1. This is American Morning,
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2. - for Monday, December 23, 2002...
- Legend of rock...
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3. Sad and sudden news,
founding father of punk rock,
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4. - Joe Strummer, died yesterday.
- Guitarist, vocalist and songwriter for
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5. - the British punk band The Clash...
- ... right here at his home in Sommerset,
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6. apparently peacefully
of a heart attack.
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7. London Calling was named
the best album of the 1980s by...
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8. The times live in we need Joe Strummer
more than ever.
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9. I wouldn't be in a band
had I not heard The Clash.
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10. Joe, we're going to have
your name on screen,
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11. would you like anything under your name?
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12. Would you like Mescaleros, The Clash?
Anything like that?
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13. I'd like you to write
Punk Rock Warlord.
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14. With "Warlord" being one word.
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15. White riot - I want to riot
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16. White riot - a riot of my own
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17. White riot - I want to riot
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18. White riot - a riot of my own
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19. Black men gotta lot a problems
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20. But they don't mind throwing a brick
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21. White people go to school
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22. Where they teach you how to be thick
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23. Everybody does
Just what they're told to
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24. An' nobody wants
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25. To go to jail!
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26. White riot - I want to riot
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27. White riot - a riot of my own
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28. White riot - I want to riot
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29. White riot - a riot of my own
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30. All the power in the hands
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31. Of the people rich enough to buy it
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32. While we walk the street
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33. Too chicken to even try it
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34. An' everybody's doing
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35. Just what they're told to
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36. An' nobody wants
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37. To go to jail!
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38. All transmitters to full.
All receivers to boost.
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39. This is London calling,
this is London calling.
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40. First of all, welcome to the program,
all peoples of the world.
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41. This is Joe Strummer at the controls
in Bush House, in the heart of London.
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42. This land is your land,
this world is your world.
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43. We're gonna say the unsayable
and we play the unplayable.
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44. Broadcasting what needs to be cast.
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45. If your radio's tuned here,
your radio's tuned right.
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46. My father was born in India.
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47. He only became an English citizen
two years before I was born.
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48. And after the war he came to London
and joined the foreign office.
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49. He was very, very left-wing
which we though was quite surprising,
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50. because he spoke
like a very pucker Englishman.
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51. What on earth Ron was doing,
being a diplomat,
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52. was completely beyond me.
He questioned everything.
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53. My parents weren't musical at all,
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54. and I think if I got any musical tradition
it comes from my mother's side,
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55. she was born on a farm, 50 miles south of
John O'Groats in a town called Bonar Bridge
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56. which is very Highland
and very wild.
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57. Anna was just this Scottish Heather
and the great thing about Joe,
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58. he's got those two combinations:
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59. of the generosity of Anna,
and the questioning of Ron.
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60. My father was posted to Turkey
and that's why I was born there.
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61. He was screaming in Turkish
when he was about three.
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62. Throwing down the stairs
some Turkish curse that he'd learned.
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63. David was 18 months older than Joe.
And they were just like chalk and cheese.
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64. My father was then
posted to Cairo for two years,
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65. and then to Mexico-City
for two years.
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66. I went to a Mexican school
where they spoke no English.
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67. And then to Bonn
in West Germany.
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68. That's a great Elvis Presley
and my favorite Elvis tune because
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69. it's got a New Orleans flavor,
and you can feel the heat on the street.
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70. 1960 I believe is the first time I saw him.
Johnny Mellor he was called then.
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71. He was obsessed with
taking my sister's clothes off.
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72. He said to me
let's take your sister's clothes off
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73. and hide them in his Uncle John's cupboard
'cause no one will ever find them in there.
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74. David would just go along with us.
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75. Even at that early age Joe seemed
to be the leader of the two of them.
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76. Then I came to England,
to boarding school.
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77. I often think about my parents,
and how I must have felt about it,
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78. 'cause it was like being sent away,
and seeing them only once a year.
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79. It really changed my life because I just
realized I had to forget about my parents...
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80. and deal with this.
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81. It was a school
where people hung themselves.
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82. I quickly realized that you either
became a power or you were crushed.
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83. I had a gang 'cause I realized
you had to fight fire with fire.
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84. It was either bully or be bullied.
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85. I was one of the principal bullies.
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86. And there was no protection
from anybody or anything.
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87. I was happiest at school
because I was in charge of my own world.
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88. My brother was very shy.
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89. He was a little bit older than me
and the year above.
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90. They used to say in school
he hadn't said a word all term.
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91. And I was the opposite,
I was a mouthy little git.
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92. Joe kept himself out of trouble
very cleverly.
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93. Or we'd all be in the shit.
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94. Joe always...
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95. he knew how to handle people even
the people that were trying to hurt him.
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96. Reporting to Scouts was a good way
of getting out of school for a weekend...
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97. I think was the reason that we joined.
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98. We used to spend a lot of time
putting camps and campfires into the land.
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99. And that's Harry Belafonte
with a reminiscent "Day-O",
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100. takes you back to the old times.
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101. In all the time they were at school,
I never met his parents.
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102. It was as if they didn't exist.
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103. He'd go back for holidays.
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104. Come in Africa,
are you receiving us?
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105. Now we've got Mzikayifani Buthelezi.
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106. This is the sort of tune
that's like honey to the soul.
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107. Malawi made a big impression on him.
He liked the people.
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108. I think it just gave him a wider perspective
of the world at a very early age.
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109. He would always bring stories back
at the beginning of each term.
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110. Plus a new collection of records.
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111. I can remember
hearing The Rolling Stones
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112. coming out of this huge wooden radio
in the day room.
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113. It sounded so different
from what we were living
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114. in our actual day-to-day reality.
It was the sound of another world.
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115. This moment I think I decided
to only follow music forever.
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116. That would be the way to live.
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117. I was a lousy student.
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118. I was always last in the class.
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119. My reports would be really terrible,
the worst you can possibly imagine.
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120. My relation with my father was even worse.
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121. I began to dread seeing him,
even the once a year because
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122. the reports would arrive in the post.
And then all hell would break loose.
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123. I would say from my upbringing
that authority
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124. was something to be avoided if possible,
attacked if you could get in
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125. and attack it and get away without
being burned.
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126. I would say that was high
on the list of priorities.
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127. Bastards!
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128. In 1968 the whole world was exploding.
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129. There was Paris, Vietnam,
Grosvenor Square,
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130. the counterculture. I think that gave me
an edge to put into punk.
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131. It was a great year
to come of age.
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132. I could see in a way
why Joe was the way he was,
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133. but I could never understand
what happened to David.
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134. Almost on one day,
you walked into his bedroom,
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135. it changed from being
a normal boy's bedroom
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136. into being black.
Swastikas and fascism
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137. and "Mein Kampf",
ultra-ultra-right-wing.
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138. David just went into Regents Park
one day and took an overdose of pills.
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139. And...
finally went onto this little island.
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140. He decided that things were
unsatisfactory.
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141. Joe being the first person to see him,
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142. and then had to identify the body which...
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143. must have been a terrifying trauma.
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144. He didn't talk about it.
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145. I think he wanted to kind of
keep a lot of stuff at bay.
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146. Just keep it at a distance.
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147. And that was the great Tim Harden,
perhaps a lost genius of music,
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148. with "Black Sheep Boy".
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149. I just went straight out of this...
dead strict environment
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150. where you had to like really struggle
to get out of the game.
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151. And straight into this seeding LSD orgy.
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152. There was only one answer
to what you were going to do after school,
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153. and that is art school.
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154. The last resort of malingerers and
bluffers and people who don't want to work.
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155. Joe, whose name was John, said,
"Oh, my name's Woody."
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156. I said to him, "That's interesting,
how'd you get the name Woody?"
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157. and he said,
"I just made it up on the spot."
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158. I think because of Woody Guthrie.
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159. I met him at art college on the first day,
we lived together.
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160. He was instantly charismatic,
everything in the room focused around him.
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161. He always had a different way
of putting things,
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162. a different,
different angle on things.
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163. He was thrown out
because he did a collage of
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164. used Tampaxes as art.
I guess that was too much for them.
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165. I decided to follow a musician around
called Tymon Dogg, D-O-G-G.
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166. He had this years before Snoop Doggy Dogg.
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167. First collecting money for him
in the London underground
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168. like a Mississippi Blues Man's apprentice.
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169. Tymon was the guy who taught
and showed Joe that music was the root.
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170. I bought a Ukulele,
because I figured
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171. that had to be easier than a guitar
having only four strings.
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172. But I managed to get some chords together.
I was chuffed.
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173. We went down to play at some tube,
and I said,
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174. "Joe, we can't go down and busk
the one song that we know."
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175. And Joe said, "Why, because
nobody's ever going to pass twice."
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176. Tymon and Joe were walking around
in a park in Kilburn.
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177. And they came across a guy who I think
had probably just come out of mental home.
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178. He was a bit strange and he had nowhere
to go and he was very disoriented.
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179. And they brought him back to live with us
and he stayed with us for a while.
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180. I remember the name of the guy,
he was called Savory.
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181. And Joe installs this tramp
with huge generosity in my bedroom.
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182. When the landlady and landlord found out
about us having this black guy,
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183. the woman attacked Tymon Dogg
with a stiletto heel.
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184. And they just went berserk.
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185. They threw us out,
chucked all our gear out the window,
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186. and we called the police and said, "Look,"
and they said, "Fuck off, hippies."
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187. I mean bloody impossible
to live with, frankly.
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188. You never knew where you were,
when you were.
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189. He lived day for night,
he'd go off somewhere
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190. to Glastonbury or to the Isle of Wight
or somewhere.
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191. And he'd turn up a week later
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192. completely unaware that you might have
actually expected otherwise.
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193. They'd had their "Summer of Love",
by '72/3 it was all over.
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194. I always felt it was like
coming on the field of a great battle
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195. 12 hours after the battle was over.
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196. So the casualties were all lying
on the field but the battle was gone.
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197. He did have a very strong
Boy's Own attitude to things,
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198. he'd have this kind of spirit of adventure.
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199. He'd sleep out under the stars
when it was totally unnecessary.
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200. And he said, "I'm gonna be a rock star."
So, he was right.
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201. That was Bukka White,
and the syncopation there,
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202. all that provided by one man,
who so I really like.
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203. It was very difficult, 'cause I still...
really loved him.
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204. But I knew I had to get away
because he was dropping out,
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205. and I was absolutely determined
to carry on with art college.
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206. I hitched down to Cardiff
and she told me to shove off.
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207. And so I started to hitch back
and the first stop off is Newport.
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208. And I had some friends there.
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209. Newport in 1973
was a very working-class town.
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210. You had the second-largest
steel works in Newport.
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211. You had the coal mines still active,
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212. docks, there were boats coming
up as far as the art college.
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213. There's nothing PC about Newport
in those days.
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214. You'd go out and there'd be punch-ups
in the streets, it was a tough place.
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215. He'd come down from the south of England
the leafy suburbs
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216. and he'd suddenly found himself in this
industrial South Wales town
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217. which was completely alien to anything
he'd experienced in the past.
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218. But he loved it.
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219. He just appeared one day in the entrance
hall of the college looking for me.
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220. He came with his guitar on his back.
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221. I had the felling that he was
getting away from or going to somewhere.
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222. He didn't sort of exactly fit in.
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223. He used to come back to my bedsit
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224. and we just used to literally sit up
all night while I played my records.
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225. He just looked at me and he said,
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226. "Is your mother proud of your eye lashes?"
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227. That was Israel Kamakiwiwo'ole
from Hawaii.
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228. He used to sign on
and he got various jobs.
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229. He was working in a carpet factory
and a rubber factory.
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230. He'd come back
with rubber all over his hair.
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231. He took a job in a graveyard.
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232. I wasn't strong enough to dig graves.
First morning they told me to dig a grave,
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233. when they come back,
I'd gone about three inches.
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234. He'd got the sack when he was found
asleep in a grave.
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235. While I wasn't at the art school, I crashed
my way into the art school rock band.
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236. that became known as "The Vultures".
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237. Really make it rusty and homemade,
you know what I mean?
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238. Is that loud enough?
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239. This is one of the first songs he wrote.
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240. Everybody ready?
Take 4.
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241. I drew a cartoon
saying how brilliant we were.
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242. We conned this poor booker to book us
into a big blues club type place in Bristol.
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243. But the crowd weren't having it.
They pelted us with beer glasses.
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244. So after that night I just realized
I had to get back to the capital.
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245. Now we're going to turn over
the controls of the tower here
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246. to the great originator
of all rap and ting,
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247. Mr. U-Roy, let it roll.
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248. By this time they had this
really huge squat scene rolling in West 9.
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249. In 1974 there were
rows and rows of buildings
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250. that were boarded up by the council
and just left to rot.
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251. There were hoards of people in London
who couldn't afford to pay rent.
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252. There was an estate agency,
the Ruff, Tuff, Cream Puff agency,
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253. which put out a newsletter
of available houses.
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254. 1A Portland Road, West 11.
Access through the back door.
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255. Has eleven large rooms
but needs enormous attention.
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256. There's a basement flat cluttered up at
Number 10, Paris Square, West 11
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257. and at 56 Pemridge Villas, West 11,
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258. it's totally cluttered up
except for the basement window.
