Showing posts with label Clash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clash. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2026

10 SONGS: 2/7/2026

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1322

SLYBOOTS: If We Could Let Go

Much of this week's show was programmed in anger, and in solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Minneapolis. We opened with Slyboots' "If We Could Let Go," a gorgeous, life-affirming declaration of gaze fixed forward in the face of life's casual (and institutionalized) cruelty. It's become one of my favorite songs, and it was the only song I considered for this week's first spin. In September, I posted a Greatest Record Ever Made! appreciation of the track. As we kick off our own statement of dissent and resolution, I'm going to quote that piece in its entirety:

"If We Could Let Go." I'm trying. Honest, I'm trying.

Slyboots are a great, great group from New York, and they're deserving of much wider notoriety. Their 2024 single "If We Could Let Go" is heartbreaking in all the best ways, a song full of hope and ache, empowered with an awareness of how far we fall short in pursuit of peace, love, and understanding, and driven by determination to overcome that gap and collectively become the better people a burning world needs us to be. Not merely my favorite track from last year; it's a legit contender for my all-time Hot 100. 

The song's title offers a path forward in troubled times, even if it's a path I'm not sure I'm ready to take. Yet. As close to throwing a gauntlet as an earnest plea for peace can be, the songwriting for "If We Could Let Go" is credited to the group. Lead singer Tiffany Lyons imbues the lyrics with an implied weariness bolstered by strength of passion and clarity of purpose. Guitarist KG Noble, bassist Margaret LaBombard, drummer Ted Marcus, and keyboardist Gregorio Lozano surround Lyons with bounce and determination, a steel-willed grace battalion buoyed by angelic backing vocals courtesy of Noble and Lozano.

As we sing along, and as we ponder the salvation in letting go of prejudice and distrust, there are things we should not relinquish. Hold fast to belief in something better. Hold each other up. Hold on. Stand and hold on. Draw strength from our passions, our delights, our embrace of art and family and community. Take comfort in what we love, and commit to fight on behalf of what we love. Pray and work for a future better than today. One foot in front of the other.

How can one hold on to hope in hopeless times? I guess the best we can do is keep pushing forward. Music turned up louder than our doubts. Hands held or raised as we see fit. Eyes on...well, if not on the prize, at least on our next step in the direction of the prize. We may feel like we'll never arrive, and that fear may prove correct. 

But let go of that fear. There are so many reasons to lose heart, to lose focus, to lose our way in the darkness all around us. There are so many reasons to just give up. With "If We Could Let Go," Slyboots gently--firmly--urge us to let go of the darkness that surrounds us.

Let go of the hate. Let go of the hurt. If we could let go. Let go of the if. We can. We will. Slyboots make their case. Let's go, Slyboots.

THE RAMONES: I Believe In Miracles

It would be impossible to overstate the importance of music in my life. From listening to my Aunt Anna's Chubby Checker 45 in the early '60s through co-hosting a little mutant radio show six decades later, music has moved me, inspired me, and built me. With the possible (probable) exception of the Beatles, no musical act has had more pervasive and prevailing impact upon me than the American Beatles, the greatest American rock 'n' roll band of all time, the Ramones. And not even the Beatles can annex and fortify my sovereign POV to the sublime extent that the Ramones can. It's true in good times. It's equally true in times like these. Gabba Gabba, man. Gabba Gabba.

From a previous post:

In times of trouble, when we find ourselves caught at the crossroads of moral quandary and indecision, we must always ask ourselves one question:

What would the Ramones do?

I doubt many people think of the Ramones as avatars of hope. Maybe they shouldn't...but maybe they should? If ever there was a band that persevered, endured, and just kept on doing, popular resistance be damned, it was the Ramones. They were a cult act. They became legitimate pop culture icons, through sheer force of will. A miracle, indeed.

The song "I Believe In Miracles" came late in the Ramones' career. 1989. It was a mere seven years before their final concert, a good fifteen years after the Bowery birthed them; thirteen years after their debut album, eleven years after their final Hot 100 single, nine years since the last Ramones album to (barely) breach the upper 50 in Billboard's LP chart. They had continued to make records. Sales--modest to begin with--diminished further. There were no miracles in their foreseeable future.

