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Original Ticket kindly shared by Dennis McHugh
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Setlist
1 |
Safe European Home |
Extensive archive of articles, magazines and other from the Take the Fifth Tour of the US, late 1979
There are several sights that provide setlists but most mirror www.blackmarketclash.co.uk. They are worth checking.
from Setlist FM (cannot be relied on)
from Songkick (cannot be relied on)
... both have lists of people who say they went
& from the newer Concert Database and also Concert Archives
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ARTICLES, POSTERS, CLIPPINGS ... A collection of A collection of articles, interviews, reviews, posters, tour dates from the Clash's Take the Fifth US Tour covering the period of the Pearl Harbour Tour. If you know of any articles or references for this particular gig, anything that is missing, please do let us know.
VIDEO AND AUDIO Video and audio footage from the tour including radio interviews.
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Brixton Academy 8 March 1984
ST. PAUL, MN - MAY 15
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Sep 11, 2013: THE CLASH (REUNION) - Paris France 2 IMAGES
Mar 16, 1984: THE CLASH - Out of Control UK Tour - Academy Brixton London 19 IMAGES
Jul 10, 1982: THE CLASH - Casbah Club UK Tour - Brixton Fair Deal London 16 IMAGES
1982: THE CLASH - Photosession in San Francisco CA USA 2 IMAGES
Jul 25, 1981: JOE STRUMMER - At an event at the Wimpy Bar Piccadilly Circus London 33 IMAGES
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Jul 24, 1978: THE CLASH - Music Machine London 48 IMAGES
Aug 05, 1977: THE CLASH - Mont-de-Marsan Punk Rock Festival France 33 IMAGES
1977: THE CLASH - London 18 IMAGES
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I saw The Clash at Bonds - excellent
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The Clash Take the Fifth Tour
Supported by The Undertones
updated 13 Feb 2012 - added 4 photos
updated Dec 2014 - added poster
slight distortion - Sound 3 - 69min - unknown gen - 20 tracks - very distant
London Calling
A reasonable audience recording
A reasonable audience recording circulates of the gig spoilt by some slight over amplification/distortion. There's a good degree of clarity, it's not too many generations down from the master, but vocals and guitar are distant. Drums come over best but bass is low almost buried in the mix. Recording levels rise up and down during first part of Safe European Home as the taper wrestles with the notoriously loud Clash PA volume.
Audio on Youtube
The Clash audio live in Walnut street theatre, Philadelphia USA 1979 - YouTube
Philadelphia Daily News - Clash Collision
Friday 21st September 1979 - Enlarge image - Enlarge image full page
Clash Collision
FURY AND DETERMINATION, a loathing of elitism, and a bemused intolerance for frauds large and small... that's The Clash.
Think of punk rock, and the now-broken Sex Pistols come most readily to mind, probably because their obnoxious antics were so loudly hyped. Truth is, though, that The Clash is the best and (on home turf) most beloved of this English music movement's progenitors.
It's one thing to have a hard bitten view of a world torn asunder by wars of race, class and identity. It's quite another to be able to express the punk's core message in a manner that's palatable to the target youth audience, especially an American one that has not experienced the economic and social strain of the English lifestyle.
That's where the Clash stand above and apart from their peers - with their stripped down but lis- tenable hard rock and reggae music, blistering guitar arrangements and in the demonic, spir- it-possessed intensity of Joe Strummer's vocals.
Catch them if you can, tomorrow night at the Walnut Street Theater. Tickets, $8, are virtually sold out.
Larger promoter changed the venue
Brenda Siegelman - facebook - Finally solved the mystery of the changed venues. The gig was originally booked for the tower theater, but the Promotor (First Nighter) was pushed out by the larger Electric Factory Concerts claiming exclusivity on the Tower Theatre .
The Walnut Street Theatre was a very unusual venue - it was purely a legit theater- and never booked music before or after - but it was perfect for the audience . Great sightlines , good acoustics , and a big, comfortable lobby to meet up with friends and wait in the merch line.
The Undertones did not open and the show was not at the Tower Theatre.
Stephen Gambino <sjgambinoatverizon.net> - Walnut St Theatre....I was there. The Undertones did not open and the show was not at the Tower Theatre.
I don't know where that Tower Theatre poster on your site came from...I guess that may have been the original venue and lineup but may have been moved to the smaller theatre for lack of sales. I know 'Give Em Enough Rope' had just been released and maybe the 1st was released at the same time?
Thanks for your site, I just started cataloging my live Clash shows and will be checking in a lot...Steve, Stephen J Gambino. Fearrington Village NC
Joe Wood - facebook - It was moved from the Tower in Upper Darby, Pa to a smaller venue, the Walnut St Theater in Philly.
Dennis McHugh - Show got moved to the Walnut Street Theatre. Johnny Thunders and Wayne Kramer played the Hot Club that nite the Clash headed over after there set. Walnut Street Theatre is the oldest theater in the states.
Original Tower Theatre poster
Cynthia Ross (B-Girls)
Celebrating 40 Years since the release of London... | Facebook
Cynthia Ross - "Celebrating 40 Years since the release of London Calling in The UK. It was released a few months later in North America.
Here’s a flyer from September 25th 1979 when The ‘B’ Girls played The St. Denis Theatre in Montreal with The Clash, Barry Myers + The Undertones on the Take The Fifth Tour.
We went on to play O’Keefe Centre in Toronto and Detroit with this lineup before playing New York, New Jersey, Boston and Philadelphia with The Clash, Lee Dorsey and Mikey Dread in early 1980. The Clash were performing ‘London Calling’ on these dates.
The second photo is from this tour and relays The ‘B’ Girls ever present sense of humor and FUN! “Up Yer Kilt!” "
Enlarge poster (sold at auction)
B-Girls
Rare flyer from the clash show at the Walnut Street theater in Philadelphia, September 1979
Passes and tickets
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Original Ticket kindly shared by Dennis McHugh
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Extensive archive of articles, magazines and other from the 16 Tons tour dates in the US, March-April 1980
Archive - Posters, Flyers - Snippets - UK Articles - US Articles - Fanzines - Photos - Video and audio
Walnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia
The Walnut Street Theatre is the oldest theatre in America opening in 1809 and still very much in business today. (see pics). The band would have had a kick about playing there as no doubt they were told that they would be performing on a stage that a host of famous actors had graced including Edward G Robinson, Marlon Brando, the Marx Brothers and even Houdini.
A very enthusiastic Philadelphia audience
Saturday night and Little Richard singing Rip It Up is playing as The Clash hit the stage and proceed to do just that to the very enthusiastic Philadelphia audience. The audiences on a number of the gigs on this tour did not know how to react to The Clash, staying in their seats, a cause of frustration to the band. But in Philadelphia the audience roar their approval after each song, Joe tells them between songs that they're ‘brilliant'. Ray Lowry (link) said the audience stood and pounded their hands together for so long that Joe had to come out after the encore to say that they were too tired from travelling to play anymore. He stood in the front and said it was a terrific show.
The performance is very strong, the band though tired responding to the audience, but the recording cannot do it justice. The enthusiasm of the audience to an explosive Safe European Home is such that Joe breaks from the norm of greeting the audience after the third song; "..are you sure you can hear it, even up there (in the balcony)".
Mick's use of the dreaded effects boxes are very much in evidence throughout, for example on London Calling taking all the piss out of the intro. As the song ends Joe says while he picks out the tune "let me tell you about all the phoney Beatle mania that's bitten the dust along with the chord changes to Pressure Drop that have escaped us."
On English Civil War (there's an edit before the start) the audience clap along to Mick's strumming on the acoustic and Joe shouts "speed up" midway and the tempo speeds up. This ‘folk' rendition of the song is a highlight of the concert as it was of the tour as a whole.
Before Stay Free (Mickey Gallagher plays unannounced) Joe addresses the audience memorably, "Hang on Topper, shut up a minute. You lot down here are brilliant, you really are brilliant, you understand that the more you give a group the more the group can give back.[crowd roar approval] We all wanna get off here you know not just you and me but him and him and him,[pointing at the band] we all wanna get off, so I'd just like to talk to you people up there in the balcony, you tell me if you think it stinks or what, shout boo if you don't like it, [a solitary boo!], just remember you sit there taking away my soul and I'll get you later!" Mick is presumably playing the old hollow electric guitar as at the Palladium the night before on Stay Free as you can hardly hear it.
Clampdown is dedicated "to all you eggheads" in the balcony. Following encouragement from Joe the crowd scream with him before Police & Thieves come crashing in, and at its end they give their longest roar of approval before the always-superb Capital Radio shreds them to pieces.
It's the usual charge then through to the 3 song encore which left the audience screaming for more. By the evidence of Philadelphia many Americans were indeed connecting to The Clash. As Johnny Green has said this was the tour when it felt like The Clash were really starting to take off in the USA.
Loud, incomprehensible, punk, it's Clash
By Edgar Koshatka, Special to The [Philadelphia] Inquirer
It was apparent after one or two minutes into Saturday evening's "Clash" show at the Walnut Street Theater that the "punk" group's live sound bore little similarity to the rather polished presentations on their two albums. The band's volume was of such stupendous proportions for the tiny hall that nary a lyric was understandable.
But the band packs an undeniable energy that thoroughly mesmerizes its non-too-large Philadelphia follow ing, and the magnetic exchange in communication between the four some and their audience is undoubtably at least as interesting to the psychologist as it is to the lay observer.
The group, considered by many to be the prime exponent of the British new wave school, has something mysterious and potent to offer its fans. Exactly what it is can undoubtedly be found somewhere among primitive musical thrashings, teenage rebellion, the hype of the music industry and vague political sentiments. But there is something in it that has little to do with musical aesthetics and cannot be judged by the usual yardsticks.
The pop music movement that the group represents began in Britain, where the economic and social conditions make punk rock a bit more understandable. Translating the phenomenon to American audiences has been something else altogether. however. The fact that the Clash show was moved from the considerably larger Tower Theater to the relatively diminutive Walnut is hardly a sign of spreading punk mania.
But the tunes, at least on record, have a certain brash and strident consciousness about them, as indicated by titles such as "I'm So Bored with the USA," "London's Burning, "I Fought the Law," "Police and Thieves" and "Jail Guitar Doors." Live, one can do little other than pray for the eardrums (the decibel level measured at the Walnut during the band's sound-check was reportedly in the 130 decibel range) and marvel at the standing-room-only audience's visceral response.
The call for mass hysteria may grate on the intellect, and the revolutionary message may be more of a paper-tiger pose than a manifesto of any credibility. But it obviously keeps both the musicians and the audience sweating and satisfied.
Listen to the audio of The Clash’s 1979 show at the Walnut Street Theatre
Listen to the audio of The Clash's 1979 show at the Walnut Street Theatre - The Key
September 22nd, 2017 | 1:57PM | By Erin Blewett
English punk rock icons The Clash rolled through Philadelphia on this day in 1979 for a show at Walnut Street Theatre. They were only a few months away from releasing the critically acclaimed London Calling, the record that boasts the legendary photo on the album cover of Paul Simonon smashing his bass guitar. This photo has been called one of the greatest in rock and roll history and is almost universally recognized.
The Clash (at least in my opinion) are one of the greatest punk-rock bands to ever exist.
Unfortunately, their run was cut short to a single decade. But they left a permanent and lasting impression on both the worlds of punk and rock and roll. The setlist for the show at Walnut Street Theatre adhered primarily to the tracklist of their sophomore record Give ‘Em Enough Rope, but included a few tracks off the forthcoming London Calling like “The Guns of Brixton” and “Koka Kola.”
The Clash are famous for pioneering the incorporation of radical politics into punk music, lead singer Joe Strummer was a committed socialist and didn’t care who knew it. They differed from other punk bands from the time in the sense that their rebellion was directed at unfair politics and/or any other inequalities they felt needed to be publicly addressed. Their anger was justified, it did not stem from empty discontentment nor did it ever evolve into that. They were a band with a message, one that they made sure was heard loud and clear worldwide.
For those of you fortunate folks who attended this show – we would be very appreciative if you would allow us to live vicariously through your experience, so if you’ve got anything to say post it in the comments section. For curiosity or nostalgia’s sake, check out the audio from the show below.
NME, Ray Lowry,
Part 2, BROTHEL CREEPERS OVER AMERICA OR SUEDES OVER THE STATES, RESCUE OPERATION
The Clash are in Chicago where the streets can be intimidating if you're a goddam wimp, English white boy like me. Battered, old pimp mobiles glide around like wounded animals and the taxi style resembles seventeen size two hundred with a girder Dr. Martens for a fender. Slapped MADE IN HONG KONG style and paint scheme complete with tinted windows and driver, the false start of Monterey.
AND ON TO CHICAGO
Where I hide behind a double-locked door from the violence and intimidation which is room service emptying the ashtrays. A body of steel bridges roughly banged together from scrap metal and excess over lengths of junk. Haphazardly, rows of sewage and worse delivered The Clash to their first Chicago gig. The Aragon Ballroom is the American ranch with the Albert Hall setting it down in Blackpool this week and calling in the hordes. And love the Cloggies! The Undertones and Bo Diddley stoked up the rampant insanity and by the time The Clash darkened the stage, beat-up amplifiers...
CHICAGO CALLING
Kicked into things. Minneapolis where it rains a fair amount. Undertones and David Johannson supported and it became clear Americans do still care about Rock Music. The Brits finally, and though it's bad news for English isolation, The Clash got lost over here. Fuckers like me can example every bit as much as the horrendous alternatives doing the rounds and the impracticability of the rock and roll population. Common sense says that they have to get out here periodically to stamp their authority on the Cowboys.
Had finished their set and the audience melted down into a heap of steaming insides and thrashing around the theatre. Songs like The Right Profile, Guns of Brixton, Revolution Rock infiltrated into the older material and made for a great Clash set. This band is still rock and roll, they're setting the standards and are still so nasty. Any of the popular English criticisms of them pale against their admirable achievements. GOT TO MOVE NOW - NEXT WEEK THE MEANING OF LIFE, to be continued...
This corrected text appears to be a review or personal account of The Clash's performance at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago on September 14, 1979
Part 3, The shape I'm in
6th October, 1979 - New Musical Express, By Ray Lowry
One-off, Johnny Hestivs was blasted before the Clash came out and shredded the New York Palladium second-night audience with magnificent rock and roll. Opinions vary as to which shows stand out, but every time I’ve sat down in the audience to witness the Clash, it’s clear they are shouldering the weight of rock and roll for the rest of the world. They are doing it so well on so many levels that predecessors and contemporaries seem like slobs and jerks in comparison.
But on with the tour. From Boston to New York on a bus called "Arpeggia," fueled by great feeds like they used to make. The New York audiences were expensive and demanding, but after the Undertones and Sam & Dave got them boiling, they went outrageous for the Clash, shouting and applauding like mad.
After New York, I became embroiled in the ongoing saga of the new backdrops. This involved spending most of September 29 hunting for a 40-foot piece of sackcloth to replace the previous one. It was a fruitless mission, ending in frustration as I could only find a small boxy substitute. For all I know, the sackcloth has since been chopped into small pieces and hurled around as relics.
THE BIG CRAB APPLE
Meanwhile, after a brief stopover in Philadelphia, where fans clapped their hands together for so long that encores were fired off like cannonballs, Joe Strummer had to come out after the set to explain that they couldn’t play any more. The next day was rough—mostly spent nursing hangovers, occasionally crying into my hands while shoveling periodic quantities of water and pain pills into my system.
NEOVASTERY AND THE SOILED PILLOWS TOUR
Philadelphia left its mark, but New York was something else entirely. The Clash delivered electrifying performances at the Palladium, weaving new material like "The Right Profile," "Guns of Brixton," and "Revolution Rock" seamlessly into their older catalog. The result was a fresh yet familiar set that proved this band is still rock and roll royalty. They’re setting standards so high that any criticism from English detractors feels hollow compared to their admirable achievements.
Next week: The Meaning of Life. This corrected version organizes the text into coherent sections while maintaining its original tone and content. It highlights key moments from The Clash's 1979 U.S. tour, including their performances in New York and Philadelphia, as well as some behind-the-scenes struggles with logistics and exhaustion.
Part 4, HAVE YOU HEARD THE NEWS?
THERE'S GOOD ROCKING TONIGHT!!
13th October, 1979, Clash USA '79 By Ray Lowry
Atlanta, Georgia, October 1st
I forgot to mention Philadelphia's mutants—more disturbing-looking people than even Liverpool or Warrington can boast. People with noses in their ears and hands growing out of the sides of their heads, dripping. Heads like hairy sunsets over the paraffin pillows stuffed down. There’s a metal statue of these people ostentatiously displayed. All that was left behind on to Montreal and Toronto on September 26th. The Clash aspired to the level of England, and this meant a lot for this tour.
Although from Joe, the long-awaited stage at the end of the Centre in Toronto, their legs were like a handful of stones. Faces like jelly and flaming complexions like beds. Walking potatoes with holes where their heads should be, smeared all over them like a giant clothes peg.
The Clash bus clogged for two shows on the 25th. Canuck audiences visibly displayed enthusiasm, with the first serious gobbing after a touching request. Distance throat clearing invaded the set at O'Keefe, where about twenty or thirty seats died. That's New Pop.
THIS IS AN AMAZING TOUR
The Americans had "Give 'Em Enough Rope" as the first official album release (although The Clash is said to have sold in vast quantities as an import). An amended version of the first album has only recently been released, but the lights are going on over people's heads all over the place, and the political message has obviously been picked up by many of the punters who try to get their messages of goodwill through at the end of each show.
"What I saw in the band was a concentration of all the pain and outrage lodged in my gut." To many, of course, it's just a great rock and roll show. Guided by some infallible rock and roll tribal consciousness, The Clash are looking more than ever like the bastard offspring of Eddie Cochran out of Gene Vincent and a Harley Davidson.
It’s dumbfounding to see the most intelligent, positive rock and roll on earth at present being presented nightly by a band who look like the wild ones who haunted the troubled skies of the fifties. America is being reminded of how rock and roll looks, as well as how it’s never sounded before. A girl hesitantly unveiled two oil paintings of Mick and Paul in Monterey; she was face to face with different incarnations.
But there's much more going on here than that. American kids are being given the rude awakening that was so swiftly pooh-poohed by vested interests when it happened in England. After Canada, it's marathon drives again to Worcester, Massachusetts, and Maryland—more images of America being given the message: London's calling to faraway towns.
