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After the break up of The Sex Pistols, guitarist Steve Jones and drummer Paul Cook were looking to form a new band. Various names were mentioned as new bandmates including Bob Geldof, but it was vocalist Jimmy Pursey and bass player Dave Treganna from fellow punk band Sham 69 who were recruited. At what was intended to be Sham's final concert at the Glasgow Apollo Theatre on June 29, 1979 Jones and Cook had joined Sham onstage for the encore of "Pretty Vacant", "White Riot", "If the Kids are United" and "What Have We Got"? This was to be the start of the new band. Time was spent in the studio where two songs were recorded - "Some Play Dirty" and "Natural Born Killer" (which was later reworked as The Professionals' "Kick Down the Doors"). However problems around deciding the name of the new group (Pursey favoured using 'The Sex Pistols'), and arguments within the band meant that it was not to be. On 19 August Jones and Cook walked out of a recording session with Jones saying "It's worse than working with Rotten". The studio recordings have never seen the light of day, but the encore at the Glasgow Apollo was released on Sham's Last Stand and Sham 69 Live in Glasgow 1979. The latter miscredits the Sham song "George Davis is Innocent (also known as "The Cockney Kids are Innocent" and "Everybody's Innocent") as the Sex Pistols' "No One is Innocent". After the dissolution of the band, Cook and Jones went on to form The Professionals, and Pursey moved on to solo projects, later r

Sham's Last Stand: Live in Glasgow July 1979

Natural Born Killer

Complete Professionals
Sham Pistols Live
Live In Glasgow 1979
If The Kids Are United: The Best Of Sham 69
Hurry Up Harry: The Collection
Sham's Last Stand - The Best of Sham 69 Live
The Complete
Last Stand
Live In Glasgow July 1979: Shams Last Stand
What Have We Got