October 25, 2006

the only band that ever mattered

(10-25) 12:40 PDT CLEVELAND, (AP) --

Armed with guitars, amps and attitude, they rocked the casbah, fought the law and hijacked a train in vain.

The Clash were more than a four-piece band. They were rock 'n' roll revolutionaries.

And now, 30 years after they first stormed across England and later invaded the United States with their sonic blend of rock, reggae, rap and righteousness, the Clash is being celebrated with an exhibit at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum.

It's enough to give Mick Jones a case of anxiety.

"I've got mixed trepidation about seeing it, getting to the museum stage of life and still being alive," said Jones, who along with the late Joe Strummer, Topper Headon and Paul Simonon formed the Clash's classic lineup.

On Saturday, "Revolution Rock: The Story of the Clash" opens to the public and will be on display until April 15, 2007. Among the exhibit's pieces are instruments, including Simonon's famous smashed bass from the cover of "London Calling" — regarded as one of rock's finest recordings. The exhibit also includes stage clothing, memorabilia and original manuscripts from songs like "Know Your Rights" and "Clampdown."

Along with the Sex Pistols, the Clash erupted from London's fertile music scene in 1976 to ride the first wave of British punk. But while Johnny Rotten and the bad-boy Pistols vented their nihilistic rage about political injustice with straightforward rock, the Clash's sound was a mesh of influences.

Bob Marley, Mott the Hoople, The Who, Eddie Cochran and others could be heard in the Clash's wide-ranging body of work.

"We just played the stuff we liked," Jones told the Associated Press in an interview this week.

Strummer was the prime source of the band's left-winged platform. He and others in London's punk scene engaged in squatting (inhabiting abandoned buildings) as a way of protest and formed a band called the 101ers, named after the address of the squat where they lived.

"Joe was always political," Jones said. "He came from that background, but the Clash were never really allied to any political party. We were just having a go, really."

But the Clash made it clear that they were making more than music beginning with their first single "White Riot" in 1977 and on tracks like "Career Opportunities,""Tommy Gun" and "London's Burning" as well as in a three-disc album "Sandinista" — titled in tribute to a Nicaraguan political movement.

The Clash often performed in military-style clothing and were staunch supporters of political groups like the Anti-Nazi League and Rock Against Racism.

And although they were an instant success in the United Kingdom, it wasn't until 1982's "Combat Rock", with its hits "Rock the Casbah" and "Should I Stay or Should I Go", that the band made a splash in the United States.

"The States are so big that it took a while for people to hear us," Jones explained. "But when we first came over in '78, everywhere we went we saw pockets of the punk scene flowering up."

Jones, who was kicked out of the Clash in 1983 following a dispute over the band's direction, went on to success with Big Audio Dynamite and is still making music. Now 51, one of punks pioneers has few regrets about his time with a band considered among rock's most influential groups.

"I would have liked to have done more stuff," Jones said. "We never stopped learning and even at the end we were doing great things. I would have liked to have done more."

Jones said he misses Strummer "terribly. I think of him a lot." Strummer died in 2002, just a few months before the band was inducted into the Rock Hall in 2003. The Clash were honored three years before the Sex Pistols.

While the Clash's surviving members attended their induction ceremony, the Pistols turned down their honor in a profane letter that was read during the hall's enshrinement gala earlier this year in New York.

"That's not the way we would have handled it," said Jones, who pushed for the Pistols' overdue induction. "We were proud to get in. It's a little like getting into the Baseball Hall of Fame, isn't it?"

___

On the Net:

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum:

www.rockhall.com


URL: http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2006/10/25/entertainment/e124045D54.DTL


Posted on 10/25/2006 12:40 PM Comments (5)

October 14, 2006

farewell cbgb's

October 14, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor

Rock ‘n’ Roll High School

CBGB’S shuts down this weekend.

There’s not too much left to say about the character of the joint. It’s the most famous rock ’n’ roll club in the world, the most famous that there ever has been, and it’s just as famously a horrendous dump. It’s the archetypal, the ur, dim and dirty, loud, smelly and ugly nowhere little rock ’n’ roll club. There’s one not much different from it in every burg in the country.

Only, like a lot of New York, CBGB’s is more so, way more so. And of course, for three or four years in the mid-70’s, it housed the most influential cluster of bands ever to grow up — or to implicitly reject the concept of growing up — under one roof.

On practically any weekend from 1974 to 76 you could see one or more of the following groups (here listed in approximate chronological order) in the often half-empty 300-capacity club: Television, the Ramones, Suicide, the Patti Smith Group, Blondie, the Dictators, the Heartbreakers, Talking Heads, Richard Hell and the Voidoids, and the Dead Boys. Not to mention some often equally terrific (or equally pathetic) groups that aren’t as well remembered, like the Miamis and the Marbles and the Erasers and the Student Teachers. Nearly all the members of these bands treated the club as a headquarters — as home. It was a private world. We dreamed it up. It flowered out of our imaginations.

How often do you get to do that? That’s what you want as a kid, and that’s what we were able to do at CBGB’s. It makes me think of that Elvis Presley quotation: “When I was a child, ladies and gentlemen, I was a dreamer. I read comic books, and I was the hero of the comic book. I saw movies, and I was the hero in the movie. So every dream I ever dreamed has come true a hundred times.” We dreamed CBGB’s into existence.

The owner of the club, Hilly Kristal, never said no. That was his genius. Though it’s dumb to use the word genius about what happened there. It was all a dream. Many of us were drunk or stoned half our waking hours, after all. The thing is, we were young there. You don’t get that back. Even children know that. They don’t want their old stuff thrown away. Everything should be kept. I regret everything I’ve ever thrown away.

CBGB’s was like a big playhouse, site of conspiracies, orgies, delirium, refuge, boredom, meanness, jealousy, kindness, but most of all youth. Things felt and done the first time are more vivid. CBGB’s is where many things were felt with that vividness. That feeling is the real identity of the club, to me. And it’s horrible, or at least seriously sad, to lose it. But then, apparently, we aren’t really going to lose it.

CBGB’s is going to be dismantled and reconstructed as an exhibit in Las Vegas, like Elvis. I like that. A lot. I really hope it happens as intended.

It’s occurred to me that Hilly’s genius passivity is something he has in common with Andy Warhol. Another trait of Warhol’s was that he fanatically tried to keep or record everything that ever happened in his vicinity, from junk mail in “time capsules” to small talk to newspaper front pages and movie star publicity shots to 24 hours of the Empire State Building.

We all know that nothing lasts. But at least we can make a cool and funny exhibit of it.

I’m serious. God likes change and a joke. God loves CBGB’s.

Richard Hell, a musician, is the author of the novel “Godlike” and the film critic for BlackBook magazine.



Posted on 10/14/2006 1:00 PM Comments (1)
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