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259. You need to saw through
under the cover of convenient bushes.
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260. The only thing to do was
to kick in these abandoned buildings
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261. and then live in them.
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262. Joe decided to open up a squat
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263. and went down there with crowbars
opened up 101 Walterton Road.
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264. It wasn't just squatting because we were
down and out it was a political act.
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265. That you can't leave buildings empty
when there are people homeless.
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266. Like bathing in the cool water
of a fragrant ocean
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267. and that was the sound of Ernest Ranglin
and the voice of Baaba Maal of Senegal.
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268. I gathered the best people, I.e. people who
weren't completely out of their minds,
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269. into one squat.
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270. And we formed a rock 'n roll band,
"The 101ers".
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271. And so our house band got going,
there was about six, seven of us in it.
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272. There were some people running
from the regime in Chile.
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273. I had a Chilean drummer called Antonio.
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274. But when he went on holiday,
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275. Richard Snakes Dudanski,
he took over after Antonio split.
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276. I think he heard me banging around
when I had a pair of bongos.
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277. He said, "Look, the drummer's gone,
we got a gig in two weeks."
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278. I thought we could mount an attack
on the stage and like potentially get paid.
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279. They were playing for the scene
that was their contribution,
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280. community entertainment, initially.
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281. When we'd get
short of enough money for food,
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282. Joe would go out and busk
and come back with money
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283. to buy provisions
for the whole group.
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284. He was like half the community.
In fact Julian was the lead singer.
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285. I got him in to sing because
I thought I was crying.
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286. I really did, right?
'Cause I thought he was better, right?
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287. And Micky Foote who was
working with me back then, he said,
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288. "That new singer you got in,
he just sounds just like you."
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289. I thought, "Oh, fuck it.
So I'll become the singer again."
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290. You got taken down
to the pub for a drink basically
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291. and then you got told
you've been fired.
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292. I remember I had to tell Simon,
Simon the saxophone player,
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293. "We're not having
saxophone anymore, Simon."
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294. We had hard decisions, we got rid of
our mate Mole, the bass player.
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295. I remember Joe saying, "Well, I think
we're gonna take Mole for a drink."
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296. It's the process of forming,
you know, it's what happens.
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297. I figured out that
I'd sacked 48 people once.
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298. And then my sister came in
with her Bolivian boyfriend.
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299. And he said the day he saw her
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300. "I want to make this girl mine,"
and so he did.
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301. He took me on a date and he said,
"You see that pub over there, Windsor Castle?"
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302. He said,
"One day we're gonna play there."
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303. We had the nerve to rent a room
above a pub
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304. and charged people 10p to get in.
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305. That's how we learned to play,
by doing it for ourselves.
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306. Which is like a punk ethos.
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307. I mean you gotta be able to
go out there and do it for yourself
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308. because no one's
going to give it to you.
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309. It soon became
like a real big mash-up.
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310. Gypsies were coming,
ripping everybody off.
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311. Handbags would be
flying out of the windows
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312. and somebody would be
catching them at the bottom.
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313. We were on stage playing
and the police raided the place.
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314. They didn't know who to search
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315. with all these filthy squatters and gypsies
and God knows what in this room.
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316. Mayhem broke loose.
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317. We carried on playing
to this crazy thing going on.
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318. Yeah, that was fun.
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319. He was never bothered about money,
never.
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320. Money didn't mean anything to him.
But he did like fame.
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321. He decided to change his name
to "Joe Strummer".
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322. And of course it was
really difficult for everyone.
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323. Because we all kept saying "Hey Woody!"
and he'd just blank you, he wouldn't respond.
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324. He'd just say,
"I'm not called Woody, my name's Joe."
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325. Well, it was either that
or Johnny Caramello.
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326. I think "Joe Strummer"
sort of won just by a little nose.
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327. I still can only play
all six strings or none
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328. and not all the fiddly bits, which is why
I called myself "Joe Strummer".
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329. Joe was a great inventor of names.
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330. He called me "Snakehips Dudanski", and
I've got no idea where he got it from.
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331. He called me "Dick The Shit",
because my Christian name is Richard,
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332. and then it was "Richard III", it was
"Richard The Turd", it was "Dick The Shit".
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333. We realized that we had to
start writing our own material
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334. so I wrote "Keys To Your Heart",
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335. and I was just overjoyed
that it came out good.
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336. Well it's a love song, isn't it?
For Paloma.
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337. We'd seen Joe play over at the Akam Hall,
and in Windsor Castle
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338. and quite a few other places.
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339. Even members of the Sex Pistols
ended up there,
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340. they were watching our stuff
while I was unaware of them.
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341. 'Cause it was the only jumping spot
in West London on a Thursday.
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342. I liked the band but Joe was something
special. Best front man out there.
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343. The 101ers were about to be
the top band in London.
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344. They were at a point
that they were really making it,
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345. like the Roundhouse,
but that was not really enough for him.
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346. He just felt he needed a breakthrough.
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347. The Pistols had to come in
and blow everything away.
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348. They were that stun grenade into the room
before the door kicked off.
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349. They came out of nowhere
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350. and they come to support us one night
in the Nashville Rooms.
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351. It was electrifying.
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352. It was so different.
They were like a million years ahead.
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353. I think Joe was the only one
who saw anything in it.
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354. They destroyed everything
that was going on in town,
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355. it was completely over
the second they came out on stage.
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356. I imagine he would have saw us play
and then figured, you know,
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357. the rockabilly thing weren't working,
this was the way to go.
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358. Right at that time
Bernie Rhodes walks into the gig.
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359. We managed to see him at the Golden Lion,
all of us. Keith went backstage and went:
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360. "Can we talk to you?"
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361. I think it was good luck to meet Bernie.
The best bit of luck I ever had.
Copy !req
362. And he drove me down to Shepherd's Bush.
Copy !req
363. There, in the rear bedroom was
Mick Jones, Paul Simonon and Keith Levene.
Copy !req
364. And me and Bernie walked in
and he introduced me all around
Copy !req
365. and then we sat on whatever
bits of furniture we could find
Copy !req
366. and we kind of stared at each other.
Copy !req
367. And he said,
"I think you should form a group."
Copy !req
368. And I though about it and I said,
"Can you give me 24 hours?"
Copy !req
369. And he said, "Sure."
Copy !req
370. Sid and Pete Levene
came to the squat.
Copy !req
371. There was meetings in rooms
and people mumbling and groaning.
Copy !req
372. It was very obvious that it was
two different kinds of people really.
Copy !req
373. He said,
"Oh, I just love the way you play guitar."
Copy !req
374. And I said,
"Why don't you be in the band then?"
Copy !req
375. And he went,
"I will, I'll do it, I'll do it."
Copy !req
376. That was it, he came out and said,
"Right, that's it, the 101ers is finished."
Copy !req
377. And it was a bombshell
to the rest of the band.
Copy !req
378. I mean I knew, it was in the air,
you know, the 101ers were...
Copy !req
379. problems with the bass player then
we got to get rid of the guitar player...
Copy !req
380. So I knew something was happening.
Copy !req
381. Anyway the following day
I bumped into Bernie Rhodes, who was...
Copy !req
382. Let me state something really quickly.
Copy !req
383. I formed the Sex Pistols,
not Malcolm, you know that don't you?
Copy !req
384. I found John, auditioned him,
put him in the group.
Copy !req
385. You know I don't take
the credit now, I'll take it later.
Copy !req
386. And it was very clear that he was
the kind of guy that... called the shots.
Copy !req
387. I'm the philosopher of it,
I'm the great engine of it.
Copy !req
388. I am punk.
Without me there's nothing.
Copy !req
389. And I said, "Joe, right..."
Copy !req
390. "The 101ers is finished but,
I'm not going with this guy."
Copy !req
391. And he said, "Oh, it's not possible Snakes,
You got to do it with this guy".
Copy !req
392. And that was it.
Copy !req
393. You're either for punk
or against it
Copy !req
394. and there's still people today
that don't talk to me
Copy !req
395. down in West London for
going over to the other side.
Copy !req
396. To go on to this new bit of his life he...
Copy !req
397. he had to stop associating with us
and that was quite hurtful.
Copy !req
398. It was a bit like walking out
on a whole lot of beliefs.
Copy !req
399. The house didn't really
last long after that.
Copy !req
400. The day that I joined The Clash
was very much back to square one.
Copy !req
401. Year zero.
Copy !req
402. It was a bold move for me
to jump into something different.
Copy !req
403. Two guys in the back room
of a squat in Shepard's Bush.
Copy !req
404. But I knew, you could tell by looking at them
you didn't even have to speak to them
Copy !req
405. Mick and Paul were different.
Copy !req
406. I think we started to rehearse
that afternoon.
Copy !req
407. Bernie hired a warehouse
off British Rail in Camden Town.
Copy !req
408. Sometimes Bernie would come down,
throw us out at night
Copy !req
409. and we'd break back in
when he was gone. We were that keen.
Copy !req
410. It was very much being
like in a 24 hour gang.
Copy !req
411. We only had each other.
Copy !req
412. I knew I wasn't fitting in,
I wanted to be in the band.
Copy !req
413. And it really got me down 'cause I realized,
"Shit, this isn't my band."
Copy !req
414. I left the band.
Copy !req
415. And then it just worked, it just made it
that it was going to work.
Copy !req
416. Paul was just admitting
that he couldn't play.
Copy !req
417. And he admitted to me that he had
no idea what this instrument was.
Copy !req
418. And for a minute I thought,
Copy !req
419. "Oh God, a whole room of people
with no idea how to play anything."
Copy !req
420. - Is Millie going to be the producer of this?
- Yeah, he is. Get on with it.
Copy !req
421. Shut your mouth and get going.
Copy !req
422. - Don't tell me to shut my mouth.
- Come on, Mick, go on with it.
Copy !req
423. They got really frustrated,
'cause I had to quickly rush over
Copy !req
424. and do all of this.
Give us an E.
Copy !req
425. Keith picked it up, he could play
as good as me in about three weeks.
Copy !req
426. One who could really play
in The Clash was Mick Jones,
Copy !req
427. more than I'll ever be able to.
Copy !req
428. - What happened to your teeth?
- My teeth?
Copy !req
429. - Yeah.
- I've never brushed them.
Copy !req
430. I'm a walking advert for
brushing your teeth.
Copy !req
431. That was what's good about punk.
If you were ugly, you were in.
Copy !req
432. - Sounds like a load of shit.
- Sounds great to me.
Copy !req
433. At first we will have to
work more and eat less.
Copy !req
434. You know in the next couple of months
this country is gonna have it really hard.
Copy !req
435. The next couple of years maybe.
Copy !req
436. We ain't started yet, right, but I do believe
that if you do it in your own way,
Copy !req
437. you'll have two years of hardship
and I really mean hardship,
Copy !req
438. you might get out of it all right.
Copy !req
439. I'd been writing with the 101ers but
with no focus or idea what to write about.
Copy !req
440. And Bernie Rhodes said,
"Write about what affects you."
Copy !req
441. The Clash for me, right, is a chance
to get some great words going.
Copy !req
442. And for Mick, he's really into the music.
Copy !req
443. He can hear arrangements, you know,
he knows what a bass should do,
Copy !req
444. he knows what the drums should do,
he knows what the guitars should do,
Copy !req
445. He can hear it in his head, right.
I can't heart that stuff.
Copy !req
446. All you have to do is look out there
to write a song, really.
Copy !req
447. You know, I mean
it's all out there, isn't it?
Copy !req
448. What I'd see is certain words, the tune
was sort of there for me anyway,
Copy !req
449. and I could hear the tune coming out of it.
Copy !req
450. There's a roar of the city,
it does sound like our music.
Copy !req
451. I really believe you gotta live something
to sing about it in a convincing way.
Copy !req
452. Whenever you hear a great song,
someone's torn that piece out of their life.
Copy !req
453. You couldn't go the full way with Joe.
Copy !req
454. There was something hidden
that was very deep within.
Copy !req
455. I ran up to him and I jump on him
and he's with his cool friends
Copy !req
456. and they're all punked up and there's
this long-haired hippie girl jumping on him.
Copy !req
457. And so he was kind of different
like a little open.
Copy !req
458. And we never were like that,
we were always very close.
Copy !req
459. He was just very different,
Copy !req
460. like troubled, and serious.
Copy !req
461. He said, "These hippies are old farts
smoking pot and all that."
Copy !req
462. So I changed.
Copy !req
463. He had encouraged me to be in "The Slits".
Copy !req
464. He was showing me how to play the drums.
Copy !req
465. He was supportive but
Copy !req
466. very soon it
became not a good thing between us.
Copy !req
467. We were almost Stalinist,
in the way you had to shed all your friends
Copy !req
468. or everything that you'd known
or every way that you'd played before.
Copy !req
469. So that all might see and agree
the laws are inscribed in a prominent place
Copy !req
470. to be remembered and obeyed, forever.
Copy !req
471. I mean do you have a
moralistic principle in anything you do?
Copy !req
472. Yeah, I wouldn't steal money off a friend.
Copy !req
473. But I'd steal his girl friend.
Copy !req
474. I think too much. Or not enough.
I mean I think all the time.
