<span>W</span><span>hen Glen Matlock began playing with the Sex Pistols in sweaty UK clubs in the 1970s, the idea of performing a gig at a regal opera house in the Middle East </span><span>40 years later was never part of the equation.</span> <span>Then again, a decade after the last reformation of the seminal punk band, the group's former bassist </span><span>can now be found singing his </span><span>solo tunes in different venues around the world.</span> <span>Earlier this year, </span><span>Matlock played a solo acoustic tour in small UK pubs, while in July, he performed at the </span><span>border between North and South Korea as part of the DMZ Peace Train Music Festival.</span> <span>"Now that was a lot of fun," </span><span>Matlock, 62, recalls.</span> <span>“I teamed up with a South Korean band and we played a bunch of songs, some which people knew and a few new ones. That was a rather interesting experience. I am open to most things, and when it comes to Dubai, I remember spotting it on the plane 30,000 feet up, so I am looking forward to seeing it on the ground this time.”</span> <span>Matlock is fond of the understatement. Speaking from his home in the UK, </span><span>he is unfuss</span><span>y when detailing his time with the Sex Pistols, a band that arguably changed the face of rock music and best embodied the anarchic, </span><span>passionate spirit of </span><span>1970s punk music.</span> <span>Despite the rowdy gigs, which were an equal mix of adrenalin and aggressiveness, Matlock recalls the group’s first year in 1975 as “normal for that time”.</span> <span>It was only after the group’s infamous expletive-filled UK television interview a year later – which resulted in a public furore that made the group notorious household names – that Matlock realised he was part of something greater.</span> <span>“Everything changed after and nothing can really prepare you for that,” he says. “And not everything was for the better. Whatever cracks that was within the group was also magnified.”</span> <span>The </span><span>dissolution of the Sex Pistols in 1978, which was hastened by Matlock's departure the previous year and the enlistment of</span><span> tragic drug addict Sid Vicious as his replacement on bass, has been well and truly covered in a plethora of music books, memoirs and the brilliant 2000 documentary </span><span><em>The Filth and the Fury</em></span><span>.</span> <span>However, I suggest to Matlock that one aspect of </span><span>the Sex Pistols that </span><span>has yet to be fully appreciated </span><span>is his songwriting contribution</span><span> to the group.</span> <span>While the snotty, </span><span>venomous vocals (now a standard for </span><span>punk groups) of </span><span>frontman Johnny Rotten remain</span><span> front and centre of all Sex Pistols songs, it was the melodic nous and open chords </span><span>of Matlock that made classic tracks </span><span><em>Pretty Vacant</em></span><span> and </span><span><em>God Save the Queen</em></span><span> </span><span>much more potent.</span> <span>“Well spotted, and I would say that is a fair appraisal,” Matlock says. “I have always been a fan of the melodic end of the guitar, and what I believe, and still do, is that I am about doing the simple things well. That’s the yardstick I used to write those great songs and which I still use today.”</span> <span>Which brings us to Matlock's present day material. The Dubai Opera crowd are set to be </span><span>among the first people in the world to hear tunes from Matlock's latest solo album, </span><span><em>Good to Go,</em></span><span> which will be released the day after the show.</span> <span>Referring to the catchy groove-ridden single </span><span><em>Keep on Pushing</em></span><span>, Matlock recalls how he was inspired to create the album after attending Bob Dylan's performance at London's Royal Albert Hall five years ago. </span> <span>It was not so much the legendary singer that caught his ear, but his backing band. “I loved what they did and this is what I wanted to do with my album,” he says. “It is a simple album, but there is some really great playing on it. It has rhythm and swing and its own flavour. It will be fun to play live.”</span> <em>Glen Matlock will perform at Dubai Opera, as part of Never Mind the Opera, on Thursday. Tickets begin from Dh150 at www.dubaiopera.com</em> ____________________ <strong>Read more:</strong> ____________________