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Rare Sex Pistols 7-inch single sells for $22,000

The Sex Pistols' anthem <i>God Save The Queen</i> has achieved a record prince for a 7-inch single.

The Sex Pistols' anthem God Save The Queen has achieved a record prince for a 7-inch single. Photo: Getty

A rare Sex Pistols 7-inch vinyl record has become the most expensive seven-inch single sold on Discogs, an online music marketplace.

The God Save The Queen single sold for $US15,882 ($22,249) in November 2018.

Previously, the highest-valued record sold on Discogs was The Beatles’ Love Me Do, which was bought for $US14,757 in March 2018.

Both pale in comparison to the $US300,000 Jack White spent on an Elvis Presley test recording from 1948.

The Sex Pistols originally signed to A&M Records in 1977.

After an intoxicated altercation in the record label’s offices following the signing, the English punk rock band’s contract was reportedly shredded after only six days.

The single sold for more than $22,000. Photo: Discogs

A&M Records had pressed 25,000 copies of God Save The Queen in May 1977, but today only nine copies are believed to exist.

For that reason, it is considered one of the rarest punk rock records off all time.

Originally comprised of lead vocalist Johnny Rotten, drummer Paul Cook, guitarist Steve Jones and bassist Glen Matlock, the band replaced Matlock with the controversial Sid Vicious in early 1977.

Before their breakup in January 1978, the band only released four singles and one album, Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols.

The single God Save The Queen attacked citizens’ devotion to the English monarch and social conformity.

In February 2006, the Sex Pistols were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, but the musicians refused to attend the initiation.

-AAP

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