The Clash
"The only band that matters" - so the often-used cliché goes whenever The Clash are being discussed. While this was somewhat hyperbolic (and one suspects, self-perpetuated), the mythology around this seminal UK punk group always had a certain amount of truth in it - guitarist Mick Jones' West London high-rise tower block upbringing, bassist Paul Simonon's initial lack of ability, drummer Topper Headon's unpredictable temper, Joe Strummer's middle-class upbringing and so on. Well, you know what they said - well some of it was true.
For
me, the first Clash album was one of my first prolonged experiences of
punk (after The Sex Pistols and The Ramones). A friend and I drove from
Buckinghamshire to Manchester one weekend and played it continually,
over and over again, revelling in the sheer visceral excitement of those
thirty-five minutes of tinny guitars, fast metronomic drums and
slurred, garbled vocals.
Whether
singer Joe Strummer's pseudo-political rants meant anything much at all
didn't really matter. They sounded as if they were of world-shattering
importance, and that suited me fine as an angry, cause-driven eighteen
year-old desperate to get some fist-pumping in. The night of Friday 22 December 1978 at Aylesbury Friars when
the lights went out and four shadowy figures loped on to the stage and
suddenly burst, lights flashing all over the place, into Safe European Home was
simply one of the most exciting moments of my life. For details of the
gig, check out the excellent Friars, Aylesbury website.
Whether
The Clash were the real thing or whether they were a bunch of contrived
sloganeers is missing the point regarding their cultural importance to
music between 1977-82. Their influence goes way beyond those five great
years and five diverse albums (only the first and parts of the second
were genuinely punk). The number of subsequent artists influenced and
inspired by them is endless.
That
said, there were no doubt many people in the same period who carried on
listening to prog rock, Led Zeppelin or disco as if The Clash never
mattered at all.
Joe Strummer had this to say -
"I
knew something was up, so I went out in the crowd which was fairly
sparse. And I saw the future right in front of me. It was immediately
clear. Pub rock was, 'Hello, you bunch of drunks, I'm gonna play these
boogies and I hope you like them.' The Pistols came out that Tuesday
evening and their attitude was, 'Here's our tunes, and we couldn't give a
flying fuck whether you like them or not. In fact, we're gonna play
them even if you fucking hate them".
Anyway, on to the only albums that matter....Were
there three better albums to come out of the punk explosion than the
first three from The Clash? Arguably not. Initially here I cover those
three great albums that remain very much part of my life - the
ground-breaking, visceral debut in its essential UK release format; the
underrated Give 'Em Enough Rope; and the critics' favourite in London
Calling - yes, I was there too....Now then - let's speed around under the yellow lights....
Click on the images below for my in-depth album reviews -
| The Clash | Give/Enough Rope | London Calling | Sandinista! |
| Combat Rock | Clash Hits Back | Joe Strummer solo | Big Audio Dynamite |
| Cut The Crap | Here To Eternity | Shea Stadium | Cl'sh Goes Jamaican |













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