To the abandoned drive-ins and big Macs like sleeping dinosaurs in the fog at the side of the truck stop, to the gas attendant in yellow at the all-night doorway, to the uneasy sleep of cities, to the people.
Rolling Stone has just printed the album review that was needed here in 1977. This is the beginning of the end for many things.
NEXT WEEK: WAR WITH THE U.S.S.R. This version corrects spelling errors, punctuation issues, and improves overall readability while maintaining the original message's intent and style.
Pt2, Brothel Creepers over America, Enlarge 29th Sept
Pt3, The shape I'm in, Enlarge 6 October
Pt4, Have you heard the news?, Enlarge 13 October
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"Life Changer"
Brenda Siegelman - first show : Phila. Walnut St. Theatre , Sept . 1979. Philadelphia, then I went on to the Meriweather Post Pavilion in Maryland, Oct. 1979. Then on to Texas (Dallas , Austin & Lubbock) Oct 79, to California (LA & SF), then Portland, Seattle, Vancouver (Oct 79) and the Pacific NW. The whole Take the 5th tour.
I joined the 16 tons tour in Hastings Jan. 1980, and that was about a year , UK , US & Europe .. Bonds in 1981 , then the studio months. I left them in May 1982 - but went to Asbury Park NJ, summer 82 Philly ice rink & the NYC Pier. I went to one Clash II show.
Dennis McHugh - Life Changer being 19yo. Nothing was the same for me after this it was all I ever wanted. No band had a chance!
Joe Wood - Life changer. I was there with you. I was 14. The Undertones completely blew me away!
Hot Club afterwards
Brenda Siegelman - I sent a note backstage, with FOH engineer Steven Kades, telling them that Johnny Thunders & Gang War were playing at the Hot Club ( 21 & South Street) . My friend gave me a ride to the club, but didn't want to go.
There was a huge line outside, but the owner, David Caroll, was walking around the line, yelling, " if you got 6 bucks, you can get in ". I had 6 bucks & paid, but I also told him The Clash were headed over. He asked me to stand by the door with him & point them out. I did. Mick, Topper & Dee, Johnny G, Baker , Warren & Kosmo ...
Later, I learned that that Dave Thought I worked for the Clash, The Clash thought I worked for the club. Anyway, that's the night we became friends. The next day, a Sunday, was a day off before they headed to Canada. I showed them how to get around on the subways.. they had a very good day in Philly.
The Undertones opened, and the Walnut Street Theater never did another punk show again.
@JeffNeedle - YouTube - September 22, 1979. Ticket stub says $7.50. Hell of a show. It was relocated to the Walnut Street theater when they didn't sell enough tickets for the Tower (I think). So much for waiting in line overnight to get front row seats. After the show, we headed over to the Hot Club where Johnny Thunders was playing a set and met Mick Jones and Topper Headon there. Thanks for posting!
One of the best concerts I have ever seen
Joe Wood - facebook - That was my first concert. Excellent! The Undertones were amazing!! I was the youngest one there [22nd]
Luca Sartor - One of the best concerts I have ever seen
Brenda Siegelman - Philadelphia . 1979 . My first Clash show
I worked for the promoter of that show, Steven Star
@douggertner7238 - YouTube - I worked for the promoter of that show, Steven Star, loading in and out The Clash and opener Undertones. Was glad to be on stage for most of the set as they were bouncing 125 dB off the back wall of the oldest theater in continuous operation in the New World.
I remember Safe European was so loud it sounded like the chords were exploding
@goodboysic - YouTube - I also was at that show, all but 15 years of age. one of those golden moments in life... I remember Safe European was so loud it sounded like the chords were exploding. After the show we hung out by the stage and eventually Joe came out and apologized (!?) to us...he said "we feel we played real shitty for you tonight" I remember having no idea what he was talking about...i was still in a sort of shell shocked ecstasy.
@woodpress1 - YouTube - I was there!! It was about this loud too. Consider that The Walnut Street theater was built in 1811 I am amazed that the volume didn't bring down the roof. This show was the day before the famous London Calling cover shot was taken at the NY Palladium. Also I remember them introducing Paul up to the mic to sing Guns of Brixton. And of course, The Undertones were f'ing amazing!!
like so many people, The Clash changed me
@loudenkliehr3633 - YouTube - One of my favorite years in my life. The point of no return came at the snare shot at the opening of "Safe European Home" from the only Clash album available, and surprisingly so, where I was living at the time. Come 1979, I saw the Clash's first American show in Berkeley (Costello four days later in the same venue) and twice more that year in Monterey CA and S.F. Saw Parker twice, the Jam, plus so many local bands. But it was and has been since then, these here Clash City Rockers that, like so many people, changed me. Miss you, Joe. And long live the Clash.
