The Clash were “The Only Band That Matters.” But more to the point, they were the only band who’s ever gotten away with calling themselves something so self-aggrandizing, because it felt close enough ...
“Combat Rock” is the Clash’s most commercially successful album, and it’s also the one that tore them apart. Although it contains their two most-popular songs — “Should I Stay or Should I Go” and ...
A 40th-anniversary edition of the Clash's 1982 Combat Rock album is set for release on May 20. The collection, titled Combat Rock / The People’s Hall, includes the original album, along with 12 ...
Forty years ago this month, the Clash drove into a ditch with 'Cut the Crap.' Here's the story behind one of rock's most legendary disasters ...
It’s likely a lot of folks thought that a double-album by The Clash was the height of folly before they released London Calling in 1979. How could the band’s potent but straightforward bashing hold up ...
Joe Strummer and Mick Jones wrote 13 of the 14 tracks on the album. Those tracks distill the attitudes and fears of British youth in the late ’70s. The dismal job market left them with little hope for ...
CD1: London Calling; Safe European Home; Know Your Rights; (White Man) In Hammersmith Palais; Janie Jones; The Guns of Brixton; Train in Vain; Bankrobber; Wrong ‘Em Boyo; The Magnificent Seven; Police ...
This week in Indie Basement: Porridge Radio return with another powerhouse emotional gut-punch; METZ’s Alex Edkins goes (kinda) pop as Weird Nightmare; Cola rise from the ashes of Montreal’s Ought; ...
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