This here music mash up the nation
This here music cause a sensation
The Legacy Edition - 25 Years after London Calling (instead of a Juno rant)
I bought London Calling in 1979, which was a good year for music, at least for me. I know, dear readers, that some of you were too young to remember much of 1979, but that was the year I found XTC, The Clash, Pink Floyd, and a host of others, some of whom have not aged well (but I won't mention those). London Calling, I believe, was the best album to come out that year (followed closely by Leonard Cohen's Recent Songs). After all of these years, I would rank London Calling as one of the top five rock records of all time. It is, beyond any doubt, a rock and roll masterpiece.
The cover picture screams punk - Paul Simonon about to smash his Fender bass. But even on first listen, most Clash fans could recognize the astonishing musical maturation that this album represented. The album opens with the apocalyptic pop title track, London Calling, and moves quickly into reggae, rockabilly, folk rock, more straight up pop and even a hint of the blues. The Clash had moved on to the new territory of postpunk, and they did it fantastically well.
Here's a good quote from Amanda Petrusich:
"The Clash are a rock band, and 1979's London Calling is their creative apex, a booming, infallible tribute to throbbing guitars and spacious ideology. " link
And another, from Adrien Begrand:
"The influence of London Calling on rock music is immeasurable. Not only did it break down barriers for punk rock, achieving mainstream success, in both the UK and North America, but it also proved that it was okay for a punk band to be great musicians, adventurous even." link
I believe in this and it's been tested by research...
Technorati Tags: music, The Clash, London Calling
3 comments:
I note, though, that Wikipidi suggests that in 1979, "disco reigned surpreme".
Just sayin' ...
Disco was the least of my worries in 1979. True, we had the Bee Gees and I did have to suffer through my Brother's Disco Queen infatuation, but check out the best male and female pop vocal Grammy awards for 1979: Anne Murray for "You Needed Me" and Barry Manilow for "Copacabana (At the Copa)". Bloody Hell.
ah, well Combat Rock is a completely different story. with that album, the Clash were in serious decline.
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