The
Sex Pistols may have been the first British punk rock band, but
the Clash were the definitive British punk rockers. Where
the Pistols were nihilistic,
the Clash were fiery and idealistic, charged with righteousness and a leftist political ideology. From the outset, the band was more musically adventurous, expanding its hard rock & roll with reggae, dub, and rockabilly among other roots musics. Furthermore, they were blessed with two exceptional songwriters in
Joe Strummer and Mick Jones, each with a distinctive voice and style. The
Clash copped heavily from classic outlaw imagery, positioning themselves as rebels with a cause. As a result, they won a passionately devoted following on both sides of the Atlantic. While they became rock & roll heroes in the U.K., second only to
the Jam in terms of popularity, it took
the Clash several years to break into the American market, and when they finally did in 1982, they imploded several months later. Though
the Clash never became the superstars they always threatened to become, they restored passion and protest to rock & roll. For a while, they really did seem like "the only band that mattered."
For a band that constantly sang about revolution and the working class,
the Clash had surprisingly traditional roots.
Joe Strummer (born John Graham Mellor, August 21, 1952) had spent most of his childhood in boarding school. By the time he was in his early twenties, he had busked on the streets of London and had formed a pub rock band called
the 101'ers. Around the same time, Mick Jones (born June 26, 1955) was leading a hard rock group called the London SS. Unlike
Strummer, Jones came from a working-class background in Brixton. Throughout his teens, he was fascinated with rock & roll, and he had formed the London SS with the intent of replicating the hard-driving sound of
Mott the Hoople and
Faces. Jones' childhood friend
Paul Simonon (born December 15, 1956) joined the group as a bassist in 1976 after hearing
the Sex Pistols; he replaced
Tony James, who would later join
Generation X and
Sigue Sigue Sputnik. At the time, the band also featured drummer
Tory Crimes (born
Terry Chimes), who had recently replaced
Topper Headon (born Nicky Headon, May 30, 1955). After witnessing
the Sex Pistols in concert,
Joe Strummer decided to break up
the 101'ers in early 1976 in order to pursue a new, harder-edged musical direction. He left the band just before their first single, "Keys to Your Heart," was released. Along with fellow
101'er guitarist
Keith Levene,
Strummer joined the revamped London SS, now renamed
the Clash.
The Clash performed its first concert in the summer of 1976, supporting
the Sex Pistols in London.
Levene left the band shortly afterward. Hiring Bernard Rhodes -- a former business associate of
Sex Pistols manager
Malcolm McLaren -- as their manager,
the Clash set out on
the Pistols' notorious Anarchy Tour late in 1976. Though only three concerts were performed on the tour, it nevertheless raised
the Clash's profile and the band secured a record contract in February of 1977 with British CBS. Over the course of three weekends, the group recorded their debut album. Once the sessions were completed,
Terry Chimes left the group, and
Headon came aboard as the band's drummer. In the spring,
the Clash's first single, "White Riot," and eponymous debut album were released to great critical acclaim and sales in the U.K., peaking at number 12 on the charts. The American division of CBS decided
The Clash wasn't fit for radio play, so it decided not to release the album. The import of the record became the largest-selling import of all time. Shortly after the U.K. release of
The Clash, the band set out on the whirlwind White Riot tour supported by
the Jam and
the Buzzcocks; the tour was highlighted by a date at London's Rainbow Theatre, where the audience tore the seats out of the venue. During the White Riot tour, CBS pulled "Remote Control" off the album as a single, and as a response,
the Clash recorded "Complete Control" with reggae icon
Lee "Scratch" Perry.
Throughout 1977,
Strummer and Jones were in and out of jail for a myriad of minor indiscretions, ranging from vandalism to stealing a pillowcase, while
Simonon and
Headon were arrested for shooting racing pigeons with an air gun.
The Clash's outlaw image was bolstered considerably by such events, but the band also began to branch out into social activism, such as headlining a Rock Against Racism concert. Released in the summer of 1978, the single "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais" demonstrated the band's growing social consciousness. Shortly after the single peaked at number 32,
the Clash began working on their second album with producer
Sandy Pearlman, a former member of
Blue Öyster Cult.
Pearlman gave
Give 'Em Enough Rope a clean but powerful sound designed to break the American market. While that didn't happen -- the album peaked at 128 on the U.S. charts in the spring of 1979 -- the record became an enormous hit in Britain, debuting at number two on the charts.
Early in 1979,
the Clash began their first American tour, entitled "Pearl Harbor '79." That summer, the band released the U.K.-only EP
The Cost of Living, which featured a cover of
the Bobby Fuller Four's "I Fought the Law." Following the later summer release of
The Clash in America, the group set out on its second U.S. tour, hiring
Mickey Gallagher of
Ian Dury's Blockheads as a keyboardist. On both of their U.S. tours,
the Clash had R&B acts like
Bo Diddley,
Sam & Dave,
Lee Dorsey, and
Screamin' Jay Hawkins support them, as well as neo-traditionalist country-rocker
Joe Ely and the punk rockabilly band
the Cramps. The choice of supporting acts indicated that
the Clash were becoming fascinated with older rock & roll and all of its legends. That fascination became the driving force behind their breakthrough double album,
London Calling. Produced by
Guy Stevens, who formerly worked with
Mott the Hoople,
London Calling boasted an array of styles, ranging from rockabilly and New Orleans R&B to anthemic hard rock and reggae. Retailing at the price of a single album, the record debuted at number nine on the U.K. charts in late 1979 and climbed to number 27 on the U.S. charts in the spring of 1980.