The determinedly uplifting lyrics of "I Believe In Miracles" were written by Dee Dee Ramone, and they offer a stunning affirmation of faith in the face of dismally long odds. The song was on Brain Drain, an album which also contained "Pet Sematary," the title tune from a then-new film based on Stephen King's novel of the same name. I even heard "Pet Sematary" on commercial radio once or twice--there's your miracle!--so maybe a belief in better fortune wasn't entirely groundless.

Just, y'know, mostly groundless. "Pet Sematary" did well (# 4) on the Modern Rock Tracks chart, but never troubled the Hot 100. Brain Drain peaked at # 122. It was the Ramones' final studio album for Sire Records. And it was Dee Dee's last record as a Ramone.

Dee Dee's abrupt departure from the brudderhood was startling, and his decision to jump ship seemed to stand in contrast to the resolute dedication implied by what he wrote in "I Believe In Miracles." Perhaps sometimes a song is just a song.

And perhaps sometimes--most times?--a song can be more than just...well, just anything. I used to be on an endless run, believed in miracles 'cause I'm one. Our art is a lifeline to our aspirations, a potential guidebook to what we want to be, what we could be. If reality falls short of our intentions, that failing doesn't negate the audacity to hope, nor indicate that we should deny ourselves the opportunity to rise: we have been blessed with the power to survive, after all these years of being alive.

One could have expected Dee Dee's exit, his act of packing up and taking his miracles home, to signal the Ramones' death knell. One woulda been wrong. A young bassist dubbed C. J. Ramone joined Joey, Johnny, and Marky in the final leather-clad incarnation of this Gabba-Gabba heyday. C. J. is in the video for "I Believe In Miracles." The Ramones kept on going. That's what the Ramones did, always. Their three post-Dee Dee studio albums in the '90s carried flashes of brilliance. And Dee Dee, bless 'im, continued to write songs for his former group. 

That wasn't a miracle. That was family. The few, the proud. Semper Fi.

Should we believe in miracles? Well, what would the Ramones do? It's a simple answer: 1-2-3-4. Get on with it. Hey-ho, let's GO! It doesn't always work out. But sometimes, every now and again, miracles are there for those who believe.

THE LEGAL MATTERS: The Message

It's like a jungle sometimes, it makes me wonder how I keep from goin' under. Although the Legal Matters' new single "The Message" shares its title with a hip-hop classic by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, it is most assuredly its own message. As the group's Andy Reed explains, "In today’s political landscape, I’ve grown frustrated with the hypocritical, religious types. It’s not aimed at religion specifically, just those who weaponize it.” 

We get the message, and we approve. The single's out now; the new album Lost At Sea is due February 27th. Message received.

THE CLASH: Clampdown


The popular meme is correct: These are the times Joe Strummer trained us for. Let fury have the hour. Anger can be power.

ELVIS COSTELLO AND THE ATTRACTIONS: (What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love And Understanding

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

MELANIE WITH THE EDWIN HAWKINS SINGERS: Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)

All around us, the world gives us an eternal supply of reasons to give in and give up. We counter the thud and drone with...well, with whatever we can, with any means or method capable of marshalling our spirits. Music is one of many such methods, a favored go-to when we need nurturing or inspiration, consolation or spark. In 1970, Melanie with the Edwin Hawkins Singers provided a song that still serves that purpose for me. From my book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1):

...What a terrific, uplifting song, with the sanctified might of the Edwin Hawkins Singers lifting Melanie up to soar as high as the angels above. I'd had no real use for the straight black Gospel sound of the Edwin Hawkins Singers' huge 1969 hit "Oh Happy Day" when I was nine, but "Lay Down" effortlessly mingled their celestial sound with Melanie's folk-singer vibe, and it all wound up as pop music. Irresistible pop music. Forget the damned roller skates. "Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)" is the key, right here.

"We were so close/There was no room/We bled inside each other's wounds." Well, the lyrics pin this one to the Viet Nam War era. "Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)" was inspired by Melanie's performance at Woodstock, a song written to express how it felt for her to see this massive crowd--perhaps not really a half a million strong, but giving the impression of a large, large number--as she sang and played her own songs of peace. The rain came down. You can hear her on the Woodstock Two album, performing "My Beautiful People" and "Birthday Of The Sun," dedicating her music with a giggle to the beautiful, wet people. You can hear her smile. You can hear her belief. 

After Woodstock, Melanie took all of what she'd seen, all of what she felt, and turned it into "Lay Down (Candles In The Rain)." Raise the candles high. If you don't we could stay black against the night. The Edwin Hawkins Singers provide amazing grace, immortal soul, an oh-happy-day's journey into night. Raise them higher again. We could stay dry against the rain...."

