The Clash
Author of The Clash (Book)
About the Author
Image credit: Photo credit: Aaron, March 21, 2005,
Austin graffito
(flickr user xraystyle)
Austin graffito
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Works by The Clash
Black Market Clash 8 copies
Rock the Casbah 5 copies
The Rise and Fall of the Clash 3 copies
Gates of the west [45 rpm] 2 copies
Combat Rock [Sony Gold Series] 2 copies
Combat Rock + The People's Hall 2 copies
Train in Vain 2 copies
From London To Jamaica 1 copy
Groovy times [45 rpm] 1 copy
The Vanilla Tapes 1 copy
Tommy Gun [Audio Single] 1 copy
Bondage at Bonds (Bootleg) 1 copy
Radio Clash 1 copy
Police On My Back 1 copy
The Clash US Festival 1 copy
Complete control (single) 1 copy
White Riot 1 copy
I Fought the Law 1 copy
Remote Control 1 copy
DVD 1 copy
The Clash Lyrics [booklet] 1 copy
Sound System 1 copy
Interview Picture Disc 1 copy
Deadly Serious 1 copy
Live Revolution Rock DVD 1 copy
Story of the Clash, Vol. 1 1 copy
The Clash On Broadway 1 copy
The Collection 1 copy
The Clash – L’expérience 1 copy
Tommy Gun 1 copy
Clampdown, USA 1 copy
From Here to Eternity 1 copy
Rude boy 1 copy
Associated Works
Live in the European Theatre — Contributor — 1 copy
This sampler goes to track 11 Non-Commercial Music from the Commercial Music Group — Contributor — 1 copy
Life in the Fast Lane: The No M11 Story — Composer — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Clash, The
- Gender
- n/a
- Relationships
- Strummer, Joe (singer)
Jones, Mick (guitarist)
Simonon, Paul (bassist)
Heddon, Topper (drummer) - Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- London, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
I was severely tempted to buy this booo when I saw it at the British Library pop-up ship that went alongside their exhibition on the history of punk, but the hefty price tag and airline luggage restrictions put a quick damper on my need to purchase. Thankfully, I have excellent shopping karma and I scooped the neon-pink tome for a mere $6.00 from Value Village over the summer. Lugging it home down the hill may have been a trial, but it was so worth it. Like the Clash themselves, the book is show more a haphazard yet particularly arranged collection of insights, wit, and memories that recall their history from the beginnings in London to the eventual breakup from “creative differences.” I’m still only a burgeoning Clash fan (owning a mere 2 albums and constantly forgetting exactly which punk anthems are in their wheelhouse), but the more of them I seem to get the more I definitely want. Long live punk and long live the Clash! show less
Product Details
* Audio CD (January 25, 2000)
* Original Release Date: 2000
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
* Label: Sony
* Catalog Number: 63882
* ASIN: B00004BZ04
* Average Customer Review: based on 75 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #5,302 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #6,691 in Music
Listen to Samples
To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more show more information.
1. Janie Jones Listen Listen
2. Remote Control Listen Listen
3. I'm So Bored With The U.S.A. Listen Listen
4. White Riot Listen Listen
5. Hate & War Listen Listen
6. What's My Name Listen
7. Deny Listen
8. London's Burning Listen
9. Career Opportunities Listen
10. Cheat Listen
11. Protex Blue Listen
12. Police & Thieves Listen
13. 48 Hours Listen
14. Garageland Listen
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The Clash's label didn't believe this debut would sell in the United States. By the time CBS got around to releasing a stateside version of the U.K. album, the British original had become an import hit. While the U.S. release contains outstanding tracks such as "Complete Control" and "Clash City Rockers," it's still missing "Cheat," "Protex Blue," "48 Hours," and "Deny." No matter which version you prefer, The Clash is a fearsome listen. Joe Strummer reviles the system at every turn, while Mick Jones wields his guitar like a switchblade. Yet even on their debut there are hints of future musical adventures. Junior Murvin's "Police & Thieves" is solid reggae, while "White Man in Hammersmith Palais" expertly interpolates the reggae groove into their punk attack. --Rob O'Connor
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15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
Clash paints a picture of 70's working class Britain, March 20, 2004
Reviewer: Daniel J. Hamlow (Farmington, NM USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
If not the most popular of the wave of classic British punk, then certainly the most politically radical. The quartet consisted of Mick Jones, Joe Strummer, (ex-101ers), bassist Paul Simonon, and drummer Nicky Headon. The group's name came from a word found in London tabloid describing British class and race riots in the 1970's Britain. Songs from their classic debut album do just that. Highlights follow.
