430 King's Road, Vivienne Westwood and New York Dolls In October 1971, McLaren took over the back part of the retail premises at
430 King's Road in Chelsea, West London, and sold
rock and roll records, refurbished 1950s
radiograms and dead stock clothing as "In The Back Of Paradise Garage". With the assistance of art school friend Patrick Casey, McLaren converted the entire ground floor into the store and renamed it Let It Rock, initially selling clothing (dead stock, military surplus) and objects he had sourced. When the shop became a success, he enlisted the help of his then-girlfriend
Vivienne Westwood who customized and repaired original clothing and made facsimiles. Let It Rock was patronised by
teddy boys and McLaren and Westwood's designs also appeared in such theatrical and cinematic productions such as
The Rocky Horror Show and ''
That'll Be The Day''. In August 1973, McLaren and Westwood visited New York to participate in the National Boutique Fair, where they began an association with the
New York Dolls, McLaren instead blamed Thunders and drummer Jerry Nolan's drug addictions for the split. His one-time associate
Bernie Rhodes, who would later become the manager of
the Clash, claimed he spotted a new frontman in another customer,
John Lydon, then sporting green hair and torn clothes with the words "I hate" written on a
Pink Floyd T-shirt above the band's name. After Lydon joined, McLaren dubbed him "Johnny Rotten" and shortened the band's name to simply Sex Pistols, stating that he wanted to give the impression of "sexy young assassins". In May 1977, a few months after McLaren replaced Matlock with
Sid Vicious (supposedly because Matlock "liked
The Beatles"), the band released the anti-monarchy protest song "
God Save the Queen" during the week of
Queen Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee. McLaren organised a boat trip down the
Thames in which the Sex Pistols would perform their music outside the
Houses of Parliament. The boat was raided by the police and McLaren was arrested, thus achieving his goal to obtain publicity. The band released their album ''
Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols in October 1977 and played their last UK gig before embarking upon a U.S. tour in January 1978. McLaren was accused by the band of mismanaging them and refusing to pay them when they asked him for money. McLaren stated that he had planned out the entire career path of the Sex Pistols, which he illustrated in the film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle.'' Lydon's feelings of being used by McLaren formed the creative impetus for his subsequent band
Public Image Ltd. The contractual rights to the Sex Pistols' name were disputed in a case brought by Lydon, Jones, Cook and the estate of Sid Vicious in 1979 against McLaren's management company Glitterbest. In 1986 the High Court awarded the rights to the group's name, ''The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle'', the artwork, master tapes and the group's income to Lydon and the others. In the 2000 film
The Filth and the Fury, the surviving members of the Sex Pistols gave their version of events. McLaren is portrayed during his time as the Sex Pistols' manager by
David Hayman in the film
Sid and Nancy and by
Thomas Brodie-Sangster in the miniseries
Pistol.
Other artists McLaren was approached by
Adam Ant to manage
Adam and the Ants following their debut album release in late 1979. Shortly thereafter, three members of the band left to form
Bow Wow Wow under McLaren's management.
Solo music career In 1983, McLaren released
Duck Rock, an album that, in collaboration with producer and co-writer
Trevor Horn and
the World's Famous Supreme Team (a duo of hip hop radio disc jockeys from New York City who hosted a hip hop and classic R&B show on
WHBI 105.9 FM and were among the first DJs to introduce the art of
scratching to the world). This mixed up influences from Africa and the Americas, including
hip hop. to accompany
British Airways commercials since 1984. However, in 1989 McLaren and Yanni further arranged the "Flower Duet" and it featured in BA's "World's Favourite Airline" global advertising campaign of the 1980s and 1990s. In 1992, McLaren co-wrote the song "
Carry On Columbus" for the feature film of the same name. The song plays over the end credits of the film. In 1994, he recorded the concept album
Paris, with appearances by such prominent French stars as actress
Catherine Deneuve, musician
Françoise Hardy, and fashion designer
Sonia Rykiel. In 1998, McLaren released
Buffalo Gals Back 2 Skool (Virgin Records), an album featuring hip hop artists
Rakim,
KRS-One,
De La Soul and producer Henri Scars Struck revisiting tracks from the original
Duck Rock album. That year, he also created a band called Jungk. This project was not a commercial success. Around this time he released a track called "The Bell Song" as a single available in a variety of remixes. McLaren contributed a track, "About Her", to the
soundtrack of
Quentin Tarantino's 2004 film
Kill Bill: Volume 2. The song heavily samples "
She's Not There" by
the Zombies, and uses
Bessie Smith's "
St. Louis Blues" by looping the phrase: "My man's got a heart like a rock cast in the sea". In November 2005, a court in Angers, France, cleared McLaren of plagiarism accusations made by French audio engineer Benjamin Beduneau. Beduneau, who had worked for McLaren and was paid by him through the studio, had taken McLaren's unfinished demos and fraudulently registered them under his own name at the French Composer Society, Sacem. The court ruled in McLaren's favor and ordered Beduneau to pay damages, which he never did. McLaren's solo work, particularly from the
Duck Rock period, has been sampled by other artists. In 1999,
Dope Smugglaz had a UK Top 20 hit with the track "Double Double Dutch", which made extensive use of samples from McLaren's original "Double Dutch". In 1997,
Mariah Carey's "
Honey" and its "Bad Boy Remix" sampled "
Hey DJ". In 2002,
Eminem released a track called "
Without Me", which incorporated "Buffalo Gals". In 2007, McLaren's song "World's Famous" was sampled by
R&B singer
Amerie on the song "Some Like It" from her album
Because I Love It. In 2001, author
Paul Gorman published his book
The Look: Adventures In Rock & Pop Fashion with a foreword and contributions from McLaren. The 2006 second edition included a CD featuring the track "Deux" from the
Paris Remixes album.
Royalty payment controversies In 1982, McLaren visited
Johannesburg in South Africa. His hit song, "Double Dutch" was taken from "Puleng", by
mbaqanga band the Boyoyo Boys, as was the flip side "Zulus on a Time Bomb", from "Tsotsi". "On the Road to Soweto" was lifted from a General M. D. Shirinda and the Gaza Sisters song "He Mdjadji", while two songs were taken from the
Mahotella Queens, with "Thina Siyakhanyisa" becoming "Jive My Baby", and "Kgarebe Tsaga Mothusi" becoming "Punk It Up". McLaren had previously plagiarised the Mahotella Queens song "Umculo Kawupheli", which formed the basis of the
Bow Wow Wow hit "See Jungle! (Jungle Boy)". None of the artists concerned received any royalty payments at the time. McLaren was later sued, with a UK judge freezing royalty payments to McLaren. The case was then settled out of court for an undisclosed sum of money. == Film production ==