THE JAM: In The City

In the city there's a thousand men in uniform/And I've heard they now have the right to kill a man

Those lines cut deep in 1977. They cut even deeper now.

APOLLO 100: Joy

Classic Top 40 is fine, but let's raise a glass to classical Top 40. In 1971, Apollo 100 took an electric pop-rock arrangement of Johann Sebastian Bach's "Jesu, Joy Of Man's Desiring" into the Top Ten and onto AM radios everywhere. "Joy." The song's title describes its effect. As we said on the radio Sunday night:

"We acknowledge that when things go wrong, playing pop music on the radio doesn't do much of anything to correct what's wrong. But we channel our outrage, our dedication, our belief that we CAN change, for the better. 

"Belief is hope. Hope is joy.

"On this show, and in this life, we embrace the audacity of joy."

THE BEATLES: Revolution

We do not know that it's gonna be all right. And it won't be all right any time soon enough. We ain't givin' up just yet. 1-2-3-4!

MICHAEL SIMMONS: America

From his exquisite covers album Fun Where You Can Find It, Michael Simmons covers Simon and Garfunkel. All come to look for America. I swear it's out there. Keep the faith, baby. Keep the faith.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider a visit to CC's Tip Jar. You can also become a Boppin' booster on my Patreon page.

I compiled a various-artists tribute album called Make Something Happen! A Tribute To The Flashcubes, and it's pretty damned good; you can read about it here and order it here. My new book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1) is now available, and you can order an autographed copy here. You can still get my previous book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones from publisher Rare Bird Books, OR an autographed copy here. If you like the books, please consider leaving a rating and/or review at the usual online resources.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, streaming at SPARK stream and on the Radio Garden app as WESTCOTT RADIO. You can read about our history here.

Friday, March 3, 2023

10 SONGS: 3/3/2023

10 Songs is a weekly list of ten songs that happen to be on my mind at the moment. The lists are usually dominated by songs played on the previous Sunday night's edition of This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl. The idea was inspired by Don Valentine of the essential blog I Don't Hear A Single.

This week's edition of 10 Songs draws exclusively from the playlist for This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio # 1170. This show is available as a podcast.

IRENE PEÑA: Must've Been Good

America's Sweetheart Irene Peña invited Dana and I to appear on her Twitch TV channel last Sunday, and we were delighted to do so. Evidence? Right HERE. But we had no idea that she was also going to surprise us with live cameos by our musical friends Dolph Chaney, Bruce Gordon, and Steve Stoeckel, and we had no clue whatsoever that this fantastic four had wrangled others to join them in a secret fundraiser for Syracuse Community Radio. We're told the looks on our faces when they announced a $500 donation to SCR tells the story of our shock and gratitude.

Maybe it's not enough to just say "thank you," but...thank you. Thank you Irene, and thank you everybody, all who participated and all who contributed. 

This week's TIRnRR was already recorded well before all of the above occurred. Knowing we were gonna be on the air (prerecorded) right after Irene's Twitch-and-shout presentation, we opened our own show with "Must've Been Good," the track that introduced us to Irene's music in 2016.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio has the best listeners--the best friends--a little mutant radio show could ever want. And next week? Well, next week's TIRnRR playlist will be our chance to offer a proper thank you after all.

THE FLASHCUBES FEATURING RANDY KLAWON: Get The Message

At this writing, "Get The Message"--the 2022 digital single from the irresistible combined pop forces of the Flashcubes featuring Randy Klawon--has been the most recent 'Cubes release from the visionaries at Big Stir Records. It's a good one, so we keep playing it. 

Still, we want more. Listen, greed ain't so much a sin when you're seeking bounty on behalf of the greater good. For the people! For the FANS! 

(I mean, for us, too. Let's not get crazy. DJs need cool stuff to play just like you need cool stuff to play.)

Luckily, there will be more. I can speak with authority that the Flashcubes are working on [redacted]. 

Um...[redacted]?

Er...lemme try saying it louder, like Garrett Morris on Saturday Night Live: THE FLASHCUBES ARE WORKING ON [redacted]. I said [redacted]. [Redacted]. [REDACTED!] That's [REDACTED!!!].

Damn these NDAs! You'll find out soon enough. Just remember: you got the [redacted] message here first.