The visceral hard-edged guitar and drums and in-your-face vocals, is demonstrated with "Clash City Rockers." "I'm So Bored With The USA" takes on the US military and political establishment, US foreign policy, and political corruption, with a Sex Pistols-like guitar from "Pretty Vacant." But despite being bored with the USA, "what can I do?" underlies helplessness of overpowering US hegemonism.
Punk power was demonstrated in two ways in "Remote Control." The song denounces the power of government and big business. However, CBS Records released this song without their permission. While this song isn't as hard-driving as others, it does have some worthy guitar riffs.
The group lashed back at CBS with the hard "Complete Control." The issue about control of single releases is evident here, but the song's also about how the fan-band interraction is hampered by security throwing the fans out. At the end, Strummer screams out "Total C-o-n control-that means you!" meaning his fans.
After a police siren, a grinding, fast-paced guitar sets the pace for "White Riot," calling for the white working class to stand up for their rights just like the blacks had at Notting Hill Gate. School is a place "where they teach you how to be thick" (true!) and the rich have all the power.
One of the best songs they put out is the reggae-influenced "White Man In Hammersmith Palais," which is a nod to black culture and people, who fight for something instead of among themselves like punkers, but also details the harassment they get from the police and army: "The British army is waiting out there/An' it weighs fifteen hundred tons." The solution to their poverty: some wealth distribution from some Robin Hood.
"London's burning! london's burning!" Anthemic guitars, but no, it's not about a riot but how London is burning with boredom, burned out with traffic jams and the usual subway ride and becoming vegged out on the tube.
This reading of the Crickets' "I Fought The Law" (no, Bobby Fuller did NOT originally do it!) is the best rendition I've heard, with the power guitar and galloping and thundering drums.
Breakin' rocks in the hot sun. Very apropros for the anti-copper attitude of the time.
The first of two job songs. The boyfriend of "Janie Jones" hates his boring job, with a neverending in-tray and a jerk of a boss, leading to a confrontation: "This time he's gonna really tell the boss/Gonna really let him know exactly how he feels." And one of my favourite songs, "Career Opportunities" is about economic dead ends, with words growled at breakneck pace: "They offered me the office, offered me the Shop/They said i'd better take anything they'd got." Indeed, "Career opportunities are the ones that never knock/Every job they offer you is to keep you out the dock."
The condemnation on racism of "Police And Thieves" has reggae-influenced guitar riffs and vocals and predicts a cataclysmic result from the police and thieves who are scaring and fighting "the nation with their guns and ammunition."
Youth identity and feeling alienated and not belonging is the theme behind "What's My Name," be it at home, being in trouble with the law, leading to burglary.
An all-out assault of unleashed energy, the Clash's debut album demonstrates their taking social and socialist realism to artistic and political levels. show less
* Audio CD (January 25, 2000)
* Original Release Date: 2000
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
* Label: Sony
* Catalog Number: 63882
* ASIN: B00004BZ04
* Average Customer Review: based on 75 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #5,302 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #6,691 in Music
Listen to Samples
To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that sample. Visit our audio help page for more show more information.
1. Janie Jones Listen Listen
2. Remote Control Listen Listen
3. I'm So Bored With The U.S.A. Listen Listen
4. White Riot Listen Listen
5. Hate & War Listen Listen
6. What's My Name Listen
7. Deny Listen
8. London's Burning Listen
9. Career Opportunities Listen
10. Cheat Listen
11. Protex Blue Listen
12. Police & Thieves Listen
13. 48 Hours Listen
14. Garageland Listen
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The Clash's label didn't believe this debut would sell in the United States. By the time CBS got around to releasing a stateside version of the U.K. album, the British original had become an import hit. While the U.S. release contains outstanding tracks such as "Complete Control" and "Clash City Rockers," it's still missing "Cheat," "Protex Blue," "48 Hours," and "Deny." No matter which version you prefer, The Clash is a fearsome listen. Joe Strummer reviles the system at every turn, while Mick Jones wields his guitar like a switchblade. Yet even on their debut there are hints of future musical adventures. Junior Murvin's "Police & Thieves" is solid reggae, while "White Man in Hammersmith Palais" expertly interpolates the reggae groove into their punk attack. --Rob O'Connor
Tag this product (What's this?)
