# February 5th in Music History: The Day Punk Exploded Into America's Living Rooms
**February 5, 1977 – The Sex Pistols Sign with A&M Records... For Six Days**
On this date in 1977, one of the most spectacular train wrecks in music industry history began when the Sex Pistols signed a contract with A&M Records outside Buckingham Palace in London. The irony of Britain's most notorious punk band putting pen to paper in front of the Queen's residence wasn't lost on anyone – it was perfectly on-brand for a group that had already been dropped by EMI just months earlier.
The signing ceremony was pure chaos. Johnny Rotten, Sid Vicious, Steve Jones, and Paul Cook showed up dressed in their punk finest, and the day quickly descended into drunken mayhem. According to legend, the band members proceeded to get absolutely smashed, with Sid Vicious allegedly vomiting in the A&M offices' bathroom and various members insulting staff and behaving abominably throughout the building on Cromwell Road.
What makes this story absolutely legendary is that A&M Records, a label known for easy-listening acts like The Carpenters and Peter Frampton, held the contract for exactly **six days**. By February 11th, A&M had torn up the agreement, making it one of the shortest major label deals in history. The label agreed to pay the band £40,000 to go away – essentially paying them more money to NOT be on their roster than many bands earned from actually releasing records.
The cancelled single "God Save the Queen" – which would have been the Pistols' first release on A&M – became an instant collector's item. Only a handful of test pressings survived before A&M destroyed the 25,000 copies they'd already manufactured. Those surviving copies are now worth thousands of pounds.
This incident perfectly captured everything punk rock represented: chaos, anti-establishment fury, and the complete incompatibility between corporate music industry sensibilities and the raw, uncompromising spirit of punk. The Sex Pistols weren't just making music; they were cultural arsonists, and record labels kept handing them matches.
The band would eventually land at Virgin Records, where "God Save the Queen" was finally released in time for Queen Elizabeth II's Silver Jubilee, reaching number two on the UK charts (though conspiracy theories persist that it actually hit number one but was kept off the top spot for political reasons).
This February 5th signing represents a pivotal moment when punk rock proved it couldn't – and wouldn't – be tamed by the mainstream music industry. The Sex Pistols showed that you could be too punk for punk rock's own good, getting fired by your record label before your first single even hit the shelves. It was performance art disguised as a business deal, and it burned bright and fast, leaving nothing but scorched earth and legendary stories in its wake.
The whole affair remains a testament to punk's chaotic spirit and serves as a reminder that sometimes the best rock and roll stories are about the records that almost happened rather than the ones that did.
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