OSCAR TONEY JR: Moon River

Gotta admit I'd never even heard of Oscar Toney Jr. until last year. Yeah, late to the party again. But I brought tunes! Here's what I said in 2022:

"One of the many truths in our lives as pop fans is that there is always so much more magnificent music awaiting our discovery: new music, of course, and also old music that escaped our attention.

"I don't recallI hearing (or hearing of) '60s soul singer Oscar Toney Jr. before last week. Maybe? Even if so, Toney didn't register with me until, like, now. A chance dive into the CD bins at Sound Garden in Syracuse netted me The Soul Of The Memphis Boys, a compilation CD collecting some Memphis sides by Ben E. KingElvis PresleyArthur ConleyJames and Bobby PurifyArthur AlexanderJerry Lee LewisDusty SpringfieldSolomon BurkeElla Washington, and more. Impulse purchase, come to Poppa!

"On this disc, Toney's 'Ain't That True Love' freakin' knocked me out. On the radio it went, and on the radio it will return next week. This is a bona fide soul classic, even if hardly anyone knows it. Classic.

"There's so much out there, waiting for us to open our ears, eyes, and minds and just notice. The hunt continues. Ain't that...something?"

That hunt led me to a Toney best-of CD called Oscar's Winners, which made its TIRnRR debut with last week's spin of the exquisite "No More Sad Songs." Go'geous! Toney's heavenly take on Henry Mancini and Johnny Mercer's stalwart "Moon River" crossed in style past dreammaker and heartbreaker alike to join this week's cavalcade o' hits, and we'll tune up more Toney next week. You know the mantra, mis amigos: Any record you ain't heard is a new record. Open up. Say OSCAR!

THE CYNZ: Tell That Girl To Shut Up

With this week's spin on the ol' playlist, the Cynz' current cover of Holly and the Italians' "Tell That Girl To Shut Up" has probably locked a berth on TIRnRR's year-end countdown of our most-played tracks in 2023. How high will it place? Remains to be seen, and it's gonna have competition. Still, it seems safe to predict it will be on the Countdown show. 

The track's taking a break next week. It'll be back. Don't even waste your breath tellin' this girl to be quiet. Quiet is not her nature. Lucky for us!

THE MONKEES: You Told Me

Peter Tork, Davy Jones, producer Chip Douglas, Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith

The Monkees will always, always be one of my all-time favorite acts. As the group's sole surviving member, Micky Dolenz is currently preparing a new concert tour in tribute to the Monkees' 1967 album Headquarters. Their third album, Headquarters (along with the non-LP B-side "The Girl I Knew Somewhere," which immediately preceded Headquarters) presented the Monkees as a working studio band for the first time. Following two albums of not being allowed to play at all on the records that bore their name, the Monkees played on every track on Headquarters. There were a few essential sidemen, and producer Chip Douglas served in spots as a de facto fifth Monkee, but it was mostly the Monkees themselves. The result was a solid win, both artistically and commercially. With Headquarters and a 1967 concert tour, the made-for-TV combo had become real.

I've seen a video of Micky and his ace ensemble rehearsing for this new tour, singing the album's opening track "You Told Me." It's a Michael Nesmith song, and Micky channels his departed friend's original presence in his own charismatic style. I'd love to hear what he does with more songs originally sung by Nesmith ("Sunny Girlfriend" and "You Just May Be The One"), Davy Jones (particularly "Early Morning Blues And Greens" and "Forget That Girl"), and Peter Tork (whose only lead vocal on the album was the second verse and one line of the chorus of "Shades Of Gray;" on this tour, Micky will presumably sing both Peter's and David's parts on this one). And I wanna hear Micky's live versions of songs he did sing on the Headquarters album, songs like "Mr. Webster" and "For Pete's Sake." It's gonna be a great show.

Alas, he may not--won't--be coming to my town, as the tour isn't planning stops anywhere near Syracuse. ADD MORE DATES!, I cry. But I know there are only so many shows they can do.

I have a great memory of seeing the Monkees in 2012, after Davy passed, but with Micky, Michael, and Peter. It was magic, one of my most-cherished concert experiences. We play the Monkees' records nearly every week on TIRnRR. This week, we played "You Told Me," the opening track from Headquarters, which remains the Monkees' most-respected full-length work. Next week, we'll play the opening track from one of the Monkees' least-respected albums. It's a great track nonetheless. Hey-hey. We're fans.