Copy !req
475. I think, thinking is like real fun.
I get a lot of fun out of thinking.
Copy !req
476. I mean, I can't see any other point
to getting up in the morning,
Copy !req
477. doing everything and going to bed
and getting up again.
Copy !req
478. It's just the thinking
that makes it the point, you know?
Copy !req
479. Yankee detectives
Are always on the TV
Copy !req
480. 'Cause there's a murder in America
About every ten seconds
Copy !req
481. And don't you think I care
About your poxy baseball shirt
Copy !req
482. I'd rather wear nothing
Than look like I'm ready to bat
Copy !req
483. I'm so bored with the USA
Copy !req
484. I'm so bored with the USA
But what can I do?
Copy !req
485. And then The Clash came along
and I went to see them.
Copy !req
486. Happy new fucking year.
Copy !req
487. "Hi Joe, it's Dick. It's Dick."
Copy !req
488. And this shutter came down.
Copy !req
489. It would have been nice if Joe Strummer had said,
"Hey Dick, how are you?" but he didn't.
Copy !req
490. It was almost impossible for him to
Copy !req
491. get out of character and go back.
Copy !req
492. The next chapter had started.
Copy !req
493. The only way you can
really change anything
Copy !req
494. is if you don't repeat your mistakes.
Or other people's mistakes, right?
Copy !req
495. So I can look back at Jagger
and all that lot, right?
Copy !req
496. And I can really pick their mistakes out
quite clearly.
Copy !req
497. And I'm determined
not to repeat those mistakes.
Copy !req
498. I value my existence by what I achieve,
you know, by what I create, that's it.
Copy !req
499. Creation is everything you know.
Copy !req
500. - Anything special?
- No, just blanket cover.
Copy !req
501. I don't know what I'm after.
Copy !req
502. If I knew what I was after
I probably wouldn't bother to go after it.
Copy !req
503. Give it a good hammering, Joe.
Copy !req
504. And this is Joe Strummer's
"London Calling" on the world service,
Copy !req
505. coming out of one of these basements
we have here in London,
Copy !req
506. throbbing in summer heat.
Copy !req
507. That was "Best Dressed Chicken In The Town"
by Doctor Alimantado,
Copy !req
508. well worth checking out him.
Copy !req
509. So kids like me who didn't really
read newspapers,
Copy !req
510. he kind of informed us about events
that were going on in the world.
Copy !req
511. He made us politically aware I guess.
Copy !req
512. One of the things I'd like us to do,
Copy !req
513. so I have to try to stop kids joining up
the National Front because of ignorance.
Copy !req
514. In 1977
Copy !req
515. Knives in West 11
Copy !req
516. It ain't so lucky to be rich
Copy !req
517. Sten guns in Knightsbridge
Copy !req
518. Danger stranger
Copy !req
519. You better paint your face
Copy !req
520. No Elvis, Beatles, or The Rolling Stones
Copy !req
521. In 1977
Copy !req
522. You're on the never never
Copy !req
523. You think it can't go on forever
Copy !req
524. But the papers say it's better
Copy !req
525. I don't care 'cause I'm not all there
Copy !req
526. No Elvis, Beatles, or The Rolling Stones
Copy !req
527. In 1977
Copy !req
528. In 1978
Copy !req
529. - It's too late
- Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
530. In 1979
Copy !req
531. Hate! Hate! Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
532. In 1980
Copy !req
533. Hate! Hate! Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
534. In 1981
Copy !req
535. - The toilets don't work
- Hate! Hate! Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
536. In 1982
Copy !req
537. Hate! Hate! Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
538. In 1983
Copy !req
539. Hate! Hate! Hate! Hate!
Copy !req
540. In 1984
Copy !req
541. Big Brother really is here.
Copy !req
542. It's worse now than ever.
Even your Oyster Card,
Copy !req
543. can tell where you were,
they can tell where you're going.
Copy !req
544. I haven't got one.
Copy !req
545. There was a moment
where the world stopped
Copy !req
546. when everything just... stopped.
1976, 1977.
Copy !req
547. Suddenly,
Copy !req
548. ideas became more important
than guitar solos.
Copy !req
549. And,
Copy !req
550. a certain integrity
became more important than
Copy !req
551. driving a Rolls Royce
into a swimming pool.
Copy !req
552. Rock stars were like Greek gods.
Copy !req
553. You were lucky to be in the room with them.
Copy !req
554. Oh look, that's me.
That's me there.
Copy !req
555. All that came to an end
after The Clash.
Copy !req
556. It was a feeling that if The Clash
could do it, you could do it.
Copy !req
557. I just want to preserve, right,
my personal freedom.
Copy !req
558. I just want the right to choose, right?
Copy !req
559. And it ain't no use me
having the right to choose, right?
Copy !req
560. And not everybody else to have it, right?
Everyone's got to have it.
Copy !req
561. I just thought I'd join the band
to go to parties and have fun.
Copy !req
562. Not to argue
about politics night and day.
Copy !req
563. It felt like me
versus everyone else.
Copy !req
564. That's why I left because it's
such a grueling onslaught the whole time.
Copy !req
565. Mick found Topper, and Topper came down,
and it just smugged.
Copy !req
566. It wasn't the sort of music I was into.
Copy !req
567. You know when punk first started, it
was against all the music that I was into.
Copy !req
568. And I thought, I will join to make a name
and then move on to play proper music.
Copy !req
569. Paul said, "We got to cut your hair off,"
then Joe said, "We got to dye it."
Copy !req
570. I went home to my wife, I left her
in the morning with long hair and fez,
Copy !req
571. and I went home with
short spiky blonde hair and zips.
Copy !req
572. And I called him Woody for some reason.
But I know the reason:
Copy !req
573. Joe had little pointed ears at the top
Copy !req
574. and I thought he looked
like Woody Woodpecker.
Copy !req
575. Now I didn't know
he had been called Woody before.
Copy !req
576. And I said, "Oi, Woody," and he went,
"Don't ever fucking call me that."
Copy !req
577. And I thought, "God, he's sensitive."
Copy !req
578. It's not a bad thing to have The Clash
be your first ever rock show.
Copy !req
579. 17 years old,
hanging out with my mates
Copy !req
580. and we got into Trinity College, Dublin.
Copy !req
581. At the back of the stage they had
a picture from the first album
Copy !req
582. which was a lot of bobbies
running down the street with truncheons.
Copy !req
583. Which was what was
going on in London at the race riots.
Copy !req
584. But in Ireland it looked like Belfast.
Copy !req
585. So it was a very, very, very,
Copy !req
586. tense moment as this backdrop
was opened up.
Copy !req
587. We want to roll the tanks,
queue the Air Force,
Copy !req
588. roll out the navy.
Copy !req
589. And there was...
Copy !req
590. a real sense of jeopardy.
Copy !req
591. There was a violence in the air.
Copy !req
592. I was terrified.
I was excited.
Copy !req
593. And rock 'n' roll...
Copy !req
594. was not entertainment at that moment.
Copy !req
595. It was not a matter of life and death,
something much more serious.
Copy !req
596. One, two, three, four.
Copy !req
597. So me and my mates stayed up
trying to figure out,
Copy !req
598. how we could all be in bands
that meant as much as The Clash.
Copy !req
599. Being in the right time at the right place
with the right ship.
Copy !req
600. It was just explosive. It was
like pirates slashing their way through.
Copy !req
601. It just got completely out of control.
Copy !req
602. We had crews of people, stealing cars,
hopping rides, just following this thing.
Copy !req
603. I remember once, a local TV station
came to shoot us
Copy !req
604. in the dressing room
before the show.
Copy !req
605. We always used to let people in because,
hey, the audience were our friends.
Copy !req
606. And behind me,
it was like one of those jokes
Copy !req
607. where 19 people
get out of a baby car,
Copy !req
608. someone had opened
the dressing room window
Copy !req
609. and people were climbing in
from the alley
Copy !req
610. And it was like, I'm not joking,
50 people,
Copy !req
611. diving through this window
like a Charlie Chaplin movie.
Copy !req
612. "Blitzkrieg Bop"
by the godfathers of punk rock,
Copy !req
613. ladies and gentlemen,
The Ramones.
Copy !req
614. If the kids didn't have money to get home,
he'd give them money to get home
Copy !req
615. if they didn't have money for drinks at
the pub, he'd give them money for drinks.
Copy !req
616. The police would wait until we were
driving across the mountains.
Copy !req
617. After a few motels we had
started to borrow the pillows
Copy !req
618. because it made it easier sitting in a
coach seat overnight if you had a pillow.
Copy !req
619. So when they couldn't find any drugs,
the police searched the bus
Copy !req
620. and they came up
with something like 30 pillows.
Copy !req
621. And then they found
hundreds of hotel room keys.
Copy !req
622. And they said,
"Right, that's theft."
Copy !req
623. And then they threatened to charge
every one of us individually
Copy !req
624. with one each
and keep us there all night.
Copy !req
625. Said Joe, "I'll do the pillows,
you take the rap for the keys."
Copy !req
626. And we were locked in the same cell
for like three nights.
Copy !req
627. You're going to room 101.
Copy !req
628. We really got close and we just talked honestly.
And I got to speak to the real Joe.
Copy !req
629. Now every time I'd spoken to him before
there were people watching or people listening.
Copy !req
630. And he wouldn't drop the act.
Copy !req
631. We both said we were scared.
Copy !req
632. 'Cause at the time they were making
a big thing about the punk thing.
Copy !req
633. And we thought we might end up in
more trouble than we were really in.
Copy !req
634. We just got honest with each other.
Copy !req
635. He still had this thing about, he was a punk
rocker but he'd been to a private school.
Copy !req
636. That always fucked him up
right from the beginning.
Copy !req
637. I don't care what he comes from,
he ain't a phony, you know what I mean?
Copy !req
638. He weren't acting up a role, you know?
He believed what he was doing.
Copy !req
639. I think Gaby started going out with Joe,
I just remember this guy walking around,
Copy !req
640. shoulders up here
and his black leather jacket,
Copy !req
641. mumbling, he never said much.
Copy !req
642. And they'd move to Ladbroke Grove
and I'd go there and then I got to know Joe.
Copy !req
643. He was a great host,
he was a brilliant host.
Copy !req
644. Making sure everybody had
something to drink and chairs to sit on.
Copy !req
645. Coming from a family of diplomats
he'd been taught, you know,
Copy !req
646. to bring out the cocktails for other guests
when he was staying with his parents.
Copy !req
647. - Hey Mick, do you want some LSD?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
648. Better have three.
You want to really get out there.
Copy !req
649. I definitely believe because of punk
that you can have whatever you want.
Copy !req
650. You know, you say,
"Fuck off, this is what I think."
Copy !req
651. I definitely think that's
what formed me an amazing artist.
Copy !req
652. I was a Clash fan.
Copy !req
653. I seen them in '78 they came and played
at the Apollo and there was a riot.
Copy !req
654. The bouncers were big Glasgow thugs.
Copy !req
655. They really hated the punks.
Copy !req
656. The Clash had to keep stopping the gig.
Copy !req
657. I couldn't sing if I felt that people
were being brutally mistreated.
Copy !req
658. Let them go!
They're fucking dancing!
Copy !req
659. I really loved them because
they stood up to the bouncers.
Copy !req
660. The audience,
they're your friends.
Copy !req
661. And you're no better than them.
We were one with the audience.
Copy !req
662. You should never feel above anyone.
Copy !req
663. When punk first started,
it didn't seem particularly black-friendly.
Copy !req
664. And so when The Clash's first album came out
and they got "Police and Thieves" on there,
Copy !req
665. and they got a scene from the Carnival,
it sort of made punk accessible to me.
Copy !req
666. So it was a way of saying,
"Come in, this is for you as well."
Copy !req
667. White music has always
taken from black music.
Copy !req
668. The difference was
with people like The Clash, is that
Copy !req
669. Strummer and Jones were inspired
by people that were living next door.
Copy !req
670. So the effect was a lot more direct.
Copy !req
671. I mean, they're saying
you can't hear the words.
Copy !req
672. But the words are really great. They're
really great and you can't hear them.
Copy !req
673. Don't you think that's ironic?
Copy !req
674. Joe had a way with words.
A sense of narrative and drama.
Copy !req
675. Joe would have more ideas
in a rhyming couplet
Copy !req
676. than some people would have
on their whole fucking album.
Copy !req
677. I really connected with Joe's lyrics.
Copy !req
678. Anti-establishment, anti-military,
anti-work.
Copy !req
679. Especially the anti-work bit, you know?
Copy !req
680. Because I was working in a factory
and I thought
Copy !req
681. I'm going to have to do this
for the rest of my life.
Copy !req
682. This is why we came up with
so much idealism 'cause we figured
Copy !req
683. we was going to need that much to combat
a situation like being rich and famous.
Copy !req
684. All that I had was those blokes.
I had to do something with them, right?
Copy !req
685. I did as much as I could.
Copy !req
686. Now I used to consider Bernie
as a pain in the ass.
Copy !req
687. He always just seemed to be stirring up,
he always wanted trouble.
Copy !req
688. Joe I didn't realize
was such a coward, right?
Copy !req
689. Mick I didn't realize
was such an egomaniac.
Copy !req
690. Paul I didn't realize
was such a pussy-whipped guy.
Copy !req
691. And the other one I couldn't stand.
Copy !req
692. He called me, what was it?
Copy !req
693. Provincial tosser.
Copy !req
694. Because I came from Dover.
Copy !req
695. Bernie got sacked.
Copy !req
696. All the sudden we were on our own.
As if like daddy had gone away.
Copy !req
697. And I think this is
where we proved ourselves.
Copy !req
698. We stayed in some shithole
in Pimlico for five months.
Copy !req
699. We were in trouble,
we'd lost our management.
Copy !req
700. We just sat there every day
and wrote and wrote.
Copy !req
701. And we got that thing down so good,
we ran into the studio
Copy !req
702. we knocked the whole thing off in like
three weeks and two days.
Copy !req
703. London calling
to the faraway towns
Copy !req
704. Now war is declared
and battle come down
Copy !req
705. London calling
to the underworld
Copy !req
706. Come out of the cupboard,
you boys and girls
Copy !req
707. London calling,
now don't look to us
Copy !req
708. Phony Beatlemania
has bitten the dust
Copy !req
709. London calling,
see we ain't got no swing
Copy !req
710. Except for the ring
of that truncheon thing
Copy !req
711. The ice age is coming,
the sun is zooming in
Copy !req
712. Meltdown expected,
the wheat is growin' thin
Copy !req
713. Engines stop running,
but I have no fear
Copy !req
714. 'Cause London is drowning, and I,
I live by the river
Copy !req
715. At the time I was living
right by the Themse.
Copy !req
716. I was following
a lot of the doom prophecies.
Copy !req
717. You know the scientists
having the big arguments
Copy !req
718. about who's right and who's wrong
Copy !req
719. One lot was saying the ice age is coming
Copy !req
720. and then another lot was saying
we're going to collide with the sun
Copy !req
721. making you feel like you're some kind of ant
who isn't worth living.
Copy !req
722. Then they were going on, "You better
watch out down there on the Themse."
Copy !req
723. "It's due for a flood on the spring tide
and you're gonna drown."
Copy !req
724. I was cheering myself up by putting all
these ridiculous things into one basket.
Copy !req
725. Played it to Mick,
and he said he loved the song.
Copy !req
726. He tapped the lyric sheet
with his finger.
Copy !req
727. He told me to write the message that
we were gonna call out around the world.
Copy !req
728. We needed to break out
and reach America.
Copy !req
729. Now get this
Copy !req
730. London calling,
yes, I was there, too
Copy !req
731. And you know what they said?
Well, some of it was true!
Copy !req
732. London calling
at the top of the dial
Copy !req
733. And after all this,
won't you give me a smile?
Copy !req
734. London Calling
Copy !req
735. I never felt so much
alike alike alike
Copy !req
736. Says the Sex Pistols landed here.
Copy !req
737. In 1869.
Copy !req
738. We're not particularly talented, we try on.
Copy !req
739. What is it in terms of the energy?
You mean you put out more energy.
Copy !req
740. We give it all we got, that's all.
It's so simple as that.
Copy !req
741. Everybody's used to paying eight dollars
and getting half measures,
Copy !req
742. and like going home satisfied.
Copy !req
743. Well, in England they go back
being satisfied three years ago.
Copy !req
744. You got to give it all you got
or forget it.
Copy !req
745. He knew the culture of America,
he knew
Copy !req
746. he knew the literature,
he knew the music of it.
Copy !req
747. backwards and forwards.
And so we hit if off immediately.
Copy !req
748. Here was this unlikely meeting of guys
that grew up thousands of miles apart,
Copy !req
749. but the same things moved us.
Copy !req
750. Robbin' people with a six-gun
Copy !req
751. I fought the law and the law won
Copy !req
752. He was passionate,
he sang every word like he meant it.
Copy !req
753. He sang about things that
were deep down in his soul.
Copy !req
754. He sang about injustices and he sang
about everything as if it was urgent.
Copy !req
755. I don't know if his politics
can be separate from his art.
Copy !req
756. They're kind of a spiritual politics.
Copy !req
757. He didn't ask you to
just question authority
Copy !req
758. he asked you to really explore
the very nature of authority.
Copy !req
759. What does it mean to be free?
Copy !req
760. I suppose the initial effect
The Clash had on me was
Copy !req
761. was the proper effect.
Copy !req
762. You know, you were experiencing a
Copy !req
763. a sincerity.
Copy !req
764. Not only in the lyrics
but in the music as well.
Copy !req
765. There was a truth in the attack.
Copy !req
766. They sort of pretended
that they hated America but
Copy !req
767. Joe loved cowboy stuff
and big cars
Copy !req
768. and big pizzas.
Copy !req
769. When you went to the bar,
a single was a double.
Copy !req
770. Honey, I forgot to duck.
Copy !req
771. So there was a lot of things
they liked about America.
Copy !req
772. I came out of the Vietnam war,
Copy !req
773. and I was very much into
people's liberation struggles.
Copy !req
774. In '76 I got very involved
with the Sandinistas.
Copy !req
775. It was a sort of teenage revolution
where the people actually for once
Copy !req
776. took control of their own country
for the first time.
Copy !req
777. I was given, as a gift,
these street fighting scarves
Copy !req
778. that they used in Esteli,
Esteli's a small town in Nicaragua,
Copy !req
779. so that the Samosa troupes
wouldn't know who they were.
Copy !req
780. Then I gave these to Joe and Mick
Copy !req
781. We decided to call the record "Sandinista",
Copy !req
782. to redress the lack of information
that was in the papers.
Copy !req
783. I never knew who the Sandinistas were
or where Nicaragua was.
Copy !req
784. The lyrics of Joe Strummer
were like an atlas.
Copy !req
785. They opened up the world to me
Copy !req
786. and to other people who came from
a kind of blank suburbia.
Copy !req
787. It's up to you not to heed the call-up
Copy !req
788. I don't want to die!
Copy !req
789. It's up to you not to hear the call-up
Copy !req
790. I don't want to kill!
Copy !req
791. As soon as the people
got hold of the idea that,
Copy !req
792. all right, it's punk, we get it,
we got it.
Copy !req
793. And then when we started to play
other things you get a lot of abuse
Copy !req
794. especially in Britain.
Copy !req
795. My favorite Clash record is "Sandinista",
Copy !req
796. and the whole concept of that record
Copy !req
797. of people standing up
for their brothers and sisters
Copy !req
798. and not taking any shit
just like the same ethos of punk rock.
Copy !req
799. But they couldn't have been
my favorite band of all time
Copy !req
800. if every record hadn't grown and
hadn't gotten better and hadn't changed
Copy !req
801. and it's the biggest inspiration for me
with our band with the Chili Peppers.
Copy !req
802. I mean 'cause, this means that
there's no point in carrying on
Copy !req
803. if you don't have
something new to say.
Copy !req
804. Over Kiev and down to the sea
Copy !req
805. "Sandinista",
the triple for the price of one.
Copy !req
806. We wanted it released for a low price
Copy !req
807. because we felt that records
were generally overpriced.
Copy !req
808. And that turned
the record company freak.
Copy !req
809. They were quite happy
to bury that one I think.
Copy !req
810. You learn a lot about life
getting shafted royally.
Copy !req
811. Anyway after "Sandinista" I realized
that I wanted Bernie back.
Copy !req
812. I still think that Bernie is a creative
individual, I was missing his input.
Copy !req
813. It was a question of either Joe
was gonna leave or Bernie came back.
Copy !req
814. So Bernie came back.
Copy !req
815. With a vengeance.
Copy !req
816. The Clash was a rusty old wreck
and I grabbed it and put it up,
Copy !req
817. and put my engine in it,
my updated engine.
Copy !req
818. Would you like to interview
our manager while he's here?
Copy !req
819. Catch him while he's hot.
Copy !req
820. - Yeah, Bernie. Bernie.
- Bernie.
Copy !req
821. - Leave him. Leave him.
- Sorry, that's Bernie Rhodes.
Copy !req
822. Sorry, about that.
Come back.
Copy !req
823. He invented punk.
It's obviously too much for him.
Copy !req
824. The Clash became like a family,
it was like warring brothers.
Copy !req
825. I think the other kind of looked up
to Joe, Joe was like the big brother.
Copy !req
826. He was a bit older,
I think that made a difference
Copy !req
827. and he was probably
the most forceful.
Copy !req
828. Then we found our greatest success
in commercial terms.
Copy !req
829. The Clash invade America.
Next, Off The Record.
Copy !req
830. People still hate us in England
for making it in America.
Copy !req
831. Somebody had to break out and prove that
this thing was a global thing.
Copy !req
832. It wasn't just a neighborhood thing.
Copy !req
833. Only half the people could get in and
they started rioting in front of the square.
Copy !req
834. And it was live across the States,
the first time since Frank Sinatra
Copy !req
835. that they had to
close off Times Square.
Copy !req
836. It's a madhouse in there.
It's crazy in there, I can't...
Copy !req
837. The Bond's manager, Joel Heller
denied his club had done anything wrong.
Copy !req
838. Can I say that we overbooked?
Copy !req
839. All over New York you could
hear our stuff coming up.
Copy !req
840. There was a black mix of "Mag Seven",
Copy !req
841. that's coming out of every ghetto blaster
in the city, every hour.
Copy !req
842. That summer, that moment,
we had New York.
Copy !req
843. There was a romance that The Clash had
with New York at that period in time.
Copy !req
844. I remember bumping into a guy called
Jack Checker who was a cab driver.
Copy !req
845. And he told me that they weren't like
other rock stars who came to New York.
Copy !req
846. Their limousine was Jack Checker's cab.
Copy !req
847. Oh, he just wanted to see the city.
Copy !req
848. He wanted to see Harlem,
he wanted to see Brooklyn.
Copy !req
849. He just wanted to see the people
and to interact with the people.
Copy !req
850. Does this man deserve to be in jail?
Copy !req
851. I mean they took New York.
Copy !req
852. And all the artists wanted to see them
and wanted to check them out.
Copy !req
853. The Clash was a revelation.
Copy !req
854. It took us back to the first,
Copy !req
855. the first excitement of hearing
rock 'n' roll for the first time.
Copy !req
856. Interestingly enough in Raging Bull
Copy !req
857. the music that is there
is music from the 40s and 50s,
Copy !req
858. and opera.
Copy !req
859. But the place I went for the source,
the creativity came from The Clash, really.
Copy !req
860. I did see The Clash at Bond's.
Copy !req
861. And Grandmaster Flash
opened for them.
Copy !req
862. And they were practically
booed off the stage.
Copy !req
863. It was crazy, like 3000 people
"Everybody say hoo!"
Copy !req
864. it was like,
"Fuck you!"
Copy !req
865. "Say yeah!"
"Get the fuck out of here!"
Copy !req
866. When The Clash came out,
Joe reprimanded the whole place.
Copy !req
867. "You know, you gotta give them a chance,
you gotta fucking listen. Don't do that."
Copy !req
868. And the whole crowd was like, "Oh, shit.
Strummer just, like, did a number on us."
Copy !req
869. Even when I'm vomiting
on a carpet at an airport
Copy !req
870. he was standing up for me,
having a go at the journalists
Copy !req
871. saying he's ill,
leave him alone.
Copy !req
872. - Shut up, will you? You stupid cunt.
- Thanks very much for that.
Copy !req
873. Yeah, that's what you deserve
with that sort of crap.
Copy !req
874. What do you think we are? You think this is
1976 and you're talking to the Sex Pistols?
Copy !req
875. Piss off or I'll fucking
piss all over you.
Copy !req
876. If he feels like throwing up,
it's because his stomach hurts.
Copy !req
877. I don't need your jokes
to fucking contend with.
Copy !req
878. If you haven't got something
serious to say, piss off.
Copy !req
879. - Well, it's serious.
- Well you tell me.
Copy !req
880. How about life and death and not
about who pukes on stinking carpets.
Copy !req
881. There were parts of his character
that I didn't like.
Copy !req
882. I had my girlfriend
on the road with me
Copy !req
883. had a big argument
with her somewhere
Copy !req
884. and said, right,
well, you're not sleeping in my room.
Copy !req
885. I woke up the next morning,
she'd spent the night with Joe.
Copy !req
886. You know,
and that kind of really hurt.
Copy !req
887. I felt really betrayed and he did it with
me, he did it with other people as well.
Copy !req
888. We'd lost that unity. I was already
starting to disappear up my own ass.
Copy !req
889. Joe was having doubts.
I think he was already becoming embarrassed
Copy !req
890. by the fact that we were so successful.
Copy !req
891. And Mick wouldn't travel
on the bus unless he had a spliff.
Copy !req
892. Everybody's got their weaknesses,
you know?
Copy !req
893. We were fed up with each other.
Copy !req
894. We'd been living in each other's pocket
for year upon year.
Copy !req
895. We never had a holiday.
Groups now have a holiday.
Copy !req
896. They go away.
They get their heads together.
Copy !req
897. We never had any of that.
We just continually worked.
Copy !req
898. And Mick thought if he didn't want
to play "White Riot", none of us could.
Copy !req
899. I made a comment which was
Copy !req
900. probably out of order and I
probably shouldn't have said it but I did,
Copy !req
901. and that's what sparked
the whole thing up.
Copy !req
902. And it's directly related to his
Copy !req
903. presence on the stage.
Copy !req
904. He said,
"You've got no respect for the stage."
Copy !req
905. And I said,
"Don't fucking tell me about the stage."
Copy !req
906. And then he threw
his Vodka-Orange in my face.
Copy !req
907. So I hit him as hard as I could
the center of the forehead.
Copy !req
908. It was one fuck of a punch
and it drew blood, you know?
Copy !req
909. That's what people call musical differences,
ain't it? Mick didn't like "White Riot".
Copy !req
910. But Joe looked as shocked as Mick did.
Copy !req
911. Fuck me, what have I done here,
you know?
Copy !req
912. Well I'm no boxer but I guess that was
a triple hook combination
Copy !req
913. with a double uppercut.
Copy !req
914. Eddie Cochran there,
"Nervous Breakdown".
Copy !req
915. And it was over the next thing,
and I was laughing my head off.
Copy !req
916. Suddenly you're on
the Saturday Night Live,
Copy !req
917. you get on Johnny Carson,
you're on talk shows.
Copy !req
918. We weren't prepared funnily enough.
Copy !req
919. After all the years of struggle
to actually be there.
Copy !req
920. Everyone began to get big-headed.
Copy !req
921. It was just falling apart.
Copy !req
922. Never any one time were all four of us
in the studio at the same time.
Copy !req
923. I'd turn up a little later at the studios
and yet no one was there.
Copy !req
924. I've got this idea on the piano,
if I put the drums down
Copy !req
925. then I can put the piano over the top
Copy !req
926. and when the others come in,
I can say this is my idea.
Copy !req
927. So I put the drums down, put the piano
down and still no one was there.
Copy !req
928. So I picked up the bass
and put the bass down quickly
Copy !req
929. and added percussion
and by the time they came
Copy !req
930. I said I got this idea and I played it
to them and it was virtually completed.
Copy !req
931. It was Joe that actually said
"Well, that's brilliant."
Copy !req
932. Bernie came in and he said,
"Why does everything have to be a raga?"
Copy !req
933. And we went, "What?"
Copy !req
934. He said, "Everything's
going on for six minutes."
Copy !req
935. "How are we going to get
this stuff on the record?"
Copy !req
936. And then he left and we
started to laugh about the raga.
Copy !req
937. I went back to the Iroquois hotel on 44th
and it was already daylight again.
Copy !req
938. And I had a typewriter in the room
and I went over to the bureau and I typed,
Copy !req
939. "Now the king told the boogie men
you have to let that raga drop."
Copy !req
940. I was tired out of my mind
Copy !req
941. and that paper sticking out of
the typewriter was irresistible
Copy !req
942. I just sat down and I did
the whole lyric to "Rock The Casbah".
Copy !req
943. There's no tenderness
or humanity in fanaticism.
Copy !req
944. That's what I was trying to say
in "Rock The Casbah".
Copy !req
945. Mick and Joe's relationship
had become really difficult, you know?
Copy !req
946. We used to drive around there and he
used to post lyrics through the letterbox.
Copy !req
947. He didn't want to see him,
he didn't want to write with him.
Copy !req
948. I got worried at that point,
that Mick would lead us into disaster.
Copy !req
949. through his complete idealism
Copy !req
950. and refusal to compromise
in order to operate in the real world.
Copy !req
951. You know Mick's an emotional guy,
wears his heart on his sleeve,
Copy !req
952. and quite often was the fall guy for things
that Joe was actually responsible for.
Copy !req
953. Mick took a lot of undue flak,
Copy !req
954. but that was Joe doing
his Machiavellian maneuvering number
Copy !req
955. so that he wasn't the bad guy.
Copy !req
956. So we're not very good at making life
easy for ourselves, we never have been.
Copy !req
957. We keep going because
Copy !req
958. we are the real McCoy.
Copy !req
959. We're not just going to fold up
Copy !req
960. and in a few weeks you'll wonder
what all that was about.
Copy !req
961. We're going to be here and continue
and get harder and rougher than tough.
Copy !req
962. Dreader than dread, you know?
Copy !req
963. It was the eve of our tour. The tickets
in the UK were not selling that well.
Copy !req
964. So Bernie Rhodes said,
"Look, you've got to disappear."
Copy !req
965. I said, "Well, Bernie, if you really think
I should disappear, I will."
Copy !req
966. "Where do you want me to disappear to?"
Copy !req
967. And he said, "Well I don't know.
Go to Austin, Texas."
Copy !req
968. "You know that fellow there,
Joe Ely, the country singer."
Copy !req
969. I said, "Okay Bernie,
I'll be seeing you."
Copy !req
970. I took the boat train to Paris instead
Copy !req
971. and I thought it'd be a good joke
if I never phoned Bernie at all.
Copy !req
972. If he was going to be thinking
he was going to be acting
Copy !req
973. you know, "Oh, where's Joe gone,"
Copy !req
974. when really he was going,
"Where has he gone?"
Copy !req
975. And I ran the Paris marathon too.
Copy !req
976. Eventually they hired
a private detective to find me.
Copy !req
977. What is he up to and what news is there
of his whereabouts?
Copy !req
978. Who can answer that?
Cosmo?
Copy !req
979. We don't know where he is
and we can't find him.
Copy !req
980. And if you're listening, Joe,
and I said this before,
Copy !req
981. please get in touch,
we need to talk to you.
Copy !req
982. So in no way
is this any kind of publicity stunt.
Copy !req
983. None whatsoever, I'm telling you.
Copy !req
984. He was just proving
without me this band can't go on.
Copy !req
985. And when he came back
it was either me or Topper.
Copy !req
986. I can't deny that I wasn't
firing on all cylinders
Copy !req
987. When you use drugs
you don't care anymore.
Copy !req
988. I was self-seeking, I was dishonest,
I was...
Copy !req
989. You know, I didn't really
give a fuck about anyone.
Copy !req
990. You have to undo my boots Mick,
I can't undo them.
Copy !req
991. Oh, right. Oh, yeah.
Copy !req
992. I gotta go sunbathing.
Copy !req
993. You go sunbathing.
Poor Tops.
Copy !req
994. Bye, Topper.
Down the railway track.
Copy !req
995. There wasn't a lot of choice, really.
Copy !req
996. You can't have a band
with a drummer
Copy !req
997. who's so out of it he can hardly
play sometimes, and he's always late.
Copy !req
998. I burst into tears, right? Mick was crying.
Then Joe kind of softened, he said,
Copy !req
999. "Listen, it's not the end,
if you pull yourself together,
Copy !req
1000. we'll say you've been sacked
for nervous exhaustion."
Copy !req
1001. "And if you get yourself together by
the time you come back, you've got the gig."
Copy !req
1002. I tried to stop.
Copy !req
1003. And about a week after
the start of the American tour
Copy !req
1004. I think Joe got drunk and he said
Copy !req
1005. "We had to get rid of Topper,
because he's a heroin addict."
Copy !req
1006. And overnight I was Topper from The Clash,
resting from nervous exhaustion
Copy !req
1007. to being sacked for being a junkie.
Copy !req
1008. And that's when I started injecting.
Copy !req
1009. While I was playing hooky,
everybody had a row.
Copy !req
1010. And Topper just decided that,
Copy !req
1011. he obviously didn't think
I was ever coming back.
Copy !req
1012. And he decided to cut out.
Copy !req
1013. We're playing
with a guy called Terry Chimes,
Copy !req
1014. who played on our first album.
And, maybe we'll stick with him.
Copy !req
1015. I was living in a squat in Fulham
with no windows
Copy !req
1016. sleeping with my dog under the carpet
Copy !req
1017. and I'm seeing my song, a video,
and some old bloke playing in it.
Copy !req
1018. Shareef don't like it
Copy !req
1019. Rock the Casbah
Rock the Casbah
Copy !req
1020. Shareef don't like it
He thinks it's not kosher
Copy !req
1021. I don't think we played a good gig
after Topper was fired.
Copy !req
1022. "Rock The Casbah"
cracked the Top 5 in America.
Copy !req
1023. We want to be number one
in every country in the world.
Copy !req
1024. Seriously, we do.
Copy !req
1025. They made me wake up to a lot of
things that are happening in the world.
Copy !req
1026. Kick-ass band.
Copy !req
1027. Revolutions, nuclear arms race,
individual rights.
Copy !req
1028. But if that's going to destroy us,
then we're not so sure we want it.
Copy !req
1029. What do you want to be doing
when you're 40 years old?
Copy !req
1030. Do you want to stay into this
and continue to play?
Copy !req
1031. - I want some dignity left.
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1032. - They're not punk rock now.
- What are they now?
Copy !req
1033. They're just what the Stones are.
Copy !req
1034. Obviously life's full of sick jokes and you
could have seen that one coming I guess.
Copy !req
1035. But it's still a shock
when it actually happens.
Copy !req
1036. Now we turned into a load of pop stars.
Copy !req
1037. I couldn't believe that we turned into
the people we were trying to destroy.
Copy !req
1038. I'd rather go back to busking,
be a nobody than carry on like that.
Copy !req
1039. When The Clash got really really huge,
it must have on some level,
Copy !req
1040. you know, been
frightening.
Copy !req
1041. I mean it must have
scared them on some level.
Copy !req
1042. Maybe they weren't ready for it then.
Copy !req
1043. Just afraid that that degree
of success or money
Copy !req
1044. would taint their purity,
their ability to be honest.
Copy !req
1045. - What is the question?
- I'm asking you about
Copy !req
1046. the kind of responsibility
that you feel that you've got
Copy !req
1047. towards the fans as the
public figures that you are.
Copy !req
1048. I just don't feel strong enough
to carry anything at the moment.
Copy !req
1049. Let alone anything like that.
Copy !req
1050. Are you discouraged with
rock 'n' roll in general though?
Copy !req
1051. It's no worse than
any other prostitution business.
Copy !req
1052. What we got for you tonight is,
we ain't got no baseball.
Copy !req
1053. No baseball tonight.
Copy !req
1054. We ain't got no football,
they're on strike.
Copy !req
1055. What we have got here is a little bit of
what's going on in London at the moment.
Copy !req
1056. So will you welcome all the way
from Ladbroke Grove, London, W10
Copy !req
1057. The Clash!
Come on!
Copy !req
1058. They offered me the office,
offered me the shop
Copy !req
1059. They said I'd better take
anything they'd got
Copy !req
1060. Standing there, singing the songs while
they got bigger and bigger towards the end
Copy !req
1061. for some reason I began
to feel worse and worse.
Copy !req
1062. It's something to do
with what those songs are saying.
Copy !req
1063. Career opportunities,
the ones that never knock
Copy !req
1064. Every job they offer you
is to keep you out the dock
Copy !req
1065. Career opportunities,
the ones that never knock
Copy !req
1066. It was all right when we were part
of the audience, part of the movement.
Copy !req
1067. I hate the army
and I hate the RAF
Copy !req
1068. Once it became thousands of miles
removed from that
Copy !req
1069. I began to freak out.
Copy !req
1070. I hate the civil service rules
Copy !req
1071. I won't open letter bombs for you
Copy !req
1072. Mick was probably comfortable with success,
Joe was uneasy with it.
Copy !req
1073. But he didn't know why
he was unhappy
Copy !req
1074. and there was a struggle inside of him
that couldn't ever be resolved.
Copy !req
1075. He couldn't be happy because
Copy !req
1076. he wanted the band to be successful but
when it was successful he wasn't comfortable
Copy !req
1077. so there was nowhere to go.
Copy !req
1078. The thing that The Clash
don't understand
Copy !req
1079. and the thing that a lot of these bands
don't understand
Copy !req
1080. is that you can't take life
so goddamn seriously, honey.
Copy !req
1081. "You make, you buy, you die."
That's the motto of America.
Copy !req
1082. You get born to buy it.
Copy !req
1083. And if there's anything
going to be in the future
Copy !req
1084. it's got to be
from all parts of everything.
Copy !req
1085. Not just one white way
down the middle of the road.
Copy !req
1086. I need some hostility here, you know?
Copy !req
1087. I need some feelings.
Copy !req
1088. Hey, we're all alive at the same time
at once, you know?
Copy !req
1089. Should I stay or should I go now?
Copy !req
1090. Should I stay or should I go now?
Copy !req
1091. If I go, there will be trouble
Copy !req
1092. And if I stay it will be double
Copy !req
1093. So you got to let me know
Copy !req
1094. This indecision's bugging me
Copy !req
1095. Seven years ago we decided that we
were gonna be bigger than anybody else
Copy !req
1096. but still keep our message.
Copy !req
1097. Exactly whom I'm supposed to be
digame que tengo ser
Copy !req
1098. Do you remember which clothes fit me?
no sabes que ropas me queda
Copy !req
1099. We have fallen into every pitfall
Copy !req
1100. that you can possibly fall into
Copy !req
1101. as a group starting from nothing
and becoming something
Copy !req
1102. and we invented a few new ones
along the way.