Your tags: Add your first tag
Spotlight Reviews
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Search Customer Reviews
15 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
Clash paints a picture of 70's working class Britain, March 20, 2004
Reviewer: Daniel J. Hamlow (Farmington, NM USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
If not the most popular of the wave of classic British punk, then certainly the most politically radical. The quartet consisted of Mick Jones, Joe Strummer, (ex-101ers), bassist Paul Simonon, and drummer Nicky Headon. The group's name came from a word found in London tabloid describing British class and race riots in the 1970's Britain. Songs from their classic debut album do just that. Highlights follow.
The visceral hard-edged guitar and drums and in-your-face vocals, is demonstrated with "Clash City Rockers." "I'm So Bored With The USA" takes on the US military and political establishment, US foreign policy, and political corruption, with a Sex Pistols-like guitar from "Pretty Vacant." But despite being bored with the USA, "what can I do?" underlies helplessness of overpowering US hegemonism.
Punk power was demonstrated in two ways in "Remote Control." The song denounces the power of government and big business. However, CBS Records released this song without their permission. While this song isn't as hard-driving as others, it does have some worthy guitar riffs.
The group lashed back at CBS with the hard "Complete Control." The issue about control of single releases is evident here, but the song's also about how the fan-band interraction is hampered by security throwing the fans out. At the end, Strummer screams out "Total C-o-n control-that means you!" meaning his fans.
After a police siren, a grinding, fast-paced guitar sets the pace for "White Riot," calling for the white working class to stand up for their rights just like the blacks had at Notting Hill Gate. School is a place "where they teach you how to be thick" (true!) and the rich have all the power.
One of the best songs they put out is the reggae-influenced "White Man In Hammersmith Palais," which is a nod to black culture and people, who fight for something instead of among themselves like punkers, but also details the harassment they get from the police and army: "The British army is waiting out there/An' it weighs fifteen hundred tons." The solution to their poverty: some wealth distribution from some Robin Hood.
"London's burning! london's burning!" Anthemic guitars, but no, it's not about a riot but how London is burning with boredom, burned out with traffic jams and the usual subway ride and becoming vegged out on the tube.
This reading of the Crickets' "I Fought The Law" (no, Bobby Fuller did NOT originally do it!) is the best rendition I've heard, with the power guitar and galloping and thundering drums.
Breakin' rocks in the hot sun. Very apropros for the anti-copper attitude of the time.
The first of two job songs. The boyfriend of "Janie Jones" hates his boring job, with a neverending in-tray and a jerk of a boss, leading to a confrontation: "This time he's gonna really tell the boss/Gonna really let him know exactly how he feels." And one of my favourite songs, "Career Opportunities" is about economic dead ends, with words growled at breakneck pace: "They offered me the office, offered me the Shop/They said i'd better take anything they'd got." Indeed, "Career opportunities are the ones that never knock/Every job they offer you is to keep you out the dock."
The condemnation on racism of "Police And Thieves" has reggae-influenced guitar riffs and vocals and predicts a cataclysmic result from the police and thieves who are scaring and fighting "the nation with their guns and ammunition."
Youth identity and feeling alienated and not belonging is the theme behind "What's My Name," be it at home, being in trouble with the law, leading to burglary.