DONNA SUMMER: He's A Rebel

This one made it to the playlist outta nowhere. Dana played "Rebel Girl Rebel Girl" by Wreckless Eric and Amy Rigby, and I figured I'd follow with "Rebel Rebel." Rather than play David Bowie's original, I opted for a cover by the Bay City Rollers

But I didn't want to play the album track (from 1977's It's A Game); I wanted to go with a live version. We've spoken in recent weeks about Voxx, the 1980 album the post-fame (and post-"Bay City") Rollers submitted as their contract-breaker with Arista Records. It's a very good record, I remembered a live cover of "Rebel Rebel" lurked in between its studio tracks, so I plopped the live Voxx "Rebel Rebel" into place as we set up the show.

It didn't work. 

Not in the context, not in the specific flow of the show. It's a fine track, but it wasn't the right track for the moment. Maybe the Crystals' "He's A Rebel" instead? Hmmm. Or maybe a cover of "He's A Rebel?" Or maybe, I dunno...

...maybe an entirely different song that happened to share that title? Yeah. That worked.

The only tracks I remembered from Donna Summer's 1983 hit album She Works Hard For The Money were the superb title track and "Unconditional Love," her collaboration with Musical Youth. "He's A Rebel" was an original song on that album, I stumbled across it while fumbling through "Rebel"-titled choices, and had my EUREKA! programming epiphany. 

I work hard for no money. That's...the opposite of being a rebel, innit? No matter. As long as the right songs get on the radio, my work is complete.

AMOS MILBURN: Down The Road Apiece

Awright, maybe we're no more likely to get a consensus about identifying the very first rock 'n' roll record than we are to agree on a definition of power pop. But I have yet to hear compelling evidence that anything other than Amos Milburn's 1947 boogie-woogie jumper "Down The Road Apiece" could claim that title. Um, I mean that First Rock 'n' Roll Record title. Calling it power pop would be a little bit of a stretch.

THE CLASH: Train In Vain

The Greatest Record Ever Made!

BLOTTO: Twist And Shout

RECORDED LIVE IN SYRACUSE! I may have even been at this September 1981 show at the Jab, because trust me: given the state of ME in the early '80s, the fact that I don't remember being there has no legit bearing on how likely it was that I was there anyway. Shake it up, baby.

THE KINKS: Destroyer

This is the first time we've ever played "Destroyer" on TIRnRR. I've never fully embraced this willfully bludgeonsome track from the Kinks' 1981 album Give The People What They Want. Other than the flat-out stellar "Better Things," Give The People What They Want isn't one of my favorite Kinks albums; it's always felt to me like a continuation of the arena-rock of 1979's Low Budget, and while I do like both albums, neither would be among the first ten non-compilation Kinks records I'd pick to play during free time.

That said, even if "Destroyer"'s stadium bluster and self-referential nods to "Lola" and "All Day And All Of The Night" are a tiny bit off-putting, I do still like it. The arena-rock phase helped the Kinks remain commercially viable, both Low Budget and Give The People What They Want have their share of well-respected moments, and their next two '80s albums State Of Confusion and Word Of Mouth are even better.

(And I wonder if, in this stadium period from the late '70s to the early/mid '80s, Ray Davies thought of a heavy-handed number called "Destroyer" as a callout to the bombast of KISS, who had a 1976 album called Destroyer. Probably a coincidence, but ya know what? I wanna rock 'n' roll, all day and all of the night. Maybe Ray did, too.)

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

Carl's new book Gabba Gabba Hey! A Conversation With The Ramones is now available for preorder, courtesy of the good folks at Rare Bird Books. Gabba Gabba YAY!!

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

Saturday, December 10, 2022

THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE: Train In Vain

Expanding upon a previous post about the Clash, this was prepared as a potential chapter in my long-threatened book The Greatest Record Ever Made! (Volume 1), but is not part of that book's current plan.

An infinite number of tracks can each be THE greatest record ever made, as long as they take turns. Today, this is THE GREATEST RECORD EVER MADE!


THE CLASH: Train In Vain (Stand By Me)
Written by Joe Strummer and Mick Jones
Produced by Guy Stevens
From the album London Calling, Epic Records, 1979

I like the Clash, but I don't think I like the Clash quite as much as many of my friends and peers like the Clash. I don't say that to be provocative. It's just something that occurred to me, and I've been picking at that thread in my mind ever since.

