A version taped on 2 April 1977 at one of the band's earliest public performances had already been issued on a live compilation album,
The Roxy London WC2, in June. The song attracted wide notice and led directly to the band's first record deal—a pact with the
Virgin label for one single.
Poly Styrene, X-Ray Spex's songwriter as well as lead vocalist, had been motivated to join the punk scene like many others as a result of attending a
Sex Pistols concert—her first encounter with the band, when she still went by Marianne Elliot-Said, was in
Hastings in early July 1976. Concerned with issues of
consumerism and disposability, reflected in the name she soon adopted, she wrote "Oh Bondage Up Yours!" shortly after seeing the Pistols for a second time the following month. The lyrics combine a depiction of contemporary capitalist materialism as a brand of servitude with a "feminist [...] rallying cry". Styrene later described it as "a call for liberation. It was saying: 'Bondage—forget it! I'm not going to be bound by the laws of consumerism or bound by my own senses.' It has that line in it: 'Chain smoke, chain gang, I consume you all': you are tied to these activities for someone else's profit." X-Ray Spex' instrumental lineup featured a saxophonist, unusual for a punk band. What made the woodwind player particularly stand out was that she was a girl, Susan Whitby (known as
Lora Logic), just 16 years old as of mid-1977. Band manager
Falcon Stuart had helped convince Styrene that the presence of a second woman in the band would be a boon to their marketing. == Content ==