My brother caught one of Toppers drumsticks
WXPN - WXPN | Facebook - 40 years ago today, The Clash played the Walnut Street Theatre in Philadelphia. Look back on that show and listen to archival audio at The Key. Were you there?
Joe Buchler - WXPN | Facebook - After reading this post I drove past the Walnut St. Theatre last night at 7:30pm. I remember standing on that sidewalk with the rest of the kids talking about how long we’ve all waited to see them live!!! Wow, it was surreal...40 years to the hour at the same spot!!
I was there with my brother. The Undertones opened the show. We were all so pumped to see the Clash for the first time in Philadelphia! My brother caught one of Toppers drumsticks. It was a fabulous night...was it really 40 years ago?!?!?
Bjbuchler - Facebook - Great great concert. Caught a drum stick. Strummer thought they played shitty!?!?
Thomas Hood - Joe Buchler - frigging undertones were so loud. Dude , we are so lucky and smart to go to that show. I tell peeps today and they are quite envious. Went with my older friend, i was 12, he 16 and drove. Changed my whole outlook and musical taste for the better. Unfortunately, my buddy died a few years later. OD. Heroin. A route I chose to avoid. Strummer influenced me on that choice. Too bad Topper couldn't. one of the best drummers ever.
Joe Buchler - Thomas Hood - in 1984, by chance I met Topper on the train station leaving Dover to catch the hovercraft for France. I was backpacking thru Europe. I asked him what he was doing now and he told me that he, Pete Farndon, and a couple others (who I don’t remember now) were about to start a new band but Pete had overdosed and died. I expressed how sad it was that pete had gotten caught up in that. I did not know at that time that Topper also had a drug problem. I wished him luck and off I went.
Met the band in hotel b4 show
Robert John Burczy - i was there
Thomas Hood - I was there. Met the band in hotel b4 show. I was 12 years old, lied to my Mom telling her my friend and I were going to Star Trek convention. The concert changed my life.
Blackmarketclash | Leave a Comment
22.09.79 The Clash play in Philadelphia at the Walnut Street Theatre. Jeff Rusnak
NME, Ray Lowry
The Clash: Six pages of original Ray Lowry US tour diary artwork for the 'New Musical Express',
September-October 1979, pen and ink with some collage, drawings and text, full of Lowry's wry comments on events, including: Meet the Clash at the Second Annual 'Tribal Stomp' at Monterey Fairgrounds. Saturday September 8th 1979 on the very same stage Jimi Hendrix abused with his little tin of lighter fuel all those years ago.
Ahh history, Ahh bullshit.
What had happened was that at the end of the Hendrix/Otis Festival the gates were padlocked, barbed wire was strung around the arena and armed police refused to let anyone enter or leave until yesterday - the first concert of the Clash 1979 Tour Of The Americas.
Well, naturally a lot of those inside had died, many had gone insane, thinking it was still 1967, and the really clever ones had gravitated to the backstage area where they humped masses of speaker cabinets around or listlessly pushed drum risers from one side of the stage to the other.
The musicians had all escaped in private helicopters but the more impressionable members of the audience carried on applauding and shouting ''Rart On!'' or ''Oh Burother!''at any onstage activity.
After yesterday's unlocking the first survivor to make contact with those from outside was the legendary Wavy Gravy. Still at his zingy best after so many years, he stumbled around dressed in a Santa Claus outfit and demanded the answer to the always pertinent question ''What does Diddy Wah Diddy mean?'' What a cat, huh?
When the Clash arrived to play to the dazed survivors the more lively ones gathered round to marvel at their bizarre dress and photograph these outrageous English guys hairstyles..., one sheet in two sections, the largest 10½ x 13 inches (26.5x33cm)
Footnotes: This collection was won by the vendor in a competition run by the NME (New Musical Express Newspaper).
Ray Lowry (1944-2008) was a satirist, illustrator and cartoonist. His work appeared in publications such as The Guardian, Private Eye, Punch and the New Musical Express, for whom he drew a weekly cartoon strip entitled 'Only Rock 'n' Roll'.
He had no formal art education but became known as a cartoonist in the 1970s, having contributed to the late 1960s' underground magazines, Oz and International Times. As a fan of 1950s' rock 'n' roll he was drawn to the raw energy expressed by the punk movement and attended the Sex Pistols' gig at The Electric Circus in Manchester in December 1976. There he met The Clash, with whom he became friends. He was invited to accompany them on their US tour in 1979, providing a humourous diary of the tour for the NME. It was during the tour that Pennie Smith took the now-iconic photograph of Paul Simonon smashing his bass guitar on stage in New York, the image which was incorporated into Lowry's cover design for the 'London Calling' album.