I have a decent collection of the Clash's music. On CD, I have the Clash On Broadway boxed set. On vinyl, I believe my copies of The Clash (U.S. version), Give 'Em Enough Rope, and London Calling have survived the various purges of my album stash, and I might still have Combat Rock, too. I have never owned a copy of Sandinistas!, and I couldn't get rid of the awful Cut The Crap album fast enough. I think my singles and EPs--imports of "Remote Control"/"London's Burning," "Tommy Gun"/"1-2 Crush On You," and The Cost Of Living EP, plus the domestic 10" Black Market Clash--all found decent homes with other caring and loving record collectors, while the Super Black Market Clash CD was traded in somewhere along the line. Oh, and I have mp3s of "Remote Control," "I Fought The Law," "Capital Radio Two," and "Hitsville UK." I have more Clash than I have Sex Pistols. But I listen to the Sex Pistols more often than I listen to the Clash. I listen to the Ramones more often than I listen to the Pistols and Clash combined.


I first heard of the Clash in the pages of Phonograph Record Magazine in (of course!) 1977. Over a year later, I read about them again in New York Rocker, and also heard more about them from an Syracuse University student named Diane Lesniewski. Like me, Diane was an enthusiastic fan of Syracuse's own power pop powerhouse the Flashcubes. Diane wrote about the 'Cubes and other things rockin' and new wavey in her own local fanzine Poser, where she used the nom du bop Penny Poser. Our Penny was into the Clash and the Who, and her zeal for the Clash inspired me to buy my first Clash record, the above-mentioned "Remote Control" single.

Yeah, I know--not a great place to start with the Clash. It was okay, but neither I nor (as it turned out) the members of the Clash themselves really dug it; as the group later sang on "Complete Control:" They said release "Remote Control"/But we didn't want it on the label. B-side "London's Burning" was more to my liking. I didn't get another Clash record until "Tommy Gun," which hooked me with its ratatatat-ratatatat military drum sound. B-side "1-2 Crush On You" was a pleasant throwaway. I also got the Cost Of Living EP, specifically for "I Fought The Law," though "Capital Radio Two" really became my go-to track there. The albums came to me in time, and I generally liked all of them except for Cut The Crap. And Jesus, let's not even talk about Cut The Crap.

Oh, except that I've gotta mention seeing the Clash live in Buffalo, when they were touring in support of Cut The Crap. Guitarist Mick Jones had been exiled and declared a non-person by the Clash's apparatchik, so was it really the Clash on that album and tour? I guess it was; you had your Joe Strummer and your Paul Simonon, along with whomever it was they drafted as deputy Clash. It was not a great concert.

For all that, I remained a fan. I've never stopped being a fan. I love "Complete Control," "Capital Radio Two," "London's Burning," "London Calling," "Tommy Gun," "Safe European Home," "Hate And War," the sublime "Train In Vain," "Clampdown," "Death Or Glory," "Spanish Bombs," their cover of  the Equals' "Police On My Back," and more than a few others. I'm not yet tired of "Should I Stay Or Should I Go," nor even "Rock The Casbah."


I enjoy listening to all of those tracks. I like the Clash. I just don't embrace them with the full-tilt devotion that some others may feel. I guess it brushes against irony that a group once billed as the only band that matters ultimately doesn't mean as much to me as some other great groups. When the thought first occurred to me, I asked a pal, an avowed Bruce Springsteen fan, if he thought folks who were into the Boss would be more likely to also listen to the Clash or to the Sex Pistols.

The answer was the Clash, of course; the Pistols had power, but no melody he could discern. I disagree, but this divergence in individual rockin' pop ideals may be a partial key to understanding my preferences. See, the Pistols, the Ramones, the Buzzcocks, the Undertones, the Jam--to me, that's all pop music, not dissimilar (in my mind, anyway) from the essence of the Beatles, the Kinks, the Isley Brothers, the MonkeesMotownChuck BerryBuddy HollyLittle Richard, the Beach Boys, the early Who. With all of these acts, their best stuff sounds like a 45 rpm single. Glorious, irresistible noise. Both Springsteen and the Clash (and Bob Dylan) are a step or two (or more) removed from that visceral aesthetic. Nothing wrong with that; hell, the Clash's "Train In Vain" and Springsteen's "Girls In Their Summer Clothes" cross camps into my pop world, and they're both in this book. It is a big difference nonetheless, and possibly the beginning of an explanation of why I champion the Bay City Rollers and don't often say all that much much on behalf of the Clash.

