
The Story Of The Clash (Volume 1)
The Clash
1988
The Story Of The Clash (Volume 1) is a Punk album by The Clash, originally released in 1988. On Gatefold: 116 pressings tracked, owned by 10 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Punk
- Punk Rock
- raw
- defiant
- political
About
A perfect storm of power and fury, the 1977 debut from The Clash was the 35-minute Molotov that launched political punk as we know it. A raw, unfiltered dispatch from the first generation of UK punk rock, <i>The Clash</i> called for revolution in three-minute bursts, shouting barbed screeds about class disparity, unemployment, and racism over chain-saw guitars—a weaponized attitude that would inspire generation upon generation of outspoken musicians like U2, Public Enemy, Rage Against the Machine, and Rise Against. Just one year earlier, future Clash leader Joe Strummer was a struggling, zoot-suit-clad pub-rocker who found his true calling after seeing a Sex Pistols gig in London. Snatched by manager Bernie Rhodes to join guitarist Mick Jones and bassist Paul Simonon—and later, drummer Terry Chimes—he and the group would rehearse and scheme seven days a week, choosing their name from a word that recurred in <i>Evening Standard</i> headlines. Pushed by Rhodes to lean into politically pointed lyrics, The Clash became ambitious, idealistic fire starters fighting against the forces that create oppression. The band’s first single, “White Riot,” was written after witnessing a conflict between Black youth and police at the Notting Hill Carnival. Why, Strummer posits, can’t poor white kids have a riot of their own? “All the power’s in the hands/Of the people rich enough to buy it,” he sings. “While we walk the street/Too chicken to even try it.” With their trademark rasp-and-roar, The Clash take a stand against the powers that be (“Remote Control”), American imperialism (“I’m So Bored With the U.S.A.”), the dismal state of their hometown (“London’s Burning”), conformity (“Career Opportunities”), and the music industry (“Garageland”). A cover of Junior Murvin’s incendiary reggae song “Police & Thieves” confronts police brutality in the lyrics and points forward to the band’s many experiments with stylistic cross-pollination. The Clash would have more critical and commercial success after fully embracing their role as genre-blurring roots-rockers and New Wavers, but the gnashing, undiluted rage of their debut may be their most important line in the sand.
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Tracklist
Side A
- A1The Magnificent Seven4:27
- A2Rock The Casbah3:41
- A3This Is Radio Clash4:10
- A4Should I Stay Or Should I Go3:07
- A5Straight To Hell5:27
- A6Armagideon Time3:50
Side B
- B1Clampdown3:45
- B2Train In Vain3:00
- B3Guns Of Brixton3:05
- B4I Fought The Law2:35
- B5Somebody Got Murdered3:29
- B6Lost In The Supermarket3:41
- B7Bank Robber4:31
Side C
- C1(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais3:59
- C2London's Burning2:09
- C3Janie Jones2:04
- C4Tommy Gun3:13
- C5Complete Control3:12
- C6Capitol Radio5:18
- C7White Riot1:57
- C8Career Opportunities1:51
Side D
- D1Clash City Rockers3:47
- D2Safe European Home3:46
- D3Stay Free3:37
- D4London Calling3:19
- D5Spanish Bombs3:18
- D6English Civil War2:33
- D7Police & Thieves5:57
Credits
Performers
- Paul SimononBASS
- Topper HeadonDRUMS
- Joe StrummerGUITAR VOCALS
- Mick JonesGUITAR VOCALS
- Gary BarnacleSAXOPHONE
10 collectors on Gatefold own this · 116 pressings tracked on Gatefold