The Clash successfully toured the U.S., the U.K., and Europe in early 1980, during which time the pseudo-documentary Rude Boy was released in England. During the summer, the band released the Dutch-only, dub-inflected single "Bankrobber," which they recorded with DJ
Mikey Dread; by the fall, the British branch of CBS was forced to release the single due to popular demand. Shortly afterward, the band went to New York to begin the tension-filled, self-produced sessions for their follow-up to
London Calling. In November, a U.S.-only EP of odds and ends entitled Black Market Clash was released. The following month, the triple-record set
Sandinista! appeared in the U.K. and the U.S. The critical reaction to the album was decidedly mixed, with American critics reacting more favorably than their British counterparts. Furthermore, the band's audience in the U.K. was shrinking slightly --
Sandinista! was the first record the group released that sold more copies in the U.S. than the U.K.
After spending much of 1981 touring and resting,
the Clash reconvened late in the year to record their fifth album with producer
Glyn Johns, a former engineer/producer for
the Rolling Stones and
Led Zeppelin.
Headon left the band shortly after the sessions finished; the press statement said he parted with the group due to political differences, but it was later revealed that the split was due to his heavy drug use. The band replaced
Headon with their old drummer,
Terry Chimes, around the spring release of
Combat Rock. The album was
the Clash's most commercially successful effort, entering the U.K. charts at number two and climbing into the American Top Ten in early 1983, thanks to the Top Ten hit single "Rock the Casbah." During the fall of 1982,
the Clash opened for
the Who on their farewell tour. Though the tour helped
Combat Rock scale the U.S. charts,
the Clash were routinely booed off the stage on every date of the tour.
Although
the Clash were at the height of their commercial powers in 1983, the band was beginning fall apart.
Chimes was fired in the spring and was replaced by Pete Howard, formerly of Cold Fish. During the summer, the band headlined the U.S. Festival in California; it would be their last major appearance. In September,
Joe Strummer and
Paul Simonon fired Mick Jones because he "drifted apart from the original idea of
the Clash." Jones formed
Big Audio Dynamite the following year, while
the Clash hired guitarists
Vince White and
Nick Sheppard to fill his vacancy. Throughout 1984, the band toured America and Europe, testing the new lineup. The revamped
Clash finally released their first album,
Cut the Crap, in November. The album was greeted with overwhelmingly poor reviews and sales; it would later be disowned by
Strummer and
Simonon.
Early in 1986,
Strummer and
Simonon decided to permanently disband
the Clash. Several years later,
Simonon formed the roots rock band
Havana 3 A.M., which released only one album, in 1991; following the record's release, he concentrated on painting. After reuniting with Jones to write songs for
Big Audio Dynamite's second album, 1986's
No. 10 Upping Street,
Strummer drifted between a musical and film career, appearing in Alex Cox's Straight to Hell (1986) and
Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train (1989). He also scored Permanent Record (1988) and Cox's Walker (1987).
Strummer released a solo album,
Earthquake Weather, in 1989. Shortly afterward, he joined
the Pogues as a touring rhythm guitarist and vocalist. By 1991, he had quietly drifted away from the spotlight. For the remainder of the decade,
Strummer was quiet, appearing on only one other recording --
Black Grape's 1996 Top Ten hit "England's Irie."
Though
Strummer and
Simonon were both quiet, and Jones was busy with various incarnations of
Big Audio Dynamite, rumors of a reunion continued to circulate throughout the '90s. When "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" appeared in a Levi's television commercial in 1992, the song was re-released in the U.K. by CBS, and it shot to number one, fueling even more reunion speculation. The rumors appeared again in 1995 and 1996, when
the Sex Pistols decided to reunite, but
the Clash remained quiet.
Live: From Here to Eternity, assembling material recorded between 1978 and 1982, was released in 1999, shortly followed by the documentary film Westway to the World. The
Clash were elected for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in November 2002 and were making plans to reunite to commemorate the event that following spring when
Strummer suddenly died from a congenital heart defect on December 22, 2002. In the wake of his passing, the remaining members of the band attended the industion ceremony in March of 2003, then quietly tabled any plans for a reunion.
Over the next decade, both Jones and
Simonon were musically active. Jones produced both albums by the acclaimed rock group
the Libertines -- who themselves bore a distinct debt to the
Clash -- and
Simonon teamed with
Blur's
Damon Albarn for the 2007 band
the Good, The Bad & The Queen. This project lead to a Jones and
Simonon reunion under the auspices of
Albarn's group
Gorillaz; the pair both performed on the 2010 album
Plastic Beach and then they both appeared on the supporting tour, marking the first time they shared the stage since
the Clash.
In 2013, the group released a major archival project called Sound System containing new remasters of the band's first five albums, three additional CDs of rarities, singles, and demos, plus a DVD. Along with the box set came a new compilation called The Clash Hits Back, which mimicked the sequence of their July 19, 1982 set list at the Brixton Fair Deal. Things were quiet on the reissue front until the 2022 release of
Combat Rock: The People's Hall Special Edition, which added a bonus disc of tracks that included a handful from the rejected Mick Jones "Rat Patrol from Fort Bragg" mix of the album. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine