• Live,  Punk

    The Clash rage at the US Festival

    Joe at the US Festival

    Joe Strummer was not happy when he hit the stage at the US Festival in 1983. There’s different stories about what was pissing him off so much. But the gist of it was that the Clash were upset when they heard that Van Halen took a million dollars to headline the third and final night of the festival. The Clash, by contrast, refused to go on stage until US Festival organizer Steve Wozniak (of Apple Computer) agreed to donate a large sum of money to charity. There was even a backstage shouting match between Joe Strummer and David Lee Roth, if you can believe that. Oh to be a fly on the wall on that day.

    Well, what resulted was a very spirited set, with Joe Strummer taking some time between songs to rant and rave against consumerism and the American way. This is also guitarist Mick Jones’ last performance with the Clash.

    RIP Joe Strummer: 1952-2002

    The Clash / “Clash Calling”
    Saturday, May 28th, 1983
    Glen Helen Regional Park
    San Bernardino, CA
    US Festival ’83

    DOWNLOAD (ZIP)

    * The only imperfection of this show is that “London Calling” cuts out about half way through and jumps about halfway into “This is Radio Clash”. Don’t worry, you’ll get over it quickly.

    London Calling / This Is Radio Clash
    Somebody Got Murdered
    Rock the Casbah
    The Guns Of Brixton
    Know Your Rights
    Koka Kola
    Hate and War
    Armagideon Time
    Sound of the Sinners
    Safe European Home
    Police on My Back
    Brand New Cadillac
    I Fought the Law
    I’m So Bored with the USA
    Train In Vain
    The Magnificent Seven
    Straight to Hell
    Should I Stay or Should I Go?
    Clampdown

  • Country,  Punk

    London to Lubbock: Joe Ely meets the Clash

    joe ely and joe strummer

    Here’s a cool tidbit of Clash trivia. You know that part in “Should I Stay or Should I Go” where you hear Mick Jones yell “Split!”? It was actually an impromptu moment when Joe Strummer and Joe Ely snuck up behind Jones during the recording session, and basically scared the piss out of him. The moment made it on to the final recording.

    Their relationship began in 1978, when Joe Ely was playing the Venue Club in London. The Clash were admirers of Ely’s most recent release, 1978’s ‘Honky Tonk Masquerade.’ Ely – a native of Lubbock, Texas – and the Clash met backstage and ended up spending the rest of the three night stand hanging around eachother, crawling the pubs, and gaining quite a mutual respect and admiration for eachother.

    joe ely

    Ely opened for the Clash on the 1979 Texas leg of their Pearl Harbor tour. He also headed over to London in 1980 to open for the Clash on their UK London Calling tour, and opened a couple of nights during the Clash’s residency at Bond’s in NYC in 1981.

    Well, fast forward to 1983. It’s a week before the US Festival in San Bernardino, CA, and the Clash are in San Antonio to play a warm-up gig before the 150,000 person event. Joe Ely is in the house that night, and joins the band for a version of “Fingernails” (from ‘Honky Tonk Masquerade”). Here’s the last three from that San Antonio night. The US Festival gig a week later would be Mick Jones’ final performance as a member of the Clash. The festival also included a backstage shouting match between Strummer and Van Halen’s David Lee Roth. Strummer was pissed about Van Halen demanding (and receiving) a cool million for the gig. Oh how I would have loved to be a fly on the wall that day.

    The Clash, Live at the Majestic Theater, San Antonio, TX
    May 22, 1983

    Fingernails (with Joe Ely) [mp3]
    Should I Stay or Should I Go [mp3]
    I Fought the Law [mp3]

    Here’s a cool collaboration that never was to be:

    For years, Ely, a hard-charging alt-country Texan who emerged during Jimmy Carter’s reign, and Strummer, founder and lead singer of the politically astute Clash, the greatest punk band that Margaret Thatcher’s Britain ever produced, had promised each other that some day they’d head to Mexico and record an album just for the hell of it…But Ely, who turns 59 today, never got to Mexico with Strummer.

    “I went to the funeral and got together with the guys and stayed up all night playing guitar,” he said. “I never believed someone with the vital energy he had would die. That’s a lesson that if you say you’re going to do something, you just do it.”

    How cool would that have been? A Strummer/Ely Tex-Mex-World-Punk record? Like an idiot, I just missed Joe Ely at the very intimate Rhythm Room in Phoenix. Next time I’ll go, buy him a beer, and talk about Joe Strummer.

    Here’s a couple from Joe Ely’s great live LP, ‘Live at Antone’s‘….

    The Road Goes on Forever [mp3]
    All Just to Get to You [mp3]

  • Punk

    Joe Strummer Mix

    It was the holiday season three years ago when Joe Strummer left this world. In memory of one my major musical heroes, here’s a snapshot of Joe’s work through the years. We miss you, Joe.

    Joe Strummer: The IckMusic Mix (mp3) – 18.8 MB, 27m:27s

    1. Tommy Gun (The Clash, Give ‘Em Enough Rope, 1978)
    2. Bhindi Bhagee (Joe Strummer & the Mescaleros, Global a Go-Go, 2001)
    3. Janie Jones (The Clash, The Clash, 1977)
    4. Nitcomb (Mescaleros, Rock Art & the X-Ray Style, 1999)
    5. The Leader (The Clash, Sandanista, 1980)
    6. Death or Glory (The Clash, London Calling, 1979)
    7. Boogie With Your Children (Joe Strummer, Earthquake Weather, 1989)
    8. Silver and Gold (Mescaleros, Streetcore, 2003)

    In Memory of Joe Strummer: August 21, 1952 – December 22, 2002