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    <title>Air Mail: Phil Tinline Archive</title>
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      <![CDATA[Articles by Phil Tinline]]>
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    <link>https://airmail.news/phil-tinline</link>
    <lastBuildDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2026 04:56:05 -0400</lastBuildDate>
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      <guid>https://airmail.news/issues/2026-6-6/wed-just-never-seen-anything-like-it</guid>
      <title>
        <![CDATA["We'd Just Never Seen Anything Like It"]]>
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        <![CDATA[Air Mail]]>
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        <![CDATA[  <figure>
    <a href="https://airmail.news/issues/2026-6-6/wed-just-never-seen-anything-like-it">
      <img alt="" class="img-responsive" src="https://photos.airmail.news/xyj7x18i6m2iepk9d2gjjrdft32w-d067c56c778a8c2433f2682d032f6ea2.jpg" />
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      <figcaption>
        The Sex Pistols in 1977. From left: Paul Cook, Steve Jones, Sid Vicious (né John Simon Ritchie), and Johnny Rotten (né John Lydon).
</figcaption>  </figure>

  <h5>In the summer of 1976, the Sex Pistols played two sparsely attended shows in Manchester. Among the few who did turn up were future members of Buzzcocks, the Fall, the Smiths, and Joy Division</h5>

  <p>By Phil Tinline</p>

  <p><span class="drop-cap">T</span>here are times when culture gets so stuck and suffocating, you just want something to explode. That was how Britain felt in the mid-1970s. If you were young and working-class—receiving unemployment benefits or in a dead-end job—you might have hoped that music would help vent your pent-up frustration at a collapsing economy drowning in cream-and-brown kitsch. But unless you liked plodding pub rock, disco, or aging musos whose songs dragged on longer than some wars, you were out of luck. Especially if you lived in northwest England.</p><p>Then one day in February 1976, a student at the Bolton Institute of Technology named Howard Trafford read a <a href="https://airmail.news/issues/2026-6-6/wed-just-never-seen-anything-like-it" class="rt-a" rel="external" target="_blank">READ ON</a></p>
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      <dc:creator>Phil Tinline</dc:creator>
      <link>https://airmail.news/issues/2026-6-6/wed-just-never-seen-anything-like-it</link>
      <pubDate>Sat, 6 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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