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Showing posts with label the pistoleers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the pistoleers. Show all posts

Sunday 16 July 2023

Forty Minutes Of Covers Of The Clash

To follow last week's post of The Clash sampled, edited and remixed, this week has a a forty minute set of covers of Clash songs by other artists. When I started to put a shortlist together I realised there's enough material for two or three editions. I thought of theming it- a dub mix, rock mix and so on but then in the spirit of Sandinista! decided to sling different styles together, so we go from dub to rockabilly and back again with several other points visited in between. The Clash's songs stand up well to being covered- the sheer variety is testament to their songs and the distance they travelled between White Riot in 1977 and Death Is A Star in 1983. 

Forty Minutes Of Covers Of The Clash

  • Terry Edwards And The Scapegoats: Version City
  • Megative: Ghetto Defendant
  • Infantry Rockers: Rebel Waltz
  • The Afghan Whigs: Lost In The Supermarket
  • Citizen Sound ft. Prince Blanco and Ammoye: One More Time
  • Hinds: Spanish Bombs
  • Jimmy Cliff: Guns Of Brixton
  • Lily Allen and Mick Jones: Straight To Hell
  • The Pistoleers: Bank Robber
  • Dub Spencer and Trance Hill: Train In Vain
Punk trumpeter Terry Edwards recorded covers of the Mary Chain, Bowie and The Fall with his Scapegoats as well as being a member of Gallon Drunk. It is typically punk of him to decide to cover Version City, a Sandinista! side 6 song and hence unlikely to have been heard by many but the most committed. 

Megative are from New York City. Their cover of Ghetto Defendant (a Combat Rock highlight, rocking dub with Allen Ginsburg on board) came as a bonus song on their 2018 album No Fear. 

The Afghan Whigs use Topper's Train In Vain drumbeat for their cover of one of Mick's greatest London Calling era songs, a single that never was. Greg Dulli et al recorded it for a tribute album that came out in 1999. 

Shatter The Hotel came out in 2009, a reggae/ dub album of Clash covers with Don Letts doing London Calling and Creation Rockers, Dub Antenna and Chomsky Allstars all feature. It's a really good album, good versions from start to finish. For this mix I included Infantry Rockers doing Rebel Waltz (a real lesser known Clash gem) and Citizen Sound's One More Time. Infantry Rockers are from Wisconsin with members from Venezuela, Sierra Leone, Costa Rica and Jamaica, which couldn't be more Clash if it tried. I can't find much info about Citizen Sound. Prince Blanco featured in last week's mix with 22 Davis Road

Hinds are four young women from Spain. In 2020 they kicked the living daylights out of one of London Calling's best songs, Joe conflating 70s mass tourism, the Spanish Civil War of 1936- 1939 and the terror campaign by ETA. If you're going to cover The Clash, do it properly. As Hinds do. 

Jimmy Cliff's cover of Guns Of Brixton came out on his Sacred Fire EP in 2011. Paul Simonon's lyrics refer to Ivan, the lead character in the Harder They Come. Ivan was of course played by Jimmy Cliff. 

Lily Allen and Mick recorded Straight To Hell for a War Child album in 2009. Lily's Dad Keith was a friend of Joe's and he was a regular visitor to their home. 

The Pistoleers covered Bank Robber in rockabilly style for a 2003 tribute album, This Is Rockabilly Clash- I'm fairly sure the first time I heard this was when it was played by Andrew Weatherall. 

Dub Spencer and Trance Hill are a Swiss dub outfit who released an entire album of dub versions of Clash songs back in 2011. It's quality stuff from top to tail not least when they tackle the less- dub oriented songs, like Train In Vain. 


Saturday 25 July 2020

Isolation Mix Fifteen: Songs Lord Sabre Taught Us Part Two


Two weeks ago I posted my fourteenth Isolation Mix, Songs The Lord Sabre Taught Us, an hour of music from Andrew Weatherall's record box, as featured on his radio shows, playlists, interviews and mixes, mixed together seamlessly (vaguely). Today's mix is a second edition, fifteen songs he played, raved about or sampled, most of them first heard via him (I was listening to Stockholm Monsters before I was a fan of Mr Weatherall, a long lost Factory band who made a bunch of good singles and a fine album called Alma Matter and also the best band to come out of Burnage). It's a tribute to the man and his record collection that there are so many great records from his back pages to sift through and then sequence into some kind of pleasing order. Rockabilly, dub, Factory, post- punk, krautrock legends, Weller spinning out through the Kosmos...



Cowboys International: The ‘No’ Tune
Sparkle Moore: Skull And Crossbones
The Pistoleers: Bank Robber
The Johnny Burnette Trio: Honey Hush
Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze: Dubwise
Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry: Disco Devil
African Head Charge: Dervish Chant
Big Youth: Hotter Fire
Colourbox: Looks Like We’re Shy One Horse
Stockholm Monsters: All At Once
Holger Czukay, Jah Wobble and Jaki Liebezeit: How Much Are They?
White Williams: Route To Palm
Paul Weller: Kosmos (Lynch Mob Bonus Beats)
A R Kane: A Love From Outer Space
Chris And Cosey: October (Love Song) ‘86

Friday 30 May 2014

The Return Of Friday Night is Rockabilly Night 148


I've had a week or two off the rockabilly, but here it comes again. It's getting quite difficult to keep coming up with stuff for this slot but I was reminded of this cover version recently and couldn't find it anywhere on the internet other than Grooveshark. I don't know much about Grooveshark but I think it's semi-legal at best.

This is The Clash's Bankrobber done as a rockabilly song by The Pistoleers, which makes it sound like they did it first and The Clash later covered it dub reggae stylee. It's a good cover version. I can't get the plug-in thing to work but you can listen to it here. It's worth the click through. I can't find anything that works to rip it with at the moment so no mp3 either.