[3] - that the raw versions of the songs on Spunk are superior to the officially released ones, particularly since Spunk approximates a faithful reproduction of the original Sex Pistols line-up's live sound. The album also features the bass-lines of Glen Matlock, which were not reproduced when guitarist Steve Jones took over bass duties for the recording of Never Mind the Bollocks.[4]

Spunk is therefore often cited as the Sex Pistols' de facto alternative debut album. Certainly a tape of part or all of Spunk had been played to Tony Parsons as early as March 1977, and became the subject of his NME article, "Blank Nuggets in the UK", which described the recordings as if they represented an imminent debut album release.[2]

Reissues

The original Spunk was itself copied and bootlegged immediately upon release. The tracks have since been re-bootlegged countless times in many different formats, including a widespread variant called No Future UK?, which added three extra tracks, and many releases by Dave Goodman, which often feature evidence of remixing.[2]

Spunk has also been the subject of several official releases.

Virgin Records released the whole of Spunk, without the talking between tracks, along with several other early Sex Pistols demos as part of a limited edition double-CD reissue of Never Mind the Bollocks in 1996 called Spunk/This Is Crap.

Spunk was released on 17 July 2006 by Sanctuary Records in its original vinyl format (CMQLP1395, limited to 1,000 copies). The CD version (CMRCD1376) included the three bonus tracks from the original No Future UK? bootleg.

         

Disc 1 Track names:

1. Holidays in the sun.

2. Bodies.

3. No feelings.

4. Liar.

5. God save the queen.

6. Problems.

7. Seventeen.

8. Anarchy in the UK.

9. Sub-mission.

10. Pretty Vacant.

11. New York.

12. EMI unlimited edition.

Disc 2 Track names:

1. Seventeen.

2. Satellite.

3. Feelings.

4. Just me.

5. Submission.

6. Nookie.

7. No future.

8. Problems.

9. Lots of Fun.

10. Liar.

11. Who was it.

12. New York. (looking for a kiss).

13. Problems.

14. No feelings.

15. Pretty Vacant.

16. Sub-Mission.

17 No feelings

18. EMI.

19. Satellite.

20. Seventeen.

21. Anarchy in the UK.

box front box back box side left box side right box lid box complete sticker T-shirt pen cd front cd back booklet front booklet back booklet inside back back inside disc 1 disc 2

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