Copy !req
1103. The "success goes to your head" pitfall,
the "ego-trip" pitfall,
Copy !req
1104. you think you're geniuses,
you become drug addicts,
Copy !req
1105. you make over-indulgent records,
Copy !req
1106. you over-dub the sound of ants
biting through a wooden beam.
Copy !req
1107. All these things, we've gone through
each and every damn one of them.
Copy !req
1108. And that's why we'd come out
a depleted force.
Copy !req
1109. Mick was pretty hard work to work with,
he was in his prima donna phase.
Copy !req
1110. Bernie came up to me and said,
"Look, why don't we sling this guy out?"
Copy !req
1111. And I figured it was a good idea
because I don't like being bummed out.
Copy !req
1112. You know when you go to work
in a good mood
Copy !req
1113. and there's some guy
always bumming out.
Copy !req
1114. We weren't about to
make any music like that.
Copy !req
1115. So I though, fuck it, why not?
Copy !req
1116. I think it was Joe who
managed to muster up
Copy !req
1117. the courage to say that he didn't
want to play with me anymore.
Copy !req
1118. And when somebody
says that to you...
Copy !req
1119. I just packed my guitar up
and just went, "Hey,"
Copy !req
1120. "Okay. Bye."
And that was it.
Copy !req
1121. And I walked.
Copy !req
1122. And Bernie come right out after me
with a check in his hand,
Copy !req
1123. you know like a gold watch.
Copy !req
1124. Or something, which added insult to injury.
But I took it anyway.
Copy !req
1125. It was right at the time
of the carnival.
Copy !req
1126. It was awful, you know.
Copy !req
1127. I'm walking around the carnival and then
you might see someone, you're trying to...
Copy !req
1128. I did everything.
Copy !req
1129. I grew a beard.
I dyed my hair blonde.
Copy !req
1130. For about two days I was in complete
Copy !req
1131. traumatic shock.
Copy !req
1132. But then that's character building,
you know
Copy !req
1133. when those things happen to you.
Copy !req
1134. I hadn't understood that the manager
suddenly wanted to become an artist.
Copy !req
1135. Bernie conned me to get rid of Mick,
to lay the way open for him to step in.
Copy !req
1136. Stupidly, I allowed that to happen.
It's my fault about the end, definitely.
Copy !req
1137. So he kind of thought, yeah,
well maybe Mick was the problem
Copy !req
1138. like he thought Topper
was the problem, you know?
Copy !req
1139. He didn't maybe at that point think
we're all the problem.
Copy !req
1140. And he was a coward too.
Copy !req
1141. There you go, I got to say it.
Copy !req
1142. I mean Joe, you know, he was a coward
and didn't like confrontation.
Copy !req
1143. What pisses me off about The Clash,
Copy !req
1144. is that
Copy !req
1145. this extraordinary band
should still be here.
Copy !req
1146. We had to restructure our group
to get rocking again.
Copy !req
1147. Where's Mick?
Copy !req
1148. The ships were gone
and the pit fell in
Copy !req
1149. This is Pete Howard,
the drummer.
Copy !req
1150. And Vince White, guitar,
and up top, Nick Sheppard, guitar.
Copy !req
1151. Pete Howard, Vince and Nick Sheppard,
they all felt really intimidated
Copy !req
1152. which I can't blame them
Copy !req
1153. because they were entering
the scenes already so big.
Copy !req
1154. How do you feel about the band
at this point in time?
Copy !req
1155. Great. Can you hear me?
Copy !req
1156. - Yes.
- Great.
Copy !req
1157. Everything's blando, blando, blando.
Let's have a revolt from the bottom up.
Copy !req
1158. Drugs are over
from this minute now.
Copy !req
1159. Anybody who takes a drug is a hippie
and hippies can shove off.
Copy !req
1160. Accountants and lawyers
are writing the songs.
Copy !req
1161. Attorneys are playing
the lead guitar solos.
Copy !req
1162. I can hear the sharpen of the pain
Copy !req
1163. Some lucky stranger in the rain
Copy !req
1164. Hear the sharpen of the rain
Copy !req
1165. Bernie Rhodes wanted to
really take over big-time.
Copy !req
1166. And he wanted to be the producer
and I let that happen.
Copy !req
1167. Everything was wrong.
Copy !req
1168. There was no vibe,
it was all Bernie's ego.
Copy !req
1169. Eventually I snapped.
Copy !req
1170. Strummer, he was a bloke to do the job,
he was temporary, he wasn't permanent.
Copy !req
1171. And that was the end of it.
Copy !req
1172. They used to ask me:
Copy !req
1173. "So you think you shmucks can
change the world?" they'd say to us.
Copy !req
1174. They said it so often
that you began to believe them.
Copy !req
1175. Which is fatal.
Copy !req
1176. Trust thyself.
Copy !req
1177. Joe came in to Granada in 1984.
Copy !req
1178. He was looking for the
Copy !req
1179. Federico Garcia Lorca things.
Copy !req
1180. Quickly the gossip spread in the city
that this guy
Copy !req
1181. who is like a hippie, he's so dirty,
he seems to be Joe Strummer.
Copy !req
1182. So I went to the bar and said,
Copy !req
1183. "Hey, are you Joe Strummer?"
And he told me in Spanish
Copy !req
1184. "Si, hombre.
¿Qué quieres beber?"
Copy !req
1185. So, what do you want to drink.
Copy !req
1186. He told me that he felt so frustrated,
Copy !req
1187. so alone, so lonely.
Copy !req
1188. He was unsatisfied with what he was doing.
Copy !req
1189. And while watching the Alhambra said,
my brother should be here.
Copy !req
1190. "If he knew Granada before,
Copy !req
1191. he probably wouldn't commit suicide."
Copy !req
1192. And suddenly he told me
"How wonderful it is to be alive."
Copy !req
1193. That's Bob Dylan with "Corrina, Corrina"
and his wild scratching posse of hiphop artists.
Copy !req
1194. Recorded live at the Village Vanguard
down in old Manhattan.
Copy !req
1195. Even though Joe was
a natural preacher
Copy !req
1196. and even though he was
a really righteous preacher
Copy !req
1197. the very fact that he became a preacher
in some ways
Copy !req
1198. was maybe a betrayal
of his own best instinct.
Copy !req
1199. And I always sort of felt like he spent
Copy !req
1200. those kind of wilderness years
Copy !req
1201. almost doing penance.
Copy !req
1202. You know I had to really
disassemble myself
Copy !req
1203. and examine all the pieces
and put myself back together
Copy !req
1204. I really felt completely destroyed by that,
that experience.
Copy !req
1205. And also,
Copy !req
1206. my father had died
while we were on the last tour.
Copy !req
1207. and when I came home,
my mother started to sicken
Copy !req
1208. and then she died
after the end of that year.
Copy !req
1209. You know, I'd lost my parents,
my group.
Copy !req
1210. You want to think about things
you become a different person.
Copy !req
1211. No more was I an adolescent.
Copy !req
1212. I'm a London parent.
I've got kids now.
Copy !req
1213. Joe had to really exorcise
the ghost of The Clash.
Copy !req
1214. It was a journey that he had to take.
Copy !req
1215. Where he'd been,
what he'd achieved.
Copy !req
1216. And his part in it all exploding.
Copy !req
1217. It's ironic that after Mick was
cast out from The Clash
Copy !req
1218. he was really the first one to
break big with Big Audio Dynamite.
Copy !req
1219. And Joe seemed to be
spending his time
Copy !req
1220. doing a little bit of acting work
and the odd soundtrack.
Copy !req
1221. The desert's beautiful at night.
Beautiful but lonely.
Copy !req
1222. Some people don't believe in God.
Copy !req
1223. That was my first week
on the picture, you know?
Copy !req
1224. Gun twirling
takes about a month.
Copy !req
1225. I was 18 when I made
"Straight to Hell" with Joe.
Copy !req
1226. I was broke, I was busted,
I was in love with a total loser
Copy !req
1227. and I had no place to go in London.
Copy !req
1228. And I called Joe and him
and his wife and his children
Copy !req
1229. took me in like I was their family.
Copy !req
1230. It's great having kids because that
brings you back down to earth.
Copy !req
1231. You do find yourself shouting,
"Turn the bloody music down."
Copy !req
1232. I guess it's some sort of learning thing
that we've got to go through.
Copy !req
1233. Us rebels thought
that we could somehow escape.
Copy !req
1234. But it's over in a summer,
isn't it?
Copy !req
1235. We become our parents slowly but surely.
Copy !req
1236. I saw him withdraw,
he would just completely cut off
Copy !req
1237. and go to his cabin or his cell
or his, whatever he created.
Copy !req
1238. It was very private.
Copy !req
1239. And he'd retreat to that
and he'd do his thing.
Copy !req
1240. So I suppose in a conventional term
he wasn't 100% brilliant father
Copy !req
1241. When he was on
he was fantastic
Copy !req
1242. and when he was off
he was just not available.
Copy !req
1243. He really loved those girls.
Copy !req
1244. There were a lot of uncertainties with Joe
but that was one thing that was very clear.
Copy !req
1245. You were lead singer with
The Clash for many years and
Copy !req
1246. - Many, many.
- now you're hanging around.
Copy !req
1247. Are you going to form another band?
Copy !req
1248. No, I'm kind of just doing
a bit of music for film.
Copy !req
1249. But I'm just, I'm not really looking at that
as something to do long-term.
Copy !req
1250. I'm more like trying to
get my bearings, you know?
Copy !req
1251. It takes a while to recover from ten years
on the road with one group, you know?
Copy !req
1252. I can't seem to snap into it
that quickly.
Copy !req
1253. I got a phone call from him like,
you know, "Zander."
Copy !req
1254. "We're up here in San Francisco,
you know."
Copy !req
1255. "At Russian Hill Studio."
Copy !req
1256. "I want you to come up
and bring your Spanish guitar."
Copy !req
1257. You know it was like,
that was the message.
Copy !req
1258. That was my call to arms
to be a part of that "Walker" soundtrack.
Copy !req
1259. I think "Walker" is
one of the finest things that he ever did.
Copy !req
1260. He was really proud of that.
Copy !req
1261. No one's ever heard of it
but never mind.
Copy !req
1262. I'm actually in it as an extra.
I grew a beard and grew my hair really long.
Copy !req
1263. I used to run about
wearing rags.
Copy !req
1264. Whenever he tried something new
Copy !req
1265. people weren't really prepared
to listen with new ears.
Copy !req
1266. Because what people wanted
was Joe Strummer
Copy !req
1267. and they wanted The Clash.
Copy !req
1268. And that spoiled
a lot of the work that he did.
Copy !req
1269. One day I was standing on Portobello Road
Copy !req
1270. and I thought, "Do you know,
it's time to cut down on my drinking."
Copy !req
1271. And I walked home
and the phone rang.
Copy !req
1272. And it was The Pogues going,
"Hey, you've go to come on tour."
Copy !req
1273. So I did a US tour deputying for
the rhythm guitarist in The Pogues.
Copy !req
1274. OK, I'm gonna go out and get vibed up.
Copy !req
1275. I think The Pogues gave Joe
a good appetite
Copy !req
1276. to start playing live again himself,
you know?
Copy !req
1277. In Trash City on Party Avenue
Copy !req
1278. I put together a nice little group
for this "Permanent Record" film.
Copy !req
1279. I called it "The Latino Rockabilly War".
Copy !req
1280. I wrote the music and then
I went out for three nights
Copy !req
1281. looking in all the little clubs and bars
Copy !req
1282. and little underground scenes
happening in Los Angeles
Copy !req
1283. and I just picked the musicians
from watching them.
Copy !req
1284. I already knew Zander
'cause he was on "Walker".
Copy !req
1285. But I picked the rest out from Jazz-Clubs
and Bohemian dives.
Copy !req
1286. In Trash City that's Party Avenue
Copy !req
1287. I got a girl from Kalamazoo
Copy !req
1288. In Trash City on a transit line
Copy !req
1289. I put you on hold but you're looking fine
Copy !req
1290. He was looking for a drummer in his band.
Copy !req
1291. And he said, "I've got the guy."
Copy !req
1292. I said, "Who?"
he goes, "Ramon Bajaranda."
Copy !req
1293. I said, "Is he good?"
he goes,
Copy !req
1294. "I don't know
but his name's Ramon Bajaranda, man."
Copy !req
1295. "He's gotta be good, we gotta hire him."
Copy !req
1296. Of course he wasn't
ultimately in the band unfortunately.
Copy !req
1297. Wanna see a movie
'bout a creeper on the house
Copy !req
1298. He hired my former drummer
Copy !req
1299. Jack Irons, and he's
a pretty phenomenal beat-keeper.
Copy !req
1300. In Trash City on Party Avenue
Copy !req
1301. I got a girl from Kalamazoo
Copy !req
1302. I thought that was pretty amazing because
Copy !req
1303. at the time,
Jack was in a mental institution.
Copy !req
1304. And so Joe was like,
"That's okay, that's okay."
Copy !req
1305. "We'll give him a ride to and fro every day
and he'll come into the studio and"
Copy !req
1306. "you know and he'll have a job
and we'll make this record."
Copy !req
1307. I think if your projects
are consistently failing,
Copy !req
1308. if they weren't selling records
or people weren't really listening
Copy !req
1309. I think ultimately that wears you down.
Copy !req
1310. I'm still signed to Epic
from the Clash days.
