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Never Mind the Court Case - A Look


Back at the Sex Pistols' Obscenity Trial
in Nottingham
9 November 17words: Gav Squires
reading time: 3 min

Did you know that Nottingham was at the centre of a court case that saw
punk rock standing up to the establishment over freedom of expression and
the meaning of a certain word? On the 40th anniversary of the release of
the offending album we look back at the case of the state vs Searle, a time
when, to paraphrase The Clash, punk fought the law and punk won...
The offending poster
There is always much debate as to when punk rock actually started. Was it in 1960's Detroit
with proto punk bands such as The Stooges and the MC5 or was it in the early '70s with
Malcolm McLaren managed New York Dolls with their mix of glam and Rolling Stones-
esque rock 'n' roll? Punk rock as we know it really kicked off in 1976 with the release of the
Ramones eponymous debut album, followed six months later by the first British punk
single, New Rose by The Damned.

Of course, the one band that really blew punk up in this country was The Sex Pistols.
Releasing their debut single Anarchy In The UK a month after The Damned, they became
front page news after appearing on the Bill Grundy show on ITV and being goaded into
swearing on live television by the host. The following year would see the Pistols release God
Save The Queen to coincide with Queen Elizabeth II's silver jubilee celebrations - workers in
the record plant refused to press it and it was banned from both Radio 1 and independent radio
stations, making it the most heavily censored record in British history.

Following two more singles, Pretty Vacant and Holidays In The Sun, both top 10 hits, it was
time for The Sex Pistols to release their debut album, Never Mind The Bollocks, Here's The
Sex Pistols, and it would be this title that would bring Nottingham into the story. The album
was banned by Boots (who sold records at the time), WH Smith and Woolworth's (which still
existed at the time) However, it was being sold in Virgin Records and on the 9th of
November, the police arrested the manager of the Nottingham branch, then on King Street, for
displaying material with the title on in the window.
7 King Street - The site of the old Virgin Records store

Chris Searle, the manager had been warned to cover up the word "bollocks" but had gone
back to displaying the records once the police had left. Hence, the 28-year old was charged
with contravening the Indecent Advertisement Act 1889 and found himself in front of three
local magistrates on the 24th of November at Nottingham Magistrates' Court. What was
essentially a local court found itself in the national limelight over what was a matter relating
to a retail outlet in the city.

Richard Branson, owner of both the chain of Virgin Record Stores and also the Virgin
Records label that the Pistols were signed to brought in John Mortimer QC to defend. Now
probably best known for writing the Rumpole of the Bailey books, Mortimer had also
defended Oz magazine in their famous 1971 obscenity trial, which was the longest obscenity
trial in British history at the time. His trump card was Professor James Kinsley, head of
English at the University of Nottingham. His evidence showed that "bollocks" was in fact an
Old English term for "priest" and in the context of the album meant "nonsense".

Mortimer also pointed out that both The Guardian and Evening Standard had both referred to
the album's title and neither had been charged. The trial concluded:

Much as my colleagues and I wholeheartedly deplore the vulgar exploitation of the worst
instincts of human nature for the purchases of commercial profits by both you and your
company, we must reluctantly find you not guilty of each of the four charges.
The site of the former Flying Horse pub

Having won, Branson took his team to The Flying Horse pub to celebrate and the album
would go on to sell more than 2 million copies, which of course was helped by the publicity
surrounding the case. Looking back, from forty years in the future, it's probably a little easier
to be slightly cynical and think that Branson might have encouraged Searle to defy the police
in order to drum up a story. Either way, it worked and Never Mind The Bollocks Here's The
Sex Pistols was the most successful album of the punk era and its obscenity trial is another
reason why Nottingham is on the punk rock map.

Never Mind The Bollocks Here's The Sex Pistols was released on the 28th of October 1977,
Searle was arrested on the 8th of November and acquitted on the 24th. Why not head down to
Foreman's and have a drink in its honour.

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