Public Image Ltd live music review: Same righteous anger, same cathartic energy
John Lydon’s post-punk provocateurs return with the aggressive spark that’s made them essential listening for four decades

‘Ello!’ hams John Lydon, returning to the stage after he and the rest of Public Image Ltd have ploughed through a glorious rewind as far back as 1979’s Metal Box record, alongside songs from their recently released End Of World album. By Lydon’s account, the gap since their last one has been ‘eight years of fucking misery for all of us’.

Sporting a long coat and ornate vintage tie, Lydon looks and sounds every inch the music-hall Dadaist provocateur. With lyrics perched on a music stand, he unleashes his guttural declamations over bassist Scott Firth and drummer Bruce Smith’s pounding rhythms and guitarist Lu Edmonds’ torrent of jaggy metal shards.
Having set the scene with album opener ‘Penge’ (a backhanded guide to the south-east London suburb of the song’s title), the dub echo bass and drums of ‘Albatross’ from Metal Box is a spacey and still startling-sounding creation. Similarly, the knee-jerk snarl of their new record’s ‘Being Stupid Again’ segues into the queasy swirl of ‘Poptones’, as Edmonds makes Keith Levene’s original guitar patterns his own.
On ‘Death Disco’, Lydon howls like a wounded bird of prey. Part showman, part grumpy old man, throughout a thrilling ‘Flowers Of Romance’, his voice is laced with undisguised venom. ‘Memories,’ he deadpans, introducing the song of the same name, ‘we’ve all got ’em. Let’s see if I can remember them.’
Lydon’s patter is a treat. There are digs against ‘socialist council bins’, and, on ‘Shoom’, which ends the main set, a mass singalong of ‘fuck off’ is aimed at Lydon’s former Sex Pistols comrades, Steve Jones and Paul Cook. For the encore, that ‘ello!’ of course gives way to PiL’s self-titled theme song. A dark ‘Open Up’ follows, with a triumphal ‘Rise’ provoking a mass chorus of ‘anger is an energy’. ‘We will never let you down’, Lydon declares as a parting shot. He means it, maaan.
Reviewed at O2 Academy Edinburgh.
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