Dubmatix Sticky Icky Reggae Mix

The Clash: The Only Band That Matters


Listen Later

London in the mid-seventies was not a comfortable place to be young. Unemployment was climbing, the National Front was gaining ground on the streets, and the music coming out of the mainstream had nothing to say about any of it. Punk arrived as a reaction, detonated largely by the Sex Pistols, but if the Pistols were the bomb, The Clash were the politics that followed. Joe Strummer, born John Graham Mellor, had been fronting a pub rock outfit called the 101ers when he saw the Sex Pistols play in the spring of 1976 and understood immediately that everything had to change. He quit within days and joined guitarist Mick Jones and bassist Paul Simonon, who had been playing together in a pre-punk group called London SS. Simonon came up with the name after noticing it appearing constantly in British newspaper headlines: race clashes, class clashes, political clashes. It fit perfectly. With drummer Terry Chimes completing the lineup, they played their first show on 4 July 1976, supporting the Sex Pistols in Sheffield, having rehearsed for less than a month.

The Clash signed to CBS Records in January 1977 for a reported £100,000 and immediately had to defend the deal against accusations of selling out. Their answer was their self-titled debut album, recorded in three weekends for roughly £4,000 and released in April 1977. It was raw, fast, and direct in a way the music press had rarely encountered: thirty-five minutes of songs about unemployment, police harassment, boredom, and the grinding weight of class. ‘Career Opportunities’, ‘White Riot’, and ‘Janie Jones’ announced a band writing from lived experience rather than spectacle. Critically, the album also included a cover of Junior Murvin’s reggae track ‘Police and Thieves’, signalling from the outset that The Clash were listening beyond punk, that their cultural reference points stretched into the Jamaican community in London, a community living under the same conditions of poverty and institutional racism that Strummer was putting into lyrics. CBS’s American division refused to release the album, deeming it too raw for US radio. In the UK it reached number twelve and announced the band as something serious and lasting.

Their second album, Give ‘Em Enough Rope, released in 1978 with American producer Sandy Pearlman at CBS’s insistence, had a bigger, more polished sound that sat uneasily with the band’s instincts. It sold well but felt constrained. What mattered more that year was where The Clash were placing themselves politically. They headlined the Rock Against Racism concert in Victoria Park in east London in April 1978, drawing a crowd of over 80,000 people at a time when far-right parties were actively recruiting in British cities. They had also recorded the furious single ‘Complete Control’ in 1977 with Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry producing, a direct response to CBS releasing a track without the band’s approval, and a signal of how seriously they took the connection between Jamaican music and the political fire in their own work. The band insisted their records be priced accessibly, refused to charge inflated ticket prices, and were chronically in debt to their label as a result. For The Clash, the politics were never separate from the music. They were the same thing.

The impact The Clash left behind is difficult to overstate. Chuck D has credited them as the direct template for Public Enemy’s approach to socially conscious lyrics and their relationship with the press. Tom Morello, who inducted the band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003, built the entire philosophy of Rage Against the Machine on the question The Clash asked first: what happens when you put radical politics inside music with real rhythmic weight and make people want to move to it? Their influence runs through Massive Attack, U2, the Beastie Boys, and virtually every artist who has ever believed that bass and conviction belong in the same room. Joe Strummer died on 22 December 2002, one month before that Hall of Fame induction, at the age of fifty. The music has not stopped mattering since.

This mix pulls from the early years, the fury of the debut, the political fire of the singles, and the moment a band from west London decided that punk was only the beginning. Turn it up.

PLAYLIST
  1. The Clash The Guns of Brixton - Remastered

  2. The Clash Remote Control - Remastered

  3. The Clash Know Your Rights - Remastered

  4. The Clash Police & Thieves - Remastered

  5. The Clash London Calling - Remastered

  6. The Clash Straight to Hell - Remastered

  7. The Clash Safe European Home - Remastered

  8. The Clash White Riot - Remastered

  9. The Clash Should I Stay or Should I Go - Remastered

  10. The Clash Train in Vain (Stand by Me) - Remastered

  11. The Clash London’s Burning - Remastered

  12. The Clash Tommy Gun - Remastered

  13. The Clash Police On My Back - Remastered

  14. The Clash Drug-Stabbing Time - Remastered

  15. The Clash Red Angel Dragnet - Remastered

  16. The Clash Junco Partner - Remastered

  17. The Clash Rock the Casbah - Remastered

  18. The Clash Hateful - Remastered

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    Dubmatix Sticky Icky Reggae MixBy Dubmatix

    • 5
    • 5
    • 5
    • 5
    • 5

    5

    10 ratings


    More shows like Dubmatix Sticky Icky Reggae Mix

    View all
    The Higherside Chats by Greg Carlwood

    The Higherside Chats

    3,439 Listeners

    The Deadpod by J.Henrikson

    The Deadpod

    1,227 Listeners

    Deeper Shades of House - weekly Deep House Podcast with Lars Behrenroth by Lars Behrenroth

    Deeper Shades of House - weekly Deep House Podcast with Lars Behrenroth

    527 Listeners

    DJ Private Ryan's Podcast by DJ Private Ryan

    DJ Private Ryan's Podcast

    1,269 Listeners

    Deep House Cat by Alex B. Groove

    Deep House Cat

    435 Listeners

    Balaganjah - Roots Reggae Dub by Balaganjah / Reggae Station

    Balaganjah - Roots Reggae Dub

    40 Listeners

    Scratch Master by Scratch Master

    Scratch Master

    213 Listeners

    The Dub Zone by Pete Cogle

    The Dub Zone

    64 Listeners

    The Corbett Report Podcast by The Corbett Report

    The Corbett Report Podcast

    947 Listeners

    REGGAEBOYZ SOUND by Mitch  Agen

    REGGAEBOYZ SOUND

    108 Listeners

    Dei Musicale | The Musical Gods by Dei Musicale | The Musical Gods

    Dei Musicale | The Musical Gods

    200 Listeners

    Roots Radio Reggae Burning Etxea FM SINCE 2007 by Uribe Fm - Gorliz Irratia

    Roots Radio Reggae Burning Etxea FM SINCE 2007

    3 Listeners

    The Ride Companion by TRC Media House

    The Ride Companion

    101 Listeners

    DJ ELEMENTZ' PODCAST by DJ ELEMENTZ

    DJ ELEMENTZ' PODCAST

    30 Listeners

    My Deep Is Not Your Deep by Deep Essentials

    My Deep Is Not Your Deep

    7 Listeners