I can't find out anything on this, I'm sure Paul was the bass player from the start.
He was but Mick did the recording on the album.
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I can't find out anything on this, I'm sure Paul was the bass player from the start.
Can't think of a better place to start than Complete Control for a taste of the raw dynamic power of the band
Cracking vid includes some superb 70's footage incl their magnificent appearance at the Rock Against Racism festival at Victoria Park, Hackney in 1978.
Joe Strummer RIP
Sometimes overlooked, but The Clash are due huge credit for turning a lot of punk kids on to less commercially known reggae artists like Mikey Dread and Junior Murvin. Their feel for the music and the feeling behind it was instinctive.
Rock Against Racism festival at Victoria Park, Hackney in 1978 - I went to that with my best friend, think the march started at Hyde Park, we thought it was the other way round and lazed around drinking wine 'til everyone turned up. Don't remember it being so crowded, but was pretty drunk by that time
My first memory of that day was Patrick Fitzgerald getting about 30 seconds into his gentle set then being hit square in the face by a can of lager thrown by some feral c*** skinhead down the front. Hated those low IQ Nazi scum then, hate them to this day. Pure trash.
Sometimes overlooked, but The Clash are due huge credit for turning a lot of punk kids on to less commercially known reggae artists like Mikey Dread and Junior Murvin. Their feel for the music and the feeling behind it was instinctive.
Can't think of a better place to start than Complete Control for a taste of the raw dynamic power of the band
Cracking vid includes some superb 70's footage incl their magnificent appearance at the Rock Against Racism festival at Victoria Park, Hackney in 1978.
Joe Strummer RIP
Very little. I actually saw the Jam at the Embassy Cinema on Western road in 77. They had the same energy as The Clash and Dr Feelgood but they were a mod band. Not that the (punk) audience cared. To be honest the Jam were treated with a bit of suspicion (it was extremely tribal back then) ny some because they were not from actual London, and failed to trot out the 'anarchy' psycobabbel (Weller made some comment in Sounds about possibly voting Conservative at the time, which raised eyebrows). Ironically, aside from the first album, The Clash were really a rock band. There, I said it.
studio150;8805270. My copy of The Clash on vinyl never jumped said:Neither did mine. First album I ever bought and my favourite Clash album.
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Just wondering if I should stay or should I go from this thread
I am quite impressed that a few of you have "listened" to Sandinista, I am not sure I ever got to putting side 3 on the turntable..I found it hard work if I am honest.
I saw The Clash many, many times.
My first experience of them was at Cambridge Corn Exchange in November 1977, and it's fair to say that as an impressionable 15 year old they changed my life. I got the first album for Christmas that year, and set about buying all of the singles.
Then when they toured Give Em Enough Rope me and my mates went to all the gigs within easy reach of Cambridge. I loved them more than any other band back then, they were unbelievably powerful and unlike [MENTION=1200]Harry Wilson's tackle[/MENTION] I believed (and still believe) that they were genuinely switched on, politically, and never sold out in their beliefs through their actions.
When London Calling came out I was waiting outside Andy's Records on release date. Me and my friends all then went home and listened to it all day before meeting up in the pub to talk about it. It was an 'event', and meant so much to us. It is still one of my favourite albums of all time, often my favourite.
This was the time when they were at their best live, in my opinion. Others didn't like that they had become more accomplished, less 'punk', but I could not disagree more.
Sandinista was a disappointment when it came out - a bit of a mess, no real structure, seemingly. But as time passed I grew to appreciate it more. Reviews at the time said that if they had been more selective there was a hell of a single album in there. I'd say that there is one hell of a double album.
Then Combat Rock...despite a few corkers I have never warmed to this album as I have the others. Straight to Hell is a stone cold classic and Rock the Casbah/Should I Stay are pleasant enough, but the rest of the album remains hugely disappointing in my eyes, given what had come before.
They were still superb live at this point.
Then Mick was thrown out...
I was at university in London at the time and a guy I knew vaguely called Greg White came into the Students' Union Bar one night in a gorgeous woollen tartan suit. He told us all he was now to be known as Vince, as he had auditioned and been accepted into the band, and Joe Strummer had told him he didn't want a Greg in the band (or something like that).
They released Cut the Crap - we so wanted it to be good. Sadly it wasn't - a monstrosity of an album, and the only recording by the band that I didn't buy. And live...they were like a pantomime tribute band. It was crushing.
Meanwhile, Mick went off and formed Big Audio Dynamite - they were wonderful live and released at least three great albums.
Favourite Clash songs? So many,but White Man (in Hammersmith Palais), Straight to Hell, Stay Free, Lost in The Supermarket, Spanish Bombs, Clampdown, The Magnificent Seven, Complete Control, Somebody Got Murdered, Gates of the West, Bankrobber and Safe European all come to mind immediately, as well as superb covers like Police on my Back, I fought the Law, Pressure Drop and Poilice and Thieves.
What a band.
I remember buying the London Calling 7” when it came out .
Should have got the 12" single for Armagideon Time (Version), one of the best B sides ever
Rock Against Racism festival at Victoria Park, Hackney in 1978 - I went to that with my best friend, think the march started at Hyde Park, we thought it was the other way round and lazed around drinking wine 'til everyone turned up. Don't remember it being so crowded, but was pretty drunk by that time