Billie Joe Armstrong Joins Sex Pistols and Frank Carter for Explosive “Anarchy in the U.K.” at Tons of Rock
In a moment that felt like punk history folding in on itself, Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong stormed the stage with the Sex Pistols and Frank Carter at Norway’s Tons of Rock Festival on June 26. The surprise collaboration ignited Oslo’s Ekeberg Park as three generations of punk royalty tore through a blistering rendition of “Anarchy in the U.K.,” leaving fans stunned, elated, and scrambling for their phones.
The Sex Pistols, now fronted by the ever-ferocious Frank Carter, had just wrapped a 14-song set when Armstrong emerged, grinning and wearing a leather jacket. What followed was less a performance and more a riotous celebration of punk’s enduring spirit. Arm in arm with Carter, Armstrong led the crowd in a thunderous singalong, his voice snarling through the iconic chorus as if he’d been born to scream it.
Green Day had headlined the festival the same night, sharing the bill with heavyweights like Muse, Avenged Sevenfold, and Kaizers Orchestra. But it was this unannounced cameo that stole the headlines. Armstrong, visibly moved, was later spotted backstage clutching the Pistols’ setlist like a sacred relic.
The performance wasn’t just a fan-service stunt. For Armstrong, it was deeply personal. In a 2022 interview, he described Never Mind the Bollocks as “one of the first punk records I ever heard,” calling it “perfect” in its rawness and rebellion. That reverence was palpable as he traded verses with Carter, who’s been helming the Pistols’ recent reunion shows in the absence of John Lydon.
Speaking of Lydon — the former frontman has made no secret of his disdain for both Green Day and the Pistols’ current lineup. In past interviews, he’s called Green Day “turgid” and dismissed the reunion tour as “karaoke.” But if the Oslo crowd was any indication, punk’s future doesn’t need his blessing.
The Tons of Rock Festival, now Norway’s largest rock and metal gathering, has become a proving ground for genre-defying moments like this. With a lineup that also included Megadeth, Dream Theater, Weezer, and Deafheaven, the festival proved that punk’s pulse still beats loud — and sometimes, unexpectedly, in unison.

For fans of Green Day, the Sex Pistols, or just good old-fashioned chaos, this was more than a setlist surprise. It was a reminder that punk isn’t a museum piece — it’s a living, snarling, stage-crashing force. And on that Oslo night, it roared.
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Billie Joe Armstrong Joins Sex Pistols and Frank Carter for Explosive “Anarchy in the U.K.” at Tons of Rock@RockNews
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