PUBLIC IMAGE LIMITED
Public Image Ltd. (PiL) originally was a quartet led by singer
John Lydon (formerly Johnny Rotten b.Jan 31, 1956) and guitarist
Keith Levene, who had been a member of the Clash in one of its
early lineups. The band was filled out by bassist Jah Wobble (John
Wordle) and drummer Jim Walker. It was formed in the wake of the
1978 breakup of Lydon's former group, the Sex Pistols. For the
most part, it devoted itself to droning, slow-tempo, bass-heavy
noise rock, overlaid by Lydon's distinctive, vituperative rant.
The group's debut single, "Public Image," was more of
an uptempo pop/rock song, however, and it hit the U.K. Top Ten
upon its release in October 1978. The group itself debuted on
Christmas Day, shortly after the release of its first album, Public
Image. Neither the single nor the album was released in the U.S.
Metal Box, the band's second U.K. album, came in the form of three
12-inch, 45 RPM discs in a film cannister. It was released in
the U.S. in 1980 as the double album Second Edition. (By this
time, PiL was a trio consisting of Lydon, Levene, and Wobble.)
The third album, not released in the U.S., was the live Paris
in the Spring (1980). Lydon and Levene, plus hired musicians,
made up the group by the time of The Flowers of Romance (1981),
the much-acclaimed fourth album, which reached #11 in the U.K.
In 1983, PiL scored its biggest U.K. hit, when "This Is Not
a Love Song" reached #5. By this time, however, Levene had
left, and the name from here on would be, more than anything else,
a vehicle for John Lydon (though with a comparatively steady lineup).
A second live album, Live in Tokyo, appeared in England in 1983.
The following year saw the release of This Is What You Want ...
This Is What You Get, only PiL's third album to be released in
the U.S., though it now had six albums out. It marked the start
of Lydon's move toward a more accessible dance-rock style, a direction
that would be pursued further in Album (1986) (also called Cassette
or Compact Disc, depending on the format), notably on the hit
"Rise," as well as on Happy? (1987) and 9 (1989). In
1990, PiL released the compilation album The Greatest Hits, So
Far, and in 1991 came the new album, That What Is Not. After completing
his memoirs in late 1993, Lydon decided to put an end to PiL and
pursue a solo career.