Copy !req
1311. And you have no great desire
to do a record for them?
Copy !req
1312. - For Epic?
- Yeah.
Copy !req
1313. Well you know I suspected
sometime in the last four years
Copy !req
1314. someone would ring me up
and have at me but nobody ever did.
Copy !req
1315. He was quite depressed.
Copy !req
1316. He was not happy.
Copy !req
1317. The whole process of "Earthquake Weather"
in retrospect I see it as
Copy !req
1318. he had masterminded
his own death at Epic, you know?
Copy !req
1319. "Just fucking release me
once and for all."
Copy !req
1320. I mean, I'm gonna take a $500,000 budget
and make a $500,000 art record.
Copy !req
1321. And they hated it.
Copy !req
1322. I had the head of the label and
a bunch of sort of the brass from Epic
Copy !req
1323. assembled at BBO Studios in Hollywood
to hear the record.
Copy !req
1324. I can't find him anywhere
and he's not at the studio.
Copy !req
1325. And I go to the house and,
Copy !req
1326. I see in the driveway, there's a yellow
piece of legal paper nailed to the door.
Copy !req
1327. "Dear Jerry"
Copy !req
1328. Colon.
"Don't be mad"
Copy !req
1329. Dash.
I wish I still had this.
Copy !req
1330. "I've gone to the desert. Will be back on"
Colon.
Copy !req
1331. "Sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
Copy !req
1332. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday."
And then he circled Thursday.
Copy !req
1333. Joe couldn't just write
I'll be back Thursday,
Copy !req
1334. probably didn't even know
until he saw all the days of the week
Copy !req
1335. written out in his own hand
Copy !req
1336. "Oh, Thursday."
Copy !req
1337. And he came back Thursday
and it was too late
Copy !req
1338. everyone had gone back to New York
and he sort of,
Copy !req
1339. He made that record a
self-fulfilling prophecy, I think,
Copy !req
1340. he didn't have his confidence back - yet.
Copy !req
1341. The guy fucking intended on
shooting himself in the foot.
Copy !req
1342. Sabotaging his career and
Copy !req
1343. possibly any kind of relationships he had
that he didn't want to be in.
Copy !req
1344. He needed to make some serious changes
in order to be happy.
Copy !req
1345. He had to find a place in himself
Copy !req
1346. where he was happy with just being Joe
and letting go.
Copy !req
1347. It was part of the reason why I shut
down shop after "Earthquake Weather".
Copy !req
1348. 'Cause I realized I was contracted to
this label on a never ending contract.
Copy !req
1349. So I was kind of fucked.
And I decided to bore them out.
Copy !req
1350. For the next eight years I figured out
how to get out of the contract.
Copy !req
1351. I guess it was kind of a dark period for
him in some way when we became friends.
Copy !req
1352. You know, he had a lot of frustration
Copy !req
1353. about his life in general.
Copy !req
1354. I'm sure other people have brought up
you know the Strummer's Law of
Copy !req
1355. no input, no output.
Copy !req
1356. 'Cause he was always interested
in taking things in.
Copy !req
1357. You know that period maybe was
very important for him and fertile
Copy !req
1358. but I think a little painful at times.
Copy !req
1359. And I cornered him in the kitchen
Copy !req
1360. and I said to him "Joe, do you think
we'll ever work together again?"
Copy !req
1361. It's one of the most brilliant things
he ever said to me, he said,
Copy !req
1362. "Don't be stupid man."
Copy !req
1363. And it was like one of those ambiguous
like "Joe-isms"
Copy !req
1364. It was like,
"Don't be stupid, man, of course."
Copy !req
1365. Or, "Don't be stupid, man,
move on, it's over."
Copy !req
1366. Jim asked me to be
in his film "Mystery Train".
Copy !req
1367. He said that Strummer
was going to play one of the parts.
Copy !req
1368. I was as nervous to work with him
Copy !req
1369. than if he told me I was gonna work with
Marlon Brando or De Niro or somebody.
Copy !req
1370. It was "Strummer", I was like,
"Just, just calm down."
Copy !req
1371. "It's okay, you can do this."
Copy !req
1372. I was hoping that maturity would arrive
I'm still waiting at the station for it.
Copy !req
1373. You know I've found you can't just
walk in there and expect to get a result.
Copy !req
1374. A bit like you couldn't walk into a studio
if you never thought about music
Copy !req
1375. and put down a good album.
Copy !req
1376. He used to go from high to down easily.
Copy !req
1377. He was really emotional.
Copy !req
1378. Good morning, Saudi-Arabia.
Copy !req
1379. Kicking off Desert Shield Network
Copy !req
1380. FM 107.
Copy !req
1381. And we started off rockin' the casbah.
Copy !req
1382. I saw him crying because he saw in the news
Copy !req
1383. a bomb, an American bomb
Copy !req
1384. prepared to be thrown in Irak
was written "Rock The Casbah".
Copy !req
1385. He was crying he told me
Copy !req
1386. "Hey man, I never could think that
a song of mine could be
Copy !req
1387. written as a death symbol
in a fucking American bomb."
Copy !req
1388. I used to call him Chief Thundercloud
because he was in a very dark space.
Copy !req
1389. I did this film called "When Pigs Fly"
and I benefited because
Copy !req
1390. he was so anxious to make music.
Copy !req
1391. He hadn't been in the studio
for a very long time.
Copy !req
1392. And he kind of went nuts, and he gave me
nine hours of music in four days.
Copy !req
1393. Oh no!
Copy !req
1394. Bollocks.
Copy !req
1395. Every time you get something happening,
you always go over it later.
Copy !req
1396. And the fury of it.
Copy !req
1397. Could you play me the rest of it?
You haven't gone back, have you?
Copy !req
1398. Could you go right to the end?
Copy !req
1399. To see what's left
after that stupid fool clapped on it.
Copy !req
1400. Bloody hell!
Copy !req
1401. What a pinhead!
Copy !req
1402. Imagine that you're a rock and roller
and say you were in a big band
Copy !req
1403. like I was and what have you,
and then time goes by
Copy !req
1404. and you meet a 17-year old guy,
who's never heard of The Clash.
Copy !req
1405. And that's the moment that
my feet touch the ground again.
Copy !req
1406. I've got ideas for the new world
I can't go back.
Copy !req
1407. I'd be like a living museum.
Copy !req
1408. I just want to get out there
and do something new.
Copy !req
1409. And then you get your own energy
from the newness of it.
Copy !req
1410. I think it say in the bible "There's a time
to dance to techno and a time not to."
Copy !req
1411. We've got new fresh sounds every week.
You can't even keep up with it.
Copy !req
1412. Have you tried keeping up with like
techno, hardcore, trance, intellechno.
Copy !req
1413. It's a hotbed of creativity
and that's a fact.
Copy !req
1414. Standing in a kitchen listening
to rave music I couldn't understand it.
Copy !req
1415. I had to go to a rave to understand it.
And after about four hours
Copy !req
1416. we were supposed to go into a trance,
I was going into a trance.
Copy !req
1417. And I thought,
let's just say we're in a forest.
Copy !req
1418. And there was nothing to do
but with big empty logs,
Copy !req
1419. say we were pygmies or something
Copy !req
1420. we'd end up, what we'd be
doing by about lunchtime
Copy !req
1421. we'd be standing around a log with big
sticks and we'd be going dong, dong, dong.
Copy !req
1422. There's an anti criminal justice act
in England
Copy !req
1423. which is banning parties, raves, repetitive
beats all the tenting people in the fields.
Copy !req
1424. And it's only made
the underground stronger.
Copy !req
1425. Because you have to band together
to fight the common thing.
Copy !req
1426. It was a case of that
as well with punk.
Copy !req
1427. You can see the hippie thing about it,
you know what I mean?
Copy !req
1428. Punks were hippies
with zips.
Copy !req
1429. People began to kick hippies around
but quite frankly
Copy !req
1430. I am a hippie.
I want to be a hippie, you know?
Copy !req
1431. Punks and hippies
are now fighting together here in England.
Copy !req
1432. It's the same thing they want.
In fact, you can't tell them apart.
Copy !req
1433. And they're coming together
in some new strange style.
Copy !req
1434. The first original Strummer campfire
probably started at Glastonbury.
Copy !req
1435. He loved the kind of community aspect
and the techno thing he suddenly got
Copy !req
1436. and once it was there, once it was
instilled in his brain
Copy !req
1437. he instantly understood it.
And became a champion for it.
Copy !req
1438. There's no better place to be on this
whole island than right here, right now.
Copy !req
1439. I think this is some sort of
gene memory, this is my theory.
Copy !req
1440. It's in our blood over here
to have these kind of big meets.
Copy !req
1441. I bet you if we were
standing here like maybe
Copy !req
1442. 2000 years ago or whatever, you know
there'd be something like this going on.
Copy !req
1443. But Joe was looking around the world
for different inspiration.
Copy !req
1444. This is Andres Landero, the king.
Copy !req
1445. Cumbian music,
African music,
Copy !req
1446. Jason Mayo brought this lovely music to us.
Copy !req
1447. We are riding on it.
Copy !req
1448. I love it.
I play it all of the time.
Copy !req
1449. Joe was marrying Luce and
Copy !req
1450. I just felt really happy for him
'cause he seemed very happy.
Copy !req
1451. It helped to ground him
and to help focus him,
Copy !req
1452. and give him a base to grow from
and to start his new music
Copy !req
1453. and give him a bit more
confidence in himself.
Copy !req
1454. And I think Joe really appreciated
being Joe Strummer
Copy !req
1455. and not being the ex-Clash member.
Copy !req
1456. Joe's a very spiritual person.
He always had an interest in kind of
Copy !req
1457. American Indians, the Incas,
Mexicans.
Copy !req
1458. He did love the image, the symbolism
attached to a campfire.
Copy !req
1459. It was very, very important to him.
He saw it as a great opportunity
Copy !req
1460. to express himself
but in a really quiet way.
Copy !req
1461. I think Joe was fed up with shouting.
And there's nothing better than
Copy !req
1462. people wandering through
and sitting down,
Copy !req
1463. 'cause that campfire itself
is a very comforting thing.
Copy !req
1464. You sit there, get warm and you talk.
Copy !req
1465. He would go off for hours on end
and come back with
Copy !req
1466. people from all walks of life.
None of whom we knew.
Copy !req
1467. He just enjoyed talking to people,
he enjoyed listening.
Copy !req
1468. He used to learn so much.
Copy !req
1469. He was always thinking
of other people all the time
Copy !req
1470. extra tents, extra sleeping bags
for everyone.
Copy !req
1471. It was an extension
of the whole ethos of Glastonbury.
Copy !req
1472. For him it was a form of
alternative living with your friends.
Copy !req
1473. In Rastafari we say,
"More fire,"
Copy !req
1474. and it's not supposed to be a violent thing
it's about purging and cleansing.
Copy !req
1475. And rebirth, a rising phoenix
like out of the ashes.
Copy !req
1476. So maybe that's what he was tuned into.
Copy !req
1477. He had a lot to teach about
Copy !req
1478. life in general.
Copy !req
1479. And, like, the sort of, the real world,
not the perfect world.
Copy !req
1480. Joe's campfire was utopia.
Copy !req
1481. It was re-exploring rules
Copy !req
1482. re-exploring how you can make music
as, like, going back to the druids.
Copy !req
1483. Yet the experience was
pushing the envelope.
Copy !req
1484. Trying to find something new.
Copy !req
1485. We hadn't seen each other
for nearly 25 years.
Copy !req
1486. And Joe bumped into my daughter
and he gave her a note and it just said,
Copy !req
1487. "Nothing's changed.
We're all old hippies at heart."
Copy !req
1488. "Come have a campfire."
Copy !req
1489. Campfires opened up the idea to Joe
that he could form another band.
Copy !req
1490. It didn't have to be Clash-type music
Copy !req
1491. that it could be an amalgamation
of everything that he listened to.
Copy !req
1492. It gave him the confidence to think,
Copy !req
1493. "Hey maybe I can find like-minded
people to play with me."
Copy !req
1494. Joe challenged you and he provoked you.
Copy !req
1495. In fact the last time I saw Joe
I had an argument with him
Copy !req
1496. because he was trying to tell me
not to stop smoking.
Copy !req
1497. You took cigarettes
away from the 20th century
Copy !req
1498. we wouldn't have any of the writers
you go on about or anybody worships.
Copy !req
1499. Just would not exist.
And I want this acknowledged.
Copy !req
1500. In fact I think non-smokers should be
barred from buying any product
Copy !req
1501. that a smoker created.
Copy !req
1502. We spent a long time,
trying to get Joe back on the road.
Copy !req
1503. We're talking about two years here.
Copy !req
1504. And it started off me trying to
get him to re-form The Clash.
Copy !req
1505. But he was really adamant
that he wouldn't.
Copy !req
1506. That he would not go back out
on the road with them.
Copy !req
1507. If that was no toe tapper or no body shaker
boy you need to see the undertaker.
Copy !req
1508. That was Andres Landero,
El Rey del Acordeón.
Copy !req
1509. I had my daughter on my shoulders
and I said, "What's going on?"
