Episode 18: Clash Songs for the Non-Clash Fan

On this week’s episode, I return to the roots of the podcast and my obsession with the Clash … but not without first mentioning that my wife and I have our own podcast, In the Shadow of the Evening Trees, and on our latest episode we go into some detail about the Springsteen concert we saw in Dublin in May (the subject of a good part of last week’s Two Minutes Fifty-Nine show).

I also mention that my wife and I recently recorded an episode of Jesse Jackson’s Set Lusting Bruce podcast, talking, naturally, about the Springsteen show and related matters. I’ll let you know when that episode is up, but, while recording, Jesse challenged me to recommend some Clash songs for a non-Clash fan like him to listen to as a sort of introduction to the band.

So the balance of this week’s show is dedicated to that task. Here are the songs I’ve come up with, though, to be manageable, the list will have to be pared down some:

  • “Spanish Bombs”
  • “Career Opportunities”
  • “Garageland”
  • “White Man in Hammersmith Palais”
  • “Tommy Gun”
  • “Stay Free”
  • “Gates of the West”
  • “Rudie Can’t Fail”
  • “Revolution Rock”
  • “Brand New Cadillac”
  • “London Calling”
  • “Washington Bullets”
  • “Somebody Got Murdered”
  • “Sound of the Sinners”
  • “Police on My Back”
  • “Know Your Rights”
  • “Car Jamming”
  • “Straight to Hell”
  • “Atom Tan”
  • “This Is Radio Clash”

And, because I can’t help myself, I consider whether to include these solo Joe Strummer or Joe and the Mescaleros tunes as well:

  • “Generations”
  • “X-Ray Style”
  • “Yalla Yalla”
  • “Johnny Appleseed”
  • “Coma Girl”
  • “London Is Burning” (“Burning Streets”)

Anyway, please give this week’s show a listen and share your thoughts in the comments below. And remember, as Joe always said, “Without people, you’re nothing.”

Episode 7: Joe Strummer Was Ahead of His Time, Part Infinity

One of those top nights of the year

And I see everyone’s here

Oh, took me a long time to get it

But when its taken time

Think and don’t forget it

“Diggin’ the New,” from Rock Art and the X-Ray Style (1999)

Following up on last week’s discussion about Billy Bragg’s evolving views on LGBTQ+ rights, I relate a disturbing interaction I had on Twitter after posting last week’s show in which a random stranger reacted to my defending the rights of trans and nonbinary people in a particularly offensive way. That interaction got me thinking about how Joe Strummer was never afraid to evolve and grow and challenge his own understanding of the world. The song “Diggin’ the New” really embraces this — not only Joe’s drive to understand the world around him, but his embrace of trans rights long before most artists did.

Joe was always ahead of his time. He was ahead of where a good many people are today, even twenty years after his untimely death.

And because America experienced yet another school shooting this past week, this time at Michigan State University, I reflect on the Clash’s, and particularly Joe Strummer’s, running commentary on guns and violence. Although “The  Guns of Brixton” may seem to express pro-gun sentiment, Joe’s and the band’s views on guns and violence were in reality quite different. From their cover of “Police and Thieves” to “Tommy Gun,” an explicitly anti-violence anthem, to Joe’s “Burning Streets”/“London is Burning” track first recorded with the Mescaleros and later reworked and re-released on Joe Strummer 001, their position on gun violence was far more humane and nuanced than the folks who seemingly don’t care if mass shootings continue apace. Meantime, I can’t get over the prophetic words from “Burning Streets”/“London is Burning”:

Too many guns in this damn town

At the supermarket, you gotta duck down

Baby flak jackets on the merry-go-round

(London is burnin’)

There’s too many guns in this damn town

(London is burnin’)

Baby flak jackets on the merry-go-round …

So please give this week’s show a listen and share your thoughts in the comments. And as Joe always said, “Without people, you’re nothing.”