Tag Archives: the clash

#1134: The Clash – Rock the Casbah

The Clash, The Clash, The Clash. Now, I appreciate the band and their influence and I understand why people would be a huge, huge fans of their music. I did revisit the London Calling album some months ago and did think that it was where Pete Doherty and Carl Barât got their whole shtick from for their Libertines stuff. Seemed so obvious while listening through it. But for me, The Clash are a group that I’ve never caught the fever over to start worshipping them. They do have some great songs, though. In fact, here’s one right now. ‘Rock the Casbah’. At least, in my opinion, it is. As one of the band’s most well-known singles, some may think it’s overplayed and they’ve heard it too much. I’m not one of those people.

Unlike the majority of Clash songs where songwriting duo Joe Strummer and Mick Jones would create the music and then continue to develop the songs with the rest of the band, ‘Rock the Casbah’ was brought into the studio almost completely finished by drummer Topper Headon. He had a piano idea in mind for some time. When one day he came into the studio and found no one there, he recorded the drums, bass guitar and piano. Strummer, Jones and regular bassist Paul Simonon came in and were impressed with what Headon had got down. After not-so-subtly rejecting Headon’s original lyrics for the track, Strummer wrote his own – detailing an ongoing situation where a king calls a ban on Western music, much to his people’s annoyance. They go ahead and play it anyway, because they just don’t care. We’re meant to imagine that this is all happening in the Middle East somewhere, most likely Iran, hence the mentions of ‘ragas’, ‘minarets’ the ‘Sharif’ and so on and so forth.

I think it was after seeing the video a few times on MTV2, or some other music video channel, that I thought the song was cool enough to add to the personal library. Upon finding out how the song was made, I always thought it was wrong how the bass guitar was mixed so low in the version that ended up on Combat Rock. Luckily, the mix used when it was reissued some years later (and in the music video above) altered that choice and pushed it forward. How Strummer sings “The Sheikh he drive his CADILLAAAC” makes me chuckle. He really hacks out the “cadillac”. You can hear a digital wristwatch alarm at one point during the track. I don’t have much else to day. I enjoy this one a lot. A shame that Topper Headon wasn’t able to enjoy the success the song he made got. He left the band before the song was released because of a slight addiction to heroin and had to witness the music video the band filmed without him with another drummer in his place.

#758: The Clash – London Calling

Try as I might I could never get into The Clash’s London Calling. The double album of theirs that was released in 1979 that is, and not its title track which is the subject of this post. I think the song is one of the greatest album openers you could have. Though I understand why it’s held in such acclaim. For their previous two albums the band had been delivering meat and potatoes three chord social observation punk rock. With London Calling the band decided they could make any type of music they wanted to: reggae, ska, pop, lounge jazz – it’s all on there. The album has its classics: ‘Lost in the Supermarket’, ‘The Guns of Brixton’, ‘Clampdown’. All signatures tunes from there. But as a whole, I could never vibe with it. It really doesn’t matter in the great scheme of things.

I’ve always enjoyed the title track though. Its stomping introduction with its minor key and thick bass give off this sense of some impending doom, and this is only further emphasised by singer and guitarist Joe Strummer’s vocal about police brutality, casual drug usage, and the city of London drowning because of a flood in the River Thames. Closer listening to this track has always brought out new things in the mix that I never noticed before. Like how much guitar feedback there is throughout. Or the panning of Mick Jone’s yelp just before the strange reverse double guitar solo. And the Morse code that spells out ‘S-O-S’ in the fade out. There’s plenty of small audio tricks and snippets in the production that make the song that more engaging to hear each time you listen.

This song’s been one that’s always just been there for me. I definitely came to know the song through its music video which shows the band performing the track on a boat on the Thames in the rain with huge floodlights shining on them. Made an impression on me as a younger person, however old I was when I first encountered it.

My iPod #191: The Clash – Clash City Rockers

 

British punk rock at its very finest. Not much should have to be said about The Clash. I will assume you already know what it is, who the members are/were, the importance of their music. If you don’t I can’t elaborate enough on how much you are missing.

“Clash City Rockers” is… obviously a track by The Clash. It came out as a single in 1978, but was not originally released on an album. The United States sorted that out by putting it as the opening track on the country’s version of the band’s debut album.

The first and numerous following times I heard it was when it played randomly whilst I was playing the DS version of “Tony Hawk’s Proving Ground”. That’s a good game. Very addictive. Got that for my 13th birthday. The DS version actually got better ratings then the previous gen consoles so don’t judge me.

I always think of the track as the band’s ‘theme tune’. Even though they grew out of the ‘simple’ punk and went on to explore further sounds and influences, it just captures the whole essence of what the band is.