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The Singles
(CD, 2000)

Primary Artist: Clash (The)

BEST PRICE
$0.75

LIST PRICE
$13.98
Save 94%
Format: CD
Jan 2000
Record Label: Legacy Recordings
Recording Type: Studio
UPC: 074646388624
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Track Listing
1. White Riot
2. Remote Control
3. Complete Control
4. Clash City Rockers
5. In Hammersmith Palais, (White Man)
6. Tommy Gun
7. English Civil War
8. I Fought the Law
9. London Calling
10. Train in Vain
11. Bank Robber
12. Call Up, The
13. Hitsville U.K.
14. Magnificent Seven, The
15. This Is Radio Clash
16. Know Your Rights
17. Rock the Casbah
18. Should I Stay or Should I Go?

Details
Distributor:Sony Music Distribution (
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
The Clash: Joe Strummer, Mick Jones (vocals, guitar); Paul Simonon (bass); Topper Headon (drums).
Producers include: Mickey Foote, Lee Perry, Bill Price, Sandy Pearlman, Guy Stevens.
Amidst all the punk history and revolutionary rhetoric, it's easy to forget that the Clash was one hell of a singles band, capable of releasing one propulsively catchy song after another. This collection, which moves chronologically from the band's early days at the heart of the UK punk movement to the funk experimentation of its latter career, serves as both stunning career resume and perfect introduction for the neophyte. The raging, righteous anger and blazing guitars of punk anthems "White Riot" and "Complete Control" rub shoulders with the reggae rhythms of "White Man in Hammersmith Palais."
Rap and funk rear their heads (in a distinctly British way) on "The Magnificent Seven" and "Radio Clash." Manic, post-punk rockabilly accompanies Joe Strummer's state-of-the-union address on "Know Your Rights," and the Mick Jones-sung "Should I Stay or Should I Go" makes a case for itself as a garage-rock classic on the order of "Louie Louie." For all the political smarts the group consistently displayed in its lyrics, THE SINGLES shows that the band's music was never less than enthralling. No matter how stern the Marxist theories to which the band members subscribed in their early days, they could never resist an old-fashioned rock & roll hook.

Industry Reviews
5 out of 5 - ...for non-completists...collects the a-sides - showcasing the band's every stylistic move, from '1977' (sheer ferocity) to 'Train In Vain' (soulish ebullience)...
Alternative Press (03/01/2000)

3 stars out of 5 - Included in Q's 100 Best Punk Albums - ...The most album-worthy of the early albums and deserve at-length listens...


Ranked #1 in Q Magazine's 10 Essential Reissues Of 2006.



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