Part 1, Meet the Clash
That's Family Dog meet at the second annual 'Tribal Stomp' at Monterey Fairgrounds Saturday 8th September 1979 on the very stage Jimi Hendrix abused with his little tin of lighter fuel all those years ago. Ahh history, anh bullshit. What had happened was that at the end of the Hendrix Otis festival the gates were padlocked, barbed wire strung around the arena and armed police refused to let anyone enter or leave until yesterday, the first concert of the Clash 1979 tour of the Americas. Well, naturally a lot of those inside had died, many had gone insane, thinking it was still 1967, and the really clever ones had gravitated to the backstage area where they humped masses of speaker cabinets around or listlessly pushed drum risers from one side of the stage to the other. The musicians had all escaped in private helicopters while impressionable members of the audience carried on applauding and shouting "Far out!" or "Oh brother!" at any onstage activity.
After yesterday's unlocking, the first survivor to make contact with those from outside was Wavy Gravy. Still at his zingy best after so many years in his pert Santa Claus outfit, he demanded the answer to the always pertinent question "What does diddy wah diddy mean?" We lively ones gathered as the Clash arrived to play to the dazed survivors. The more alert peered round to marvel at their bizarre dress and photograph these outrageous English guys' hairstyles.
Well catch these yeehaw! Guys huh? And after this highpoint of cultural exchange, no nation speaking with tongue unto nation, the dozen or so stretcher cases were laid out in front of the stage and, apart from Joe Ely's set, were soothed rather than inspired to anything strenuous. Despite constant reassurances that the arena would fill up, the Clash played to an audience size that would have had Hitler thinking twice about invading high garnet, never mind England, if he'd drawn as well at Nuremberg. Conspicuous by their absence they were. Still, they did their best to goddamwell bop when the Clash came out. "This is punk rock, huh? Well lemme jus show these boys what us American punk rockers can do. Yessurr. Out my way boy." Unfortunately, the time out which belongs he's got to work out his complicated reaction, your punk rockers sorted into another number and all over again.
When these people go ape they don't pogo but pull out a gun and wipeout their neighbors. The rebel yell and Eddie Cochran is in the mists of antiquity and rock roll was rather than inspired. The band were competent, rather buhow's going down the road apiece. The liaison between band and promoters, incidentally, was founder of American R.A.R., and runs a politico rock magazine along the lines of Temporary Hoarding. Unfortunately, he undermines the credibility of his good works by acting the complete acid casualty. Watch out for that brown acid, man. Next week - Minneapolis with forked 'm so bored with the U.S.A. Me too, brother shoot. And other misspelt American towns in the night, the postcards home, the noises (coming, honest) and what's behind the fear and loathing behind the who the hell are you? Behind the 'raht narce tuh meet yuh'? Meanwhile concert, bye from the Wowtorstomp Promoter
Clash - Part of the Clash crew t-shirt design.
Part 2, The Shape I'm in
6th October, 1979 - New Musical Express, By Ray Lowry
One-off, Johnny Hestivs was blasted before the Clash came out and shredded the New York Palladium second-night audience with magnificent rock and roll. Opinions vary as to which shows stand out, but every time I’ve sat down in the audience to witness the Clash, it’s clear they are shouldering the weight of rock and roll for the rest of the world. They are doing it so well on so many levels that predecessors and contemporaries seem like slobs and jerks in comparison.
But on with the tour. From Boston to New York on a bus called "Arpeggia," fueled by great feeds like they used to make. The New York audiences were expensive and demanding, but after the Undertones and Sam & Dave got them boiling, they went outrageous for the Clash, shouting and applauding like mad.
After New York, I became embroiled in the ongoing saga of the new backdrops. This involved spending most of September 29 hunting for a 40-foot piece of sackcloth to replace the previous one. It was a fruitless mission, ending in frustration as I could only find a small boxy substitute. For all I know, the sackcloth has since been chopped into small pieces and hurled around as relics.
THE BIG CRAB APPLE
Meanwhile, after a brief stopover in Philadelphia, where fans clapped their hands together for so long that encores were fired off like cannonballs, Joe Strummer had to come out after the set to explain that they couldn’t play any more. The next day was rough—mostly spent nursing hangovers, occasionally crying into my hands while shoveling periodic quantities of water and pain pills into my system.
NEOVASTERY AND THE SOILED PILLOWS TOUR
Philadelphia left its mark, but New York was something else entirely. The Clash delivered electrifying performances at the Palladium, weaving new material like "The Right Profile," "Guns of Brixton," and "Revolution Rock" seamlessly into their older catalog. The result was a fresh yet familiar set that proved this band is still rock and roll royalty. They’re setting standards so high that any criticism from English detractors feels hollow compared to their admirable achievements.