An all-out assault of unleashed energy, the Clash's debut album demonstrates their taking social and socialist realism to artistic and political levels. show less
Product Details
* Audio CD (January 25, 2000)
* Original Release Date: 1982
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
* Label: Sony
* Catalog Number: 63896
* ASIN: B00004C4L3
* Other Editions: Audio CD | Audio Cassette
* Average Customer Review: based on 96 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #5,611 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #1,811 in Music
Listen to Samples
To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that show more sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
1. Know Your Rights Listen Listen
2. Car Jamming Listen Listen
3. Should I Stay Or Should I Go? Listen Listen
4. Rock The Casbah Listen Listen
5. Red Angel Dragnet Listen Listen
6. Straight To Hell Listen Listen
7. Overpowered By Funk Listen Listen
8. Atom Tan Listen Listen
9. Sean Flynn Listen Listen
10. Ghetto Defendant Listen Listen
11. Inoculated City Listen Listen
12. Death Is A Star Listen Listen
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The final album by the Clash's original Strummer/Jones incarnation is also their most inconsistent. There were musical and ideological rifts developing within the band, and it shows: the experimentation is almost as wild as Sandanista!'s (and the biggest experiment is heading away from their punk shiftiness and into a commercial rock sound), but they seem to be enjoying it less. The band's stabs at funk and poetry aren't terribly successful, but it all came together for two massive hits: "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" has the biggest, stupidest, most perfect riff this side of "Louie Louie," and "Rock the Casbah" pulls the band's politics, fine-honed sarcasm, and saw-toothed guitar sound into the service of a dance-floor beat. --Douglas Wolk
Product Description
Digitally remastered from the original production master tapes, this a reissue of the 1982 & fifth album by 'the only band that matters'. Features the original artwork and all 12 of the original tracks, including the top 50 hit 'Should I Stay Or Should I Go' and the top 10 smash 'Rock The Casbah'. 'Combat Rock' was the English new/ punk rock group's biggest album in the U.S., reaching #7 at the time. The booklet folds out with the lyrics on one side & the full color poster of the group drinking Asian bottle of Coca-Cola that was included with --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
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Your tags: Add your first tag
Customers tagged this item with
First tag: Punk (Sheri on Dec 18, 2005)
Last tag: Punk
Punk (1)
Customers who tagged this item
* Sheri
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
amazing, July 20, 2005
Reviewer: race_of_doom (USA) - See all my reviews
I usually hate it when people cry "underrated!!" like it's going to do anything, but I feel that "Combat Rock" (as well as "Sandinista") deserve the complaint.
The first Clash record I seriously fell in love with was "Sandinista." It was wildly experimental, fun, and almost always consistently interesting. It was after that album that I started listening to their more appreciated work (the two albums -- you know which ones).
What stopped me from listening to this album was the surplus of negative reviews and opinions attached to it. People seem to like it even less than "Sandinista," and there are a lot of people who find that triple album repulsive.
But I finally gave it a listen. "Know Your Rights" sounds like a tossed off one-note experiment at first. I was a bit disappointed. But by "Car Jamming," something happened.
I really, really liked it! It's so catchy and weird at the same time. In fact, that goes for the entire album, minus the more "normal" hits -- catchy and absolutely weird. (Sell out? Pfft.) Take the last track for example. "Death Is a Star." Does that even sound like the Clash?
No, not really. In fact, not at all. But for what it is, it's not half bad! That's the beauty of The Clash circa "Sandinista!" and "Combat Rock" -- they tried so many genres and almost always succeeded in some various way. And if they didn't, it was at least an interesting failure.
This one is like "Sandinista!" edited down to a single disc, making it an extremely cohesive album. In fact, it's probably their most cohesive album. Even more so than the perfection of "London Calling."
Hell, even the hits ("Should I Stay or Should I Go" and "Rock the Casbah") are great. They're not as overplayed as some on here make them out to be.
Every single song has something to offer. "Inoculated City" is perfect pop, "Overpowered by Funk" is The Clash doing (good) disco, "Ghetto Defendant" is an interesting mess of tense drumming, seemingly computerized voices and tight rhythms.
And last but certainly not least, we get "Straight to Hell" on here. What's not to like? show less
* Audio CD (January 25, 2000)
* Original Release Date: 1982
* Number of Discs: 1
* Format: Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered
* Label: Sony
* Catalog Number: 63896
* ASIN: B00004C4L3
* Other Editions: Audio CD | Audio Cassette
* Average Customer Review: based on 96 reviews. (Write a review.)
* Amazon.com Sales Rank: #5,611 in Music (See Top Sellers in Music)
Yesterday: #1,811 in Music
Listen to Samples
To hear a song sample, click on "Listen" by that show more sample. Visit our audio help page for more information.