Copy !req
1510. And she said, "Uh, dad, there's
a naked man dancing on the stage."
Copy !req
1511. So I said, "Let me see,"
so I threw her on the ground and
Copy !req
1512. stood on her recumberent body
so that I could see.
Copy !req
1513. And this is my first glimpse
of Antony Genn.
Copy !req
1514. And then I met him
after that performance.
Copy !req
1515. I was kind of drunk and I said to him,
"Come on, you're fucking Joe Strummer."
Copy !req
1516. "Get up off your ass
and make a fucking record."
Copy !req
1517. "We need you."
Copy !req
1518. I just didn't expect him to turn around
and say "Yeah, okay. I'll do it with you."
Copy !req
1519. If you leave it too long,
there's a sort of magic moment
Copy !req
1520. when it's too late to come back.
Copy !req
1521. And I think I just got in
before the door closed.
Copy !req
1522. Please welcome Joe Strummer
and the Mescaleros.
Copy !req
1523. On a techno D-day,
a techno D-day
Copy !req
1524. Out on Omaha beach
Copy !req
1525. Where the troops believe
in a life of freedom
Copy !req
1526. And this is all about free speech
Copy !req
1527. 'Cause he hadn't been
on the road for a long, long time.
Copy !req
1528. Put a few pounds on
Copy !req
1529. He was knackered after three tunes
Copy !req
1530. 'cause he hadn't paced himself
he was giving it all.
Copy !req
1531. He was just sweating, but nobody cared
it was just Joe.
Copy !req
1532. You gotta fight for your,
for your crowd.
Copy !req
1533. Excuse me, girls. I'm trying to
promote a rock 'n' roll show tonight.
Copy !req
1534. Rock 'n' roll.
Copy !req
1535. When you hustle,
you've got to have a hard shell.
Copy !req
1536. Like Captain Beefheart said,
Copy !req
1537. "One cold vibe won't stop
this here boogie."
Copy !req
1538. I'll leave you with the flyer
in case you fancy going.
Copy !req
1539. All right.
Copy !req
1540. It's the hippest place in town tonight.
Copy !req
1541. Hurray.
Copy !req
1542. We're building.
Copy !req
1543. When I got back on the road,
my expectations were zero, zilch.
Copy !req
1544. Because I don't like
to be disappointed so
Copy !req
1545. I keep my expectations
at a bare minimum.
Copy !req
1546. It was constantly about reinvention.
Copy !req
1547. Tonight there was a power cut
in the city of madness
Copy !req
1548. And all conversations died
in the burst of a solar flare
Copy !req
1549. Yeah, he loved it, he loved it.
Copy !req
1550. He absolutely loved it,
he loved the whole deal.
Copy !req
1551. It was the beginning chapter
of a new period in his life.
Copy !req
1552. And shorted out the eastern shore
Copy !req
1553. Were left to shout out,
"We all need a little more."
Copy !req
1554. Songs don't tend to come to you,
I think, if there's no outlet for them.
Copy !req
1555. Because I couldn't get any records out,
the songs would occasionally come but
Copy !req
1556. I knew that as soon as we had
a contract the flood gates would open
Copy !req
1557. I got reams of lyrics,
Copy !req
1558. carrier bags full of twisted napkins
with insane things written on them.
Copy !req
1559. When you get a great idea for a lyric,
Copy !req
1560. just push people out of the way,
throw yourself on the floor
Copy !req
1561. and write it down because
it only makes sense in the moment.
Copy !req
1562. He would always just walk around the studio
and he had an A4 sheet of paper and a pen
Copy !req
1563. and he'd just write
reams and reams of lyrics.
Copy !req
1564. And it went on for a few hours and then
about midnight or whatever he went,
Copy !req
1565. "Okay, I've got a song,"
Copy !req
1566. and he'd just written a song about
his walk from Willesden to Cricklewood.
Copy !req
1567. And then during that time I was
fiddling around with this little tune.
Copy !req
1568. I wasn't thinking for a second
that Joe was going to go
Copy !req
1569. "Yeah, that's good,"
I was just messing around.
Copy !req
1570. There was Joe Strummer
and there was John Graham Mellor.
Copy !req
1571. He talks about his children in that song.
Copy !req
1572. Do it.
One, two, three, action.
Copy !req
1573. Maybe that night
I wrote a song with John Mellor.
Copy !req
1574. Thought about my babies grown
Copy !req
1575. Thought about going home
Copy !req
1576. Thought about what's done is done
Copy !req
1577. We're alive and that's the one
Copy !req
1578. From Willesden to Cricklewood
Copy !req
1579. From Willesden to Cricklewood
Copy !req
1580. I'm pinching myself sometimes.
Copy !req
1581. You actually got a record,
you're traveling,
Copy !req
1582. you're going around,
you're in countries,
Copy !req
1583. you're talking to people,
you're playing shows.
Copy !req
1584. It's such a change
from ten years in the wilderness.
Copy !req
1585. Yeah, it feels great
and I'm having Christmas every day.
Copy !req
1586. So here's Joe Strummer.
Copy !req
1587. You know when The Clash
were on tour and we lost the beat,
Copy !req
1588. Chef would be like at
the side of the stage going,
Copy !req
1589. "Don't forget, pump your groins, children."
Copy !req
1590. You know, that was
like his motto or something.
Copy !req
1591. Well it's a rockin' world,
make no mistake about it
Copy !req
1592. It's a shockin' world,
could be what's so great about it
Copy !req
1593. It's a rockin' world
Copy !req
1594. What the hell is this?
Copy !req
1595. Whenever we hung out all of us
brought sunglasses
Copy !req
1596. When Joe called saying,
"We're going out," you know?
Copy !req
1597. 'Cause you knew you'd be
up at dawn somewhere with Joe.
Copy !req
1598. You'd get a message like,
"I'm coming into town,"
Copy !req
1599. and you'd take your vitamins and
get your rest.
Copy !req
1600. And if Joe could find a piano,
he would go play Junco Partner.
Copy !req
1601. Like it's, you know, 5 o'clock in
the morning and we're all singing
Copy !req
1602. to Junco Partner in some ground-floor
apartment in the East Village.
Copy !req
1603. Slowly but surely my drug addiction
became much more severe.
Copy !req
1604. He's seen that movie,
he knows how that movie ends.
Copy !req
1605. So there's only one thing to do and that's
cut that guy loose.
Copy !req
1606. I was staying in Portsmouth at the time.
I hadn't seen Joe for a few years.
Copy !req
1607. And I saw him in the bar, and he
kind of looks at me and he's going
Copy !req
1608. "Have you got an instrument with you?"
Copy !req
1609. I just said to him, "Where's you violin?
Is it in the car?"
Copy !req
1610. I said, "Go and get it."
Copy !req
1611. And then we did like
virtually every gig after that.
Copy !req
1612. Which part of life do we find the truth?
Is it the beginning, the middle or the end?
Copy !req
1613. Or is it all quasi-truth?
Copy !req
1614. I approach everything in my life
with a punk rock attitude.
Copy !req
1615. In fact punk rock means exemplary
manners to your fellow human being.
Copy !req
1616. I have a record program
on the World Service,
Copy !req
1617. I just play records
for half an hour.
Copy !req
1618. When I asked how many people
are listening to this slot,
Copy !req
1619. and he flicked through a book
and he said "40 million."
Copy !req
1620. And I said, "Are you kidding me?"
And he said, "No, 40 million."
Copy !req
1621. Just brings the idea of a globe
sharply into focus.
Copy !req
1622. Maybe that opened my eyes to hearing
Copy !req
1623. things that aren't in the
complete western music groove.
Copy !req
1624. I've always kept that going,
finding strange records and
Copy !req
1625. trying to learn from them
so as not to keep it too narrow.
Copy !req
1626. 'Cause if you keep it very narrow,
it's gonna to kill the life in the music.
Copy !req
1627. Hey, down along the road
Copy !req
1628. Down on the road, down on the road
Copy !req
1629. If you're after getting the honey, hey
Copy !req
1630. Then you don't go killing all the bees
Copy !req
1631. Let the summertime sun
Copy !req
1632. I saw Joe playing with the Mescaleros
quite a bit.
Copy !req
1633. I remember it being just blissful.
Copy !req
1634. There wasn't anywhere on the planet
I could conceivably want to be.
Copy !req
1635. Tokyo, taifun coming in
Copy !req
1636. in the city of sin.
Copy !req
1637. I love you.
Copy !req
1638. I think he knew he had something
else to do and he hadn't found it.
Copy !req
1639. And in The Mescaleros he found
what he wanted to do again.
Copy !req
1640. I think it was just as important
to him as The Clash.
Copy !req
1641. I don't have any message except
don't forget you're alive.
Copy !req
1642. 'Cause sometimes when you
walk around the city
Copy !req
1643. or when you yourself are in a bad mood
Copy !req
1644. you think, "Hey wait a minute,
we're alive, you know?"
Copy !req
1645. "We don't know
what the next second will bring."
Copy !req
1646. We all though it might be we play at the
Rock 'n' Roll hall of fame or something.
Copy !req
1647. You know, we'd get back together.
Copy !req
1648. But it wasn't to be that.
It was something
Copy !req
1649. more appropriate in a way.
Copy !req
1650. The 2002 strike, we felt
we deserved more money.
Copy !req
1651. We didn't think it was being greedy
it was actually going for
Copy !req
1652. the average wage
of that particular sector.
Copy !req
1653. It wasn't seeing we were
getting our message across.
Copy !req
1654. Joe realized there was
more to our cause
Copy !req
1655. than what the papers
and the government were saying.
Copy !req
1656. For Joe to come out and do such a gig for us
it was a great morale booster.
Copy !req
1657. I didn't really intend to play with Joe
and I'd never discussed it before
Copy !req
1658. and we didn't pre-arrange anything.
Copy !req
1659. It was just I felt completely compelled.
I said, "Hold my coat, I'm going up."
Copy !req
1660. Mick Jones ladies and gentlemen.
Copy !req
1661. That was actually the first time that
Mick and Joe appeared on stage together
Copy !req
1662. since the breakup of The Clash.
Copy !req
1663. It was kind of cool because
they did it for the firemen
Copy !req
1664. and not because somebody paid them
2 million quid.
Copy !req
1665. And that's the end of the first series
of Joe Strummer's "London Calling".
Copy !req
1666. If you want a second series,
please write in.
Copy !req
1667. In fact I'm not even gonna wait
for you to write in.
Copy !req
1668. I'm gonna kick off
the second series right now.
Copy !req
1669. "Let It Roll" with Nina Simone.
Copy !req
1670. He did this incredible Christmas card.
Copy !req
1671. It was a series of islands
with campfires on them
Copy !req
1672. and people heading towards them
drawn by the campfires in little boats.
Copy !req
1673. And it was his vision of heaven I think.
Copy !req
1674. This place where people joined
and were together.
Copy !req
1675. It was all done
very last-minute as always.
Copy !req
1676. I think I posted them on December 21st.
Copy !req
1677. So a lot of people received them
the day he died.
Copy !req
1678. He was a genuinely happy man.
Copy !req
1679. There was no pressure,
there was just joy in what he was doing.
Copy !req
1680. He just went like that, on the sofa.
Reading "The Observer" I think.
Copy !req
1681. He died of a congenital heart defect which
Copy !req
1682. we were all totally unaware that he had.
Copy !req
1683. It could have struck him down at any time.
Copy !req
1684. None of those things
can really last forever.
Copy !req
1685. And I think in a way
it's kind of greedy of people
Copy !req
1686. to expect it to last forever,
because that's people, like...
Copy !req
1687. That's their fire burning.
Copy !req
1688. An extra strength for us,
you know?
Copy !req
1689. And that's kind of a lot
to ask of people to burn like that.
Copy !req
1690. Tens of thousands of emails
that came in were saying
Copy !req
1691. Joe, thank you, you've changed the
way that I thought and felt about life.
Copy !req
1692. His mythology is cast
in reinforced concrete
Copy !req
1693. and is probably helping to hold up
the Trellick Tower right now.
Copy !req
1694. You now when you and I
carried him into that chapel
Copy !req
1695. it felt like you put a bit of weight on.
Copy !req
1696. I think that Fender Telecaster
must have been in there.
Copy !req
1697. He doesn't...
Copy !req
1698. It's like Hemingway said it with Paris,
there's never any end to it.
Copy !req
1699. It's the same with Joe.
Copy !req
1700. So now I'd like to say
Copy !req
1701. people can change
anything they want to.
Copy !req
1702. And that means
everything in the world.
Copy !req
1703. People are running about following
their little tracks, I am one of them.
Copy !req
1704. But we've all got to stop just
following our own little mouse trail.
Copy !req
1705. People can do anything.
Copy !req
1706. This is something that
I'm beginning to learn.
Copy !req
1707. People are out there
doing bad things to each other.
Copy !req
1708. It's because they've been de-humanized.
Copy !req
1709. It's time to take the humanity back
into the center of the ring.
Copy !req
1710. And follow that for a time.
Copy !req
1711. Greed, it ain't going anywhere.
Copy !req
1712. They should have that in a
big billboard across Times Square.
Copy !req
1713. Without people you're nothing.
Copy !req
1714. That's my spiel.
Copy !req