Classics: The Clash - London Calling
antiGUY kicks off this Classics by telling
us how The Clash changed the punk world.
While the Damned will always be my favorite
UK punk group, hell punk group period, there is no denying the genius of
The Clash and London Calling is chrysalis of the changes in punk
that would follow. To punk this album was like Sgt Peppersor Pet
Sounds, a bold new exploration in style and sound that opened the doors
to monumental albums that followed; Sandinista! and their commercial
breakthrough Combat Rock. But it will always be London Calling
that people look back on as The Clash at their height in terms of creativity.
At the time it was a rather ambitious endeavor.
A double album from a punk band at the height of a recession when people
weren't buying albums, let alone punk albums but this album did find an
audience and we still hear the reverberations of its release to this day
in the current crop of punk bands that got their start right here.
Stylistically this album touched on too
many genres to list; it firmly broke out of the punk rock mold and opened
the doors to other genres cross-pollinating the style. Reggae, rockabilly,
ska, New Orleans tinged R&B, pop, lounge are just a few of the elements
Joe Strummer and Company incorporated into this masterpiece. To call London
Calling a classic is a no brainer but it really is so much more than
that, it is a testament to a band that wasn't afraid to try different things
and some may disagree with this next statement because sonically they are
rather different but this album really was the closest thing we have had
to the Beatles no-genre barred execution since Sgt Pepper was released.
It really is that good and really is that important. If you don't have
this album in your collection, all is not right in the world and you should
correct that unfortunate oversight right now. If you do have it, do yourself
a big favor and after you read all the reviews here today, go grab it (if
you have headphones even better) and crank that baby up and you will remember
what made London Calling a classic not only for punk rock but for
all music. Again, it really is that good.
Revolution Rock, you know it!
Now Greenmuse tells us how this album
became the father in his musical holy trinity.
he who f**ks nuns, later joins the church
For me there are three albums in my collection
that stand head and shoulders above every other cd I own. This writing
is about the holy father of this trinity: London Calling. London
Calling is THE definitive Clash album. Everything about this album
comes to mind when I hear the words "the Clash", from the music itself
to that immortal image on the cover of Paul seconds away from smashing
his bass into the floor of the palladium.
But the music, oh the music. An entire
double album of choice cuts. Cuts that really show why the Clash were one
of the most important bands of the UK Punk Movement.(you can keep your
Sex Pistols, they get a resounding "meh" from this fellow)now most albums
have at least one low spot, so a double should have a few to its name.
But London Calling has NONE. This release is as solid as one of
the Easter Island heads. Hell its not an album, its a monolith .(granted
I regard Sandinista! as the best thing ever recorded. Sandinista!
is great because of its flaws). London Calling was the first
proper Clash album I purchased, black market Clash was my first Clash album
and first actual cd I bought(well bought is a strong word, I got it from
BMG for a penny). I wish I could say I was a lifelong fan of the Clash
whose dad had all their releases on vinyl, but I'm not. I didn't get into
punk rock till senior year of high school(which is further ago than I care
to admit). Sure, I knew of the Clash from "Should I Stay Or Should I Go"
and "Rock the Casbah". But I didn't regard them as anything special. Then
I got into op ivy, which is the holy son of my musical trinity. So of course
I delved into op ivy and their influences and came upon the Clash. I had
no money at the time and mp3's were years away so I went without. Then
my first day of the first job I had, I heard it. I was there at the pizza
place folding dough into garlic rolls when I heard the now, infamous opening
chords to "London Calling". I got off work at 3, being paid per
day, and in cash, I had London Calling in my hot little hands by
3:30.by 4pm the cd was in the cd player and I was laying on the bed, hands
clasped behind head and my mind a million miles away in London in 1979.
I'm not gonna bore you with going over
the tracks on the album. By all rights you should have it yourself and
know it like the back of your hand. If not. Go out And get it. If you ever
wondered what the big to do over the Clash is, get this album .if you ever
thought punk rock is boring music played by hacks who cant Play proper
music, get this album. If you like rock music, get this album. This is
essential music for people who say they like music.
Finally Jonathon Sanders closes this
Classics out with some thoughts on this landmark album.
The Clash . . . what can you say about
a band that took the burgeoning punk scene of the late seventies and made
it their own? The world lost a songwriting mind of true brilliance when
Joe Strummer died, you'll really start to understand that fact when you
sit back and let London Calling take over your stereo. It's hard
to classify. From the opening staccato strains of the title track, and
the signature harmonics of the vocals (and the roughness of Strummer's
voice) to the almost pop nature of "Train In Vain", the album's closing
track, you get something for everyone. The only setback is that everyone
doesn't know it yet. This album serves as a perfect introduction to a band
that really made their mark over subsequent albums, but yet never exceeded
the overall feeling of rightness you'll get when you hear this album. That's
why even though it's hard to quantify exactly why I love this album, it
will never fall out of my top ten.
CD Info and Links
The Clash - London Calling
Release Date: Dec 14, 1979
Billboard Peak: No. 27 (Pop albums
chart)
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