1. Know Your Rights Listen Listen
2. Car Jamming Listen Listen
3. Should I Stay Or Should I Go? Listen Listen
4. Rock The Casbah Listen Listen
5. Red Angel Dragnet Listen Listen
6. Straight To Hell Listen Listen
7. Overpowered By Funk Listen Listen
8. Atom Tan Listen Listen
9. Sean Flynn Listen Listen
10. Ghetto Defendant Listen Listen
11. Inoculated City Listen Listen
12. Death Is A Star Listen Listen
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
The final album by the Clash's original Strummer/Jones incarnation is also their most inconsistent. There were musical and ideological rifts developing within the band, and it shows: the experimentation is almost as wild as Sandanista!'s (and the biggest experiment is heading away from their punk shiftiness and into a commercial rock sound), but they seem to be enjoying it less. The band's stabs at funk and poetry aren't terribly successful, but it all came together for two massive hits: "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" has the biggest, stupidest, most perfect riff this side of "Louie Louie," and "Rock the Casbah" pulls the band's politics, fine-honed sarcasm, and saw-toothed guitar sound into the service of a dance-floor beat. --Douglas Wolk
Product Description
Digitally remastered from the original production master tapes, this a reissue of the 1982 & fifth album by 'the only band that matters'. Features the original artwork and all 12 of the original tracks, including the top 50 hit 'Should I Stay Or Should I Go' and the top 10 smash 'Rock The Casbah'. 'Combat Rock' was the English new/ punk rock group's biggest album in the U.S., reaching #7 at the time. The booklet folds out with the lyrics on one side & the full color poster of the group drinking Asian bottle of Coca-Cola that was included with --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.
Tag this product (What's this?)
Your tags: Add your first tag
Customers tagged this item with
First tag: Punk (Sheri on Dec 18, 2005)
Last tag: Punk
Punk (1)
Customers who tagged this item
* Sheri
Spotlight Reviews
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Search Customer Reviews
8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
amazing, July 20, 2005
Reviewer: race_of_doom (USA) - See all my reviews
I usually hate it when people cry "underrated!!" like it's going to do anything, but I feel that "Combat Rock" (as well as "Sandinista") deserve the complaint.
The first Clash record I seriously fell in love with was "Sandinista." It was wildly experimental, fun, and almost always consistently interesting. It was after that album that I started listening to their more appreciated work (the two albums -- you know which ones).
What stopped me from listening to this album was the surplus of negative reviews and opinions attached to it. People seem to like it even less than "Sandinista," and there are a lot of people who find that triple album repulsive.
But I finally gave it a listen. "Know Your Rights" sounds like a tossed off one-note experiment at first. I was a bit disappointed. But by "Car Jamming," something happened.
I really, really liked it! It's so catchy and weird at the same time. In fact, that goes for the entire album, minus the more "normal" hits -- catchy and absolutely weird. (Sell out? Pfft.) Take the last track for example. "Death Is a Star." Does that even sound like the Clash?
No, not really. In fact, not at all. But for what it is, it's not half bad! That's the beauty of The Clash circa "Sandinista!" and "Combat Rock" -- they tried so many genres and almost always succeeded in some various way. And if they didn't, it was at least an interesting failure.
This one is like "Sandinista!" edited down to a single disc, making it an extremely cohesive album. In fact, it's probably their most cohesive album. Even more so than the perfection of "London Calling."
Hell, even the hits ("Should I Stay or Should I Go" and "Rock the Casbah") are great. They're not as overplayed as some on here make them out to be.
Every single song has something to offer. "Inoculated City" is perfect pop, "Overpowered by Funk" is The Clash doing (good) disco, "Ghetto Defendant" is an interesting mess of tense drumming, seemingly computerized voices and tight rhythms.
And last but certainly not least, we get "Straight to Hell" on here. What's not to like? show less
Selected interviews by the band chosen as memoir text for this large format photo book. Starts with the band members and then proceeds to the albums and tour legs. Strummer was born in Turkey and lived a few early years in Mexico, so he knows some Spanish. The Clash are direct descendants of the Sex Pistols and Peter Hook of Joy Division says that he copied Simonon's long bass strap for playing onstage. Book covers the genesis of the Sandinista album which happens to be my personal favorite.
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Statistics
- Works
- 89
- Also by
- 6
- Members
- 960
- Popularity
- #26,837
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 12
- ISBNs
- 31
- Languages
- 5
- Favorited
- 1

































