The Clash Discography Part 2

 Home >> Punk Bands >>The Clash >> Discography Part 2 

clashlpreview.jpg (119835 bytes)

Click on above to view larger image of Sounds review of The Clash 

What can you say about this album except it should in everyone's collection. Everything about it is perfect. Slated for signing with giant CBS Records the boys came up with the goods in fact knocking out 16 tracks in seven days! Essentially their live sound -incendiary guitars clash with spat venomous lyrics to bring you the sound of London 1977: Janie Jones, I'm So Bored With The USA, Career Opportunities,  a rawer White Riot , Deny, The London SS's Protex Blue and of course their take on Junior Murvin's Police & Thieves. Note the cover taken in Camden  Market as a three piece which they so often were round that time. Terry Chimes (Tory Crimes) had left but stayed on for the recording sessions. 



The Clash - 1977 Polydor



Give E'm Enough Rope - 1978
 Polydor

Slated for signing with CBS and then slated for using producer Sandy Pearlman (more famous for producing bands like Blue Oyster Cult) for their second album. Armed with a full time drummer now, Topper Headon, they were ready to rock or were they? For me a flawed album I don't listen too much. However you cannot ague that it has some absolute classics there: Tommy Gun, Safe European Home, English Civil War but so much of the album seems emotionless and devoid of a spark. A band in change.

clashropereview.jpg (105487 bytes)

Click on above to view larger image of NME review of 
Give 'Em Enough Rope. 

As if by magic this double album appears with its a cover a take on an Elvis album and is perhaps their greatest and most cohesive album  apart from their first. Its the beginning of their not so bored love affair with the USA and its culture while still retaining a British perspective. The Clash were a punk band but like The Stranglers, Siouxsie and The Damned took it in different directions incorporating rockabilly and reggae. The album revealed them as songwriters with sharp lyrical content. Nearly very song is of a high quality. Picks: London Calling, Brand New Cadillac, Spanish Bombs, Guns Of Brixton and Clampdown.

The album made them in America and Rolling Stone voted this album #1 of all time. You can justifiably apply any superlative to this album.

London Calling -  1979 Polydor

 Back To Top