The Clash |
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Released: April 8, 1977 (UK) Released: July 26, 1979 (US) Peak: 126 US, 12 UK, -- CN, -- AU Sales (in millions): 1.0 US, 0.16 UK, 1.16 world (includes US and UK) Genre: punk rock |
Tracks (UK version): Song Title (Writers) [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.
* Only on U.K. version. Tracks (U.S. version):
** only on US version Total Running Time: 35:18 (UK version), 43:20 (U.S. version) The Players:
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Rating:4.478 out of 5.00 (average of 29 ratings)
Quotable:“Pure, unadulterated rage and fury, fueled by passion for both rock & roll and revolution” – Stephen Thomas Erlewine, AllMusic.comAwards:(Click on award to learn more). |
The Group’s Debut/The U.S. VersionThe Clash formed in London in 1976. The group consisted of singer and guitarist Joe Strummer, guitarist Mick Jones, bassist Paul Simonon, and drummer Nicky "Topper" Headon. Along with the Sex Pistols, they were considered one of the fundamental bands in the shaping of punk rock in the UK. The Clash “proved to be rabble-rousers” JSH and their self-titled debut “was the punk call-to-arms summer ’77” JSH and “a catalyst for much mayhem to follow.” JSHU.S. VersionThe Clash followed their 1977 debut with their sophomore album, Give 'Em Enough Rope, in 1978. That “muddled-up affair” JSH ended up being the first official Clash album to hit U.S. soil. However, the debut album “sold an unprecedented 100,000 copies” CC as an import. It wasn’t until 1979 that the Clash’s debut album was released in the United States. Ten of the thirteen songs from the original album were featured alongside five singles and one B-side released from 1977 to 1979, “all of which were stronger than the items they replaced.” AM2 “In a way, the U.S. edition served as an extremely early best-of,” AM1However, because these songs were “more polished and thus somewhat jarring,” AM1 “purists…most likely swear on the sonic cohesion of this U.K. edition.” AM1 No matter which way you go, though, “rock & roll is rarely as edgy, invigorating, and sonically revolutionary as The Clash.” AM2 It “didn’t just help invigorate the punk scene – it was a desperate call to arms.” RV Primal PunkWhen it comes to debuts, “this might’ve been the most dramatic one of all time.” JSH “With a rat-a-tat-tat the punk “movement” was born: short hair, buzzsaw rhythms, marching jackboots.” JSH The Clash’s debut album “sees the band in its most primal, punk form.” AM1The Clash/i> is The Who Sings My Generation for a new era.” JSH This “the definitive punk-rock statement.” CCThe punk movement was partly “a reaction to the overblown prog-rock operas of the mid-Seventies.” CC “The charging, relentless rhythms, primitive three-chord rockers, and the poor sound quality give the album a nervy, vital energy.” AM2 “The Ramones debut album had influenced British punk (including the Clash) with its speaker-shattering, stripped-down simplicity, but much of its sensationalism was wrapped in direct humour, and the New York band made no attempt to anger the political establishment.” CC By contrast, the Clash “presented itself as nothing less than a call to musical and class warfare.” CC Joe Strummer’s slurred wails perfectly compliment the edgy rock, while Mick Jones’ clearer singing and charged guitar breaks make his numbers righteously anthemic.” AM2 “Despite Mickey Foote’s low-key, lo-fi production, [the band] mesh and unite with a snarling ferocity and energy. Raw, bouncy edginess pours out of each song, with new hooks popping out at odd angles by the second.” AM1 Clash vs. Sex Pistols“The cliché about punk rock was that the bands couldn’t play.” AM2 “Although they gave that illusion,” AM “unlike its punk rivals the Sex Pistols, The Clash could play, and they played hard.” RV The Sex Pistols’ “Never Mind the Bollocks may have appeared revolutionary, but the Clash’s eponymous debut album was pure, unadulterated rage and fury, fueled by passion for both rock & roll and revolution.” AM2 In addition, The Clash was actually “the first major Brit punk” JSH album, beating “the Pistols to the punch for the first full-length.” JSH While Bollocks is the more celebrated album when it comes to ground zero for punk, it “didn’t come out ‘til the hype had almost already peaked.” JSHThe Impact“While the Pistols’ music focuses on its own brand of nihilism, The Clash examines the struggles of England's streets with…wit and edge” RV and what was even considered by some to be a “proto-fascist call-to-arms.” WR The album captures a moment in time: it “will forever tell the story of the desperate, repressed young white male in the faltering, fragmented England of 1977.” CCThe SongsHere are insights into individual songs.“Janie Jones” Jones originally wrote the song in the first person, but it was switched to third person when Joe Strummer balked about singing “I’m in love.” CC “The real-life Janie Jones was a madam who had been British front-page newspaper fodder back in 1973” CC but most of the Clash’s young audience missed the reference. CC “Remote Control”
“I’m So Bored with the U.S.A.” “White Riot” The album version differs from the single in that it is “harder and more violent, the most uncompromising aural assault on the album.” CC
“Hate & War” “What’s My Name” “Deny” “London’s Burning” “Career Opportunities”
“Bolstered by Mick Jones’ power chords, which owe much here to Pete Townshend’s rhythmic style of playing, Strummer’s voice is mixed high, as if this one time he wants every word to be clearly understood.” CC It “follows a classic pop pattern – intro, verse, chorus, verse, chorus, middle eight, verse, chorus , outro – all completed several seconds’ shy of two minutes.” CC
“Cheat” “Protex Blues” “Police & Thieves”
Before punk, “Britain’s only contemporary rebel music was Jamaican reggae.” CC The Clash “were absolutely the first to do something legitimate with the form, as opposed to the usual Stones/Clapton minstrelsy.” JSH This “audacious adaptation…separated them from other punk groups, who wouldn’t dare to (or more likely, simply couldn’t) play black music.” CC
“48 Hours” “Garageland” “White Man in Hammersmith Palais”
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First posted 2/27/2008; last updated 10/30/2024. |
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