A Quote by Jimmy Page

I liked the Sex Pistols' music. I thought it was superb. — © Jimmy Page
I liked the Sex Pistols' music. I thought it was superb.
I really liked the Sex Pistols when they came out and I thought they had a lot of melody.
I've always said, I thought the Sex Pistols was more Music Hall than anything else - because I think that really, more truths are said in humour than any other form.
No one has actually gone further than The Sex Pistols, I don't think, in that cultural music arena. They still challenge people.
Well, I thought the Sex Pistols were the cream of the crop. They came in and topped everybody, for sure. They took all the existing strands and made a perfect package out of them.
[Replying to the question of the presenter: "where did the name "Sex Pistols" come from, who thought this name up?"] Some animal. I can't remember. It doesn't matter. It's history.
We're Sex Pistols, we ain't fake.
I saw the Sex Pistols, and they were terrible.
I never intended for the Sex Pistols to be immeasurably successful.
I always felt there was kind of a millennial aspect to The Sex Pistols.
When I was in the Sex Pistols, I listened to Boston. But I couldn't tell anybody, you know. I'd get lynched.
I went to visit Alcatraz years ago when I was on tour with the Pistols, and I really liked the atmosphere of the place. I genuinely, really, thoroughly enjoyed the whole morning there. I just liked the quietness and stillness of what is basically a cruel prison complex. I still found some kind of joy in that. That's how I am.
I think in that context, when a generation of kids is that ignorant of their recent history, it does a good job of showing what the Pistols were standing for. It's current and it's in the air, partly because I think nothing contemporary is as extreme or as strongly stated as what The Sex Pistols were able to do in their time, in the '70s. I think the reason to [make the film] is that their ideas are still alive: the defense of the right to be an individual, and questioning everything you read, and questioning all the information that's bombarded increasingly at you.
Nothing contemporary is as extreme or as strongly stated as what the Sex Pistols were able to do in their time.
We feel we're the only British group worth exporting since the Sex Pistols, definitely.
I might do a solo album, maybe do covers, or do an acoustic thing. No Sex Pistols tours, nothing!
There was a thing during those times in the '80s where it was like Sex Pistols then Nirvana and nothing in between.
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