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Sex Pistols stars win High Court battle against Johnny Rotten over song usage in Danny Boyle series

Johnny Rotten has lost in a row over Sex Pistols songs being used in a TV show

Two former Sex Pistols have won a High Court battle with former frontman Johnny Rotten over the use of the punk band’s songs in a forthcoming television series.

In a ruling on Monday, Sir Anthony Mann found that the group’s former drummer Paul Cook and guitarist Steve Jones were entitled to invoke ‘majority voting rules’ against the ex-singer, real name John Lydon, in relation to the use of Sex Pistols material in the series Pistol.

Cook and Jones had sued Lydon to allow their songs to be used in TV drama Pistol, directed by Danny Boyle.

The six-part series, which is being made by Disney and is due to air next year, is based on a 2016 memoir by Mr Jones called Lonely Boy: Tales From A Sex Pistol, and stars actors including Maisie Williams, Thomas Brodie-Sangster and Iris Law.

During a week-long hearing at the High Court in London, Mr Jones and Mr Cook argued that, under the terms of a band member agreement (BMA) made in 1998, decisions regarding licensing requests can be determined on a ‘majority rules basis’.

But Mr Lydon, who has previously told the Sunday Times he thinks the series is the ‘most disrespectful s*** I’ve ever had to endure’, argued that licences cannot be granted without his consent.

Lydon had argued the licenses couldn’t be granted without his consent (Picture: Elizabeth Cook/PA Wire)

Cook suggested the band was done for good (Picture: PA)

His lawyers told the court that the agreement had never been used and that he considers it a ‘nuclear button’ for the claimants and their manager, Anita Camerata, to ‘impose their wishes’ on him.

They said he had a ‘deep-felt and passionate aversion to becoming a ‘prisoner’ of a hostile majority’ and in his evidence to the court, Mr Lydon said the agreement ‘smacks of some kind of slave labour’.

Lawyers for Mr Cook and Mr Jones argued there should not be any dispute about whether the agreement allows licensing decisions to be made ‘by a majority’ and said Mr Lydon is in breach of the BMA by refusing to provide his consent.

They also said the court could not accept his evidence as true because it was a ‘straightforward lie’ and he could not ‘genuinely have believed the agreement was never effective’.

The legal fight involved Danny Boyle’s new series Pistol (Picture: PA)

They told the court Mr Cook and Mr Jones’ claim is against Mr Lydon alone, and that original band member Glen Matlock, who was replaced by Sid Vicious, and representatives of the estate of Vicious, who died in February 1979, supported their position.

The Sex Pistols were formed in 1975 and disbanded in 1978, but have performed live shows together a number of times since then, most recently in 2008.

During his testimony in court, Cook suggested the Sex Pistols were ‘gone for good’ due to the legal action.


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