Product Details
London Calling

London Calling
The Clash

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. London Calling
  2. Brand New Cadillac
  3. Jimmy Jazz
  4. Hateful
  5. Rudie Can't Fail
  6. Spanish Bombs
  7. Right Profile
  8. Lost In The Supermarket
  9. Clampdown
  10. Guns Of Brixton
  11. Wrong 'em boyo
  12. Koka Kola
  13. Koka kola
  14. Lover's Rock
  15. Four Horsemen
  16. I'm Not Down
  17. Revolution Rock
  18. Train In Vain

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #936 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-10-11
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Punk's death knell had already been called, but London Calling found The Clash fighting a heroic rear guard battle. Having shelved the no-frills heads-down thunder of The Clash and Give 'Em Enough Rope, London Calling was an extravagant benchmark. Ostensibly about the ideological and real struggles that rent British society asunder at the end of the 1970s, London Calling was couched in the language of revolutionary desperadoes. Influenced by reggae and ska, and augmented by the Irish Horns, the result was one of the most heady, celebratory rock & roll records to have come out of the punk movement. For every traditional rabble-rouser like "Rudie Can't Fail" or "Revolution Rock", though, there was a starker truth to London Calling found in "Guns Of Brixton", or a shred of poignancy in "Lost In The Supermarket" that confirmed The Clash's ideological importance to a generation. Seldom, if ever, had punk sounded so gloriously righteous, but so damn right. --Louis Pattison

From Amazon.com
Bursting at the seams with creative energy, the Clash's stunning 1979 double album more than made up for the artistic and commercial disappointment of its predecessor, '78's tried-too-hard Give 'Em Enough Rope. With ex-Mott the Hoople producer Guy Stevens harnessing their sound as never before, the band yielded what proved to be the best work of their career. Bouncing from hard-rock (the apocalyptic-vision of the title track) to rockabilly ("Brand New Cadillac") to reggae ("Rudy Can't Fail") to pop (the Top Forty hit, "Train in Vain"), the Clash knocked down all musical walls and, in the process, ended the argument over punk's viability in the U.S. --Billy Altman

CD Description
If punk rejected pop history, LONDON CALLING reclaimed it, albeit with a knowing perspective. The scope of this double set is breaktaking, encompassing reggae, rockabilly and the group's own furious mettle. Where such a combination might have proved over-ambitious, the Clash accomplish it with swaggering panache. Guy Stevens, who produced the group's first demos, returns to the helm to provide a confident, cohesive sound equal to the set's brilliant array of material. Boldlyassertive and superbly focused, London Calling contains many of the quartet's finest songs and is, by extension, virtually faultless.


Customer Reviews

V. Good5
This is a truely great and inspiring album. To be truthful there isn't much "punk" as such to be found on this album, this is very much the sound of '79 rather than '77. Obviously the attitude is completely punk, but the album is more of a showcase for Strummer's and Jones' songwriting and skill to adapt to any type of music. There are great reggie, ska and pop songs to be found on this album, showing a variety that many other bands of the era would not be able to acheive. This is a double album of great class, there are no filler tracks, each of the nineteen songs could have been released as singles. The production is of high quality and much easier on the ears compaired to their first album. The obvious standout song is the title track. The relentless guitar and pounding bass create a great basis for Strummer's snarl. This is all in all a good album, and confirms The Clash as one of the great bands.

The Sandinista's were always cool5
Remember the scene in the film "Hi Fidelity" where Jack Black berates a customer of the record shop he works in for not having Dylan's "Blonde on Blonde". Some albums really should be available on the national cirriculum. Thus in the same vein if you do not own the Clash's "London Calling" hang your head in shame, don't speak to anyone until you get a copy and greatly worry about the sanity of the person on Amazon who describes this album as "over rated". Green Day and Fall out Boy better than this? Oh dear your poor deluded soul, get help quick and hope that no ever finds out who you are for you will be forever mocked.

London Calling has it all. The great Elvis derived cover, the driving title track (please seek out the Clash video of this in the driving rain on the banks of the river Thames for the sheer attack that the band pounds into the song), the barnstorming cover of Vince Taylor's "Brand New Cadillac", the hidden gem that is "Train in Vain" the wonderful "Spanish bombs" and "Lost in a supermarket". Oh look stop me now since I about to go off on one. Possibly the best British rock, punk, psychobilly, r and b and whatever you choose album of the 1970s and therefore one of the greatest albums ever. It has enough energy to power the national grid and increase global warming. Joe Strummer you are one of the most missed individuals to depart the planet. I still have great memories of a fantastic gig he did with the Pogues and an "Irish" version of London Calling. Poor old Shane was on the sauce of course! PS if you also find yourself getting the first album you will be equally blessed. I think it was Tom Robinson who said that he bought "White Man in the Hammersmith Palais and didn't own a record player. You know what he means.

23 years old, still essential5
In August of 1979, the Clash went into Wessex studios to record one of the most emotive and influential albums of all time. The usual spiel about 'punk is dead' applies here; what made this album so impressive was the Clash's refusal to stagnate, and made a vital but ahead-of-its-time record. Everyone looked towards electronica and the New Romantic movement but the Clash thankfully never got dragged into that. There is a real "black music" feel about the album, each singalong reggae or ska melody tinged with tales of hardship. It was also with their brilliant title track that the Clash scored one of their biggest hits. Some people hate the song but it just sums up the bleakness of the time, with heavy recession and Britain besieged by threats of IRA terrorism. Other standout songs are the first six songs, Guns of Brixton, Death or Glory and Train In Vain. This is a feelgood album (ish), just sit back and be entertained by a great album that sadly proved to be the epitaph of mainstream punk.