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1610 articles found. Page 2 of 81.
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The Clash, The Specials: The Clash/The Specials: Friar's, Aylesbury
Live Review by Garry Bushell, Sounds, 8 July 1978
FOR PEOPLE who like to put things in neat little pecking orders – and because of our conditioning there's a lot of them – the ...
The Clash: Give 'Em Enough Rope
Review by Ira Robbins, Trouser Press, January 1979
THE CLASH HAVE been through a lot since they last released an album, almost 19 months ago, and so has the scene that they emerged ...
The Clash: The Fastest Gang In The West
Report and Interview by Paul Morley, NME, 20 October 1979
DETAILS: THE FIFTH MEMBER Micky Gallagher turned up in Boston. Four or five dates into the Clash itinerary and The Blockheads' jumpy Irish keyboardist slips ...
The Clash: London Calling 25th Anniversary
Retrospective by Ben Myers, Record Collector, October 2004
BY EARLY 1979, to the outside world The Clash were coasting. In their three short years of existence they had signed to Sony for a ...
The Clash: They Want To Spoil The Party So They'll Stay
Interview by Bill Holdship, Creem, October 1984
CREEM CONTRIBUTOR Mark Norton and I were talking several days before the Clash "invaded" Detroit, and we began discussing the concept of "armchair activism" and ...
Report and Interview by Mick Farren, NME, 20 June 1981
The winner of NME's Flatter The Clash competition checks out the ramifications when an English band's world is at Bonds. ...
The Clash: Give 'Em Enough Rope (Epic JE 35543)
Review by Don Snowden, Los Angeles Times, 16 February 1978
THE CLASH IS A PUNK ROCK BAND and proud of it, but fans who dismiss it for that reason alone are making a mistake. This ...
Review by Mat Snow, Q, June 1989
UNLIKE THE Sex Pistols, the other great London punk-rock group had ambitions beyond delivering the short, sharp shock to the system suggested by the sudden ...
Book Excerpt by Ira Robbins, The Big Takeover, 1994
Even if the basic impetus for punk rock was just traditional teen needs like pissing off parents and claiming a cultural identity, some of the ...
Retrospective by Chris Salewicz, MOJO, August 1994
IF THERE WAS ONE PIVOTAL EVENT IN THE HISTORY OF THE Clash's assault on the USA it was the season of 17 shows they played ...
Report and Interview by Sylvie Simmons, Sounds, 17 February 1979
"SO YOU think we lost the battle then go home and weep about it. Sometimes youve got to wake up in the morning and ...
Overview by Ian Fortnam, music365.com, June 1999
IN 1977, ROCK'N'ROLL WASN'T merely a peripheral diversion to take your mind off of the mortgage on a Saturday night, it was a matter of ...
Report and Interview by Chris Salewicz, NME, 15 July 1978
IT'S AS IF THE Clash's 'Police And Thieves' stage backdrop has suddenly transmogrified into moving 3-D. ...
Review by Van Gosse, Village Voice, 14 January 1981
CONFRONTING THE Clash's epic monstrosity Sandinista! is like being a teacher (which I once was) and having one of your favorite little buggers show up ...
The Clash: Eighteen Flight Rock...
Interview by Miles, NME, 11 December 1976
...AND THE SOUND OF THE WESTWAY ...
Interview by Chris Bohn, Melody Maker, 29 December 1979
INSIDE THE CLASH'S new rehearsal studio, under a railway bridge somewhere in South London, Joe Strummer is singing a slow country blues about rolling boxcars, ...
Interview by Chris Salewicz, MOJO, August 1994
Joe Strummer talks to Chris Salewicz ...
The Clash: Combat Rock (CBS) ***
Review by Mark Cooper, Record Mirror, 15 May 1982
Gonna write a Clashic ...
The Clash: Palais des Glaces, Paris
Live Review by Vivien Goldman, Sounds, 7 May 1977
THE AUDIENCE at the Palais des Glaces, a sleazy 30's flea-pit with odd nooks where Parisians indulged in the bourgeois old-wave habit of getting high ...
The Clash, Suicide: The Clash, Suicide: The Music Machine, London
Live Review by Charles Shaar Murray, NME, 5 August 1978
TIME HAS come today. Third of four Music Machine gigs and surprise! the ritual bottling of Suicide appears to have been omitted for ...
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