Dueling Turtables..The Clash…Tom Synder Show 1981..
Aug 22nd, 2007 by Warm Jet
“Magnificent Seven”
Via: Sidrel
Sidral Mundet on The Clash’s Sandinista!
Twenty-six years ago, on December 12, 1980, The Clash released the triple album Sandinista!
In 1980 The Clash released their album Sandinista! to mixed reviews. Taking it’s name from the Nicaraguan freedom fighters, it was a more provocative way of saying “power to the people”. The Clash were unabashed socialists who kept up on global politics and human rights abuse. Today, the themes and sounds that come from Sandinista! are remarkably topical.
The Clash were style masters known for their great taste in music, clothes and women. They had “juice”, and with 1979’s London Calling were making a fresh and accessible music that would make fans of both Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen. This helped record sales and their status amongst the Rolling Stone magazine types, but hurt their credibility with punk purists and the burgeoning hardcore scene. Amongst these forces, which they were very much aware of, they momentarily sidestepped rock, pop, punk and the status quo with Sandinista! Fortunately it was a very long moment; 36 songs on three vinyl Lps.
The Magnificent Seven is the album’s opener. A rap inspired diatribe against capitalism and the 9-5 workday, this is their answer to Dylan’s Subterranean Homesick Blues. A time traveling stew of contemporary and historical imagery that is haunting and hilarious, (“…Karlo Marx and Fredrich Engels went to the checkout at the 7-11…”).
It is remarkable they would even attempt it on live T.V.
Though they speared a hit with a rockin cover of Eddy Grant’s Police On My Back, Sandinista! is largely an exodus into other tasteful musical styles. The Mose Allison inspired Midnight Log as well as a cover of Allison’s Look Here take off from London Calling’s Jimmy Jazz into to a boozy 1940’s style. Along with the tunes Broadway and If Music Could Talk, The Clash reached back in sound and style to a cinema inspired view of New York City where some of the album was recorded. (In Electricladyland studio, made famous by The Jimi Hendrix Experience: a controversial choice in those divisive times , seen as a possible siding with the hippies). The Clash loved American style of the 40’s and 50’s. They used it to artfully create a rebel/gangster look and sound infused with their own English “Rude Boy” thing. What added further interest was their intelligence, political convictions and musical curiosity.
Sandinista! is laced with a post-Armageddon mood. The previously released tracks Bankrobber and Armagideon Time/Justice Tonight were the only hints as to how far out The Clash were capable of going. On Sandinista! with the help of Mikey Dread, they layed down their deepest groove ever with One More Time/One More Dub. The Clash had previously turned a whole generation onto reggae with their frenetic cover of Junior Murvin’s Police and Thieves. On Sandinista! they became totally legitimate contributors to reggae and dub style. The instrumental studio creations of Version Pardner, Silicone on Sapphire and Mensforth Hill enter a territory all their own. (Only Clash contemporaries Public Image Ltd. can and will boast of an earlier and more unique take on reggae and dub sound in punk era Britain. PiLs critically acclaimed Metal Box/Second Issue most certainly paved the way for Sandinista!)
The Clash were urban warriors in the pop cultural landscape fighting for peace and justice. They were simultaneously of their time and out of time. You could imagine them at union hall meetings in the 1930’s. Their style was something your dad might not like, but your grandpa could dig. Elements of “Clash Style” persist today in a surfer/skater/greaser form but the global vision and political awareness does not.
The time traveling sonic landscape of Sandinista! is as relevant today as ever. Nothing I’ve heard of late captures the current socio-political moment better then the track The Sound of the Sinners. I picture the current American president atop a tower of rubble, symbol of a nation wracked with pain, as Joe Strummer sings in gospel style;
“. . . After all this time
To believe in Jesus
After all those drugs
I thought I was him
After all my lying
And a-crying
And my suffering
I ain’t good enough
I ain’t clean enough
To be him . . .”
Peace, Love, Togetherness and Sandinista Now!
Sidral
Note: A covert communication from Sidrel thru back channels for a timely posting, to you… the people.
“You lot! What?
Don’t stop! Give it all you got!
You lot! What?
Don’t stop! Yeah!”
August 22nd, 2007 at 4:56 pm
hair standing on forearm = successful post
wow
August 22nd, 2007 at 6:06 pm
Sidrel thanks you.
August 24th, 2007 at 12:17 am
You totally nailed the feel of the Clash in this piece, but your history is a little shaky.
The Clash loved American style of the 40’s and 50’s. They used it to artfully create a rebel/gangster look and sound infused with their own English “Rude Boy” thing.
That look and sound is really a mash up of punk and Jamaican Rude Boy. They (Jamaican Rude Boys) patterned themselves after their heroes in the Hollywood gangster films of the 40’s and 50’s, hence the tilby hats and skinny ties. Rude Boy was already 20 years old when the Clash started playing. It was adopted by the skinheads in England (who were originally a mix of Mod and Rude Boy). The whole mash up was the result of west Indian immigration to the UK during the 60’s and 70’s.
Only Clash contemporaries Public Image Ltd. can and will boast of an earlier and more unique take on reggae and dub sound in punk era Britain.
Dancehall Reggae was the soundtrack for social unrest and race riots in Britain (google Notting Hill and Southall riots). Clash contemporaries like X-Ray Specs and The Slits are good examples of the general influence Reggae had on the punk bands. The Dancehall DJ’s in Sheppard’s Bush and Ari Up of The Slits deserve most of the credit for introducing Reggae to disaffected white middle class English teenagers (including Paul, Mick, Joe, and Topper).
I don’t really get the PiL thing considering that the Clash pre-date PiL and of course Kieth Levine was in the Clash long before co-founding PiL.
Anyway, my point here is that it is really hard to talk about the Clash and their politics without accurately discussing their political and musical roots. Context is really key to understanding the message. Consider how hard it would be to explain White Riot without that context. Also, there’s an amazing story about Reggae, class struggle, racism, and middle class English youth that gets missed without it.
August 25th, 2007 at 3:15 pm
your’e fretting
your’e sweating
but did you ever notice..you aint getting
anywhere…..?
vacuum cleaner sucks up budgie..
bye bye!
ya gotta love it..my other (of many) faves on Sandnista is ..”the Call Up”.
Great Post
October 9th, 2007 at 2:26 pm
sorry Jeff,
The point of PIL and the Clash’s sandanista is that 2nd ed. (Metal Box) was in ‘79 and sandanista in ‘80.
Sidrel was not saying Clash pre dated PIL as a band, twas the LP.
Thanks
s