In 1977, Sex Pistols released a furious punk anthem that immediately ignited controversy across the United Kingdom.

But decades later, “God Save the Queen” achieved something few would have predicted at the time: it finally became a No. 1 hit in the U.K., 45 years after its original release.

Released during Queen Elizabeth II’s Silver Jubilee celebrations, the song became one of the most controversial records in British music history almost instantly. Its anti-establishment lyrics and confrontational tone led to widespread backlash, including bans from the BBC and other radio stations.

Despite the bans, the single exploded in popularity.

The song reached No. 1 on the NME chart and climbed to No. 2 on the official U.K. singles chart in 1977, though many fans long believed it had actually sold enough copies to take the top spot. In one especially notorious move, the official chart reportedly displayed the title as a blank space to avoid causing offense.

“I love me country, I love me people and everything about it, but if there’s problems in it, I think I have the right to say so,” said frontman John Lydon of the song’s origins in a 2022 interview. Clearly, many listeners agreed.

The chaos surrounding the single only added to its mythology. Before signing with Virgin Records, the band had briefly been signed to A&M Records, which controversially dropped them amid backlash and destroyed thousands of unreleased copies of the song.

Over time, “God Save the Queen” became more than just a punk single. The track evolved into one of the defining protest songs in rock history, representing rebellion, frustration and anti-establishment anger during a turbulent era in Britain.

Then, in 2022, during Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations, the song experienced an extraordinary resurgence after being reissued. For the very first time, it officially became the biggest-selling single in the U.K., finally reaching No. 1 exactly 45 years after fans believed it had been denied the position.

Interestingly, Lydon later clarified that the song was never meant as a personal attack on the Queen herself.

“‘God Save The Queen’ was anti-royalist, but it’s not anti-human,” Lydon told NME in 2022, adding that he was “actually really, really proud of the Queen for surviving and doing so well.”

Nearly half a century after it first outraged the establishment, “God Save the Queen” remains one of the most influential punk songs ever recorded and proof that rebellious music can still make history decades later.

Related: 1977 Rock Classic, Released After Band Breakup, Ranked Among ‘Greatest Songs of All Time’

Share.
Exit mobile version