But I like the Clash. Sometimes I love them. Y'know...as a friend. And after all this, won't you give me a smile?

"Train In Vain" is far and away the most pop-sounding track the Clash ever did. "Pop" never really seemed to be the Clash's primary goal; they were politically aware, socially conscious, and that ambition and reputation (plus, y'know, actually being great) made them the most revered group to come out of 1970s British punk. Punk songs like "White Riot" are pop, of course--it's ALL pop music--but "White Riot" isn't pop in the same way that "Train In Vain" is pop. Nor is "London Calling," nor is the throwaway B-side "1-2 Crush On You." Nor is "Rock The Casbah," even though that was the Clash's biggest pop hit in America. "Rock The Casbah" was popular; "Train In Vain" was pop. I tell ya, outside of "Train In Vain," the closest thing to pure pop in the Clash catalog o' hits is "Spanish Bombs," which is much prettier and catchier than one would expect of a song about the Spanish Civil War.

"Train In Vain" has no qualifiers, no asterisks next to its description as an unabashed pop tune. If we close our eyes, we can imagine "Train In Vain" by Otis Redding, "Train In Vain" by the Monkees, "Train In Vain" on Motown or Apple. As we open our eyes, it's The Clash, with guitar hero Mick Jones crooning a simple song over a simple riff, a boy spurned in love and unashamed to say it. There is not a shred of self-consciousness in play, no taint of irony; to paraphrase another set of British punks, he means it, man.

And "Train In Vain" got the Clash on the radio in America. "I Fought The Law" had received some attention before that, but "Train In Vain" was really the first Clash track to earn meaningful airplay in the States. For some, maybe it was the gateway to the Clash's manifestos, to "Clampdown"'s plea to let fury have the hour, because anger could be power. For some, maybe it was just a pop song on the radio. But it was on the radio, its lament I see all my dreams come tumblin' down/I can't be happy without you around offering as effective a teardrop as the works of Gene Pitney or the Four Tops. Even though love wouldn't stand by them, the Clash stand tall.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

POP-A-LOOZA: THE EVERLASTING FIRST! Captain Marvel (Marvel Comics), The Challengers Of The Unknown, The Dave Clark Five, The Clash, The Creation, The Creeper


Each week, the pop culture website Pop-A-Looza shares some posts from my vast 'n' captivating Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do) archives. The latest shared post is an Everlasting First look back at my introductions to a mixed bag of rock 'n' roll groups and comic book superheroes: Captain Marvel (Mar-Vell), the Challengers of the Unknown, the Dave Clark Five, the Clash, the Creation, and the Creeper.

For supplemental reading on the pop combos, we have links to more about the Clash and the Creation, and the Dave Clark Five are the subject of pieces focused on "Any Way You Want It," Glad All Over Again, and even the DC5's influence on the Beatles.

(The above are not the Captains Marvel you're looking for.)

As for supplemental links to today's comic book subjects...I got nothin'. I've written about the original SHAZAM!-shoutin' Captain Marvel (especially here and here), and reprised the short-lived 1960s M.F. Enterprises Captain Marvel stories here, here, here, here, here, and here, but I haven't had much to say about the Marvel Comics characters that swipe...adopted that name. Superheroes don't swipe. Marvel's Captain Marvel turns up in my memories of the '60s Marvel Super-Heroes comic book series, and that's about it. The Creeper and the Challs are otherwise MIA on this blog, though both are mentioned in my fantasy piece "The Old 52: Imagining A New Pre-Crisis DC Comics."

Still, whatever else I've written about these pop entities, they're all on equal footing in The Everlasting First! The stories of my introductions to them serve as the latest Boppin' Pop-A-Looza.

If you like what you see here on Boppin' (Like The Hip Folks Do), please consider supporting this blog by becoming a patron on Patreonor by visiting CC's Tip Jar. Additional products and projects are listed here.

This Is Rock 'n' Roll Radio with Dana & Carl airs Sunday nights from 9 to Midnight Eastern, on the air in Syracuse at SPARK! WSPJ 103.3 and 93.7 FM, and on the web at http://sparksyracuse.org/ You can read about our history here.

I'm on Twitter @CafarelliCarl