Next week: The Meaning of Life. This corrected version organizes the text into coherent sections while maintaining its original tone and content. It highlights key moments from The Clash's 1979 U.S. tour, including their performances in New York and Philadelphia, as well as some behind-the-scenes struggles with logistics and exhaustion.
Part 3, Have you heard the news?
There's good rocking tonight!!
13th October, 1979, Clash USA '79 By Ray Lowry
Atlanta, Georgia, October 1st
I forgot to mention Philadelphia's mutants—more disturbing-looking people than even Liverpool or Warrington can boast. People with noses in their ears and hands growing out of the sides of their heads, dripping. Heads like hairy sunsets over the paraffin pillows stuffed down. There’s a metal statue of these people ostentatiously displayed. All that was left behind on to Montreal and Toronto on September 26th. The Clash aspired to the level of England, and this meant a lot for this tour.
Although from Joe, the long-awaited stage at the end of the Centre in Toronto, their legs were like a handful of stones. Faces like jelly and flaming complexions like beds. Walking potatoes with holes where their heads should be, smeared all over them like a giant clothes peg.
The Clash bus clogged for two shows on the 25th. Canuck audiences visibly displayed enthusiasm, with the first serious gobbing after a touching request. Distance throat clearing invaded the set at O'Keefe, where about twenty or thirty seats died. That's New Pop.
THIS IS AN AMAZING TOUR
The Americans had "Give 'Em Enough Rope" as the first official album release (although The Clash is said to have sold in vast quantities as an import). An amended version of the first album has only recently been released, but the lights are going on over people's heads all over the place, and the political message has obviously been picked up by many of the punters who try to get their messages of goodwill through at the end of each show.
"What I saw in the band was a concentration of all the pain and outrage lodged in my gut." To many, of course, it's just a great rock and roll show. Guided by some infallible rock and roll tribal consciousness, The Clash are looking more than ever like the bastard offspring of Eddie Cochran out of Gene Vincent and a Harley Davidson.
It’s dumbfounding to see the most intelligent, positive rock and roll on earth at present being presented nightly by a band who look like the wild ones who haunted the troubled skies of the fifties. America is being reminded of how rock and roll looks, as well as how it’s never sounded before. A girl hesitantly unveiled two oil paintings of Mick and Paul in Monterey; she was face to face with different incarnations.
But there's much more going on here than that. American kids are being given the rude awakening that was so swiftly pooh-poohed by vested interests when it happened in England. After Canada, it's marathon drives again to Worcester, Massachusetts, and Maryland—more images of America being given the message: London's calling to faraway towns.
To the abandoned drive-ins and big Macs like sleeping dinosaurs in the fog at the side of the truck stop, to the gas attendant in yellow at the all-night doorway, to the uneasy sleep of cities, to the people.
Rolling Stone has just printed the album review that was needed here in 1977. This is the beginning of the end for many things.
NEXT WEEK: WAR WITH THE U.S.S.R. This version corrects spelling errors, punctuation issues, and improves overall readability while maintaining the original message's intent and style.
Part 4, Brothel creepers over America or suedes over the States, rescue operation
The Clash are in Chicago where the streets can be intimidating if you're a goddam wimp, English white boy like me. Battered, old pimp mobiles glide around like wounded animals and the taxi style resembles seventeen size two hundred with a girder Dr. Martens for a fender. Slapped MADE IN HONG KONG style and paint scheme complete with tinted windows and driver, the false start of Monterey.
AND ON TO CHICAGO
Where I hide behind a double-locked door from the violence and intimidation which is room service emptying the ashtrays. A body of steel bridges roughly banged together from scrap metal and excess over lengths of junk. Haphazardly, rows of sewage and worse delivered The Clash to their first Chicago gig. The Aragon Ballroom is the American ranch with the Albert Hall setting it down in Blackpool this week and calling in the hordes. And love the Cloggies! The Undertones and Bo Diddley stoked up the rampant insanity and by the time The Clash darkened the stage, beat-up amplifiers...
CHICAGO CALLING
Kicked into things. Minneapolis where it rains a fair amount. Undertones and David Johannson supported and it became clear Americans do still care about Rock Music. The Brits finally, and though it's bad news for English isolation, The Clash got lost over here. Fuckers like me can example every bit as much as the horrendous alternatives doing the rounds and the impracticability of the rock and roll population. Common sense says that they have to get out here periodically to stamp their authority on the Cowboys.
Had finished their set and the audience melted down into a heap of steaming insides and thrashing around the theatre. Songs like The Right Profile, Guns of Brixton, Revolution Rock infiltrated into the older material and made for a great Clash set. This band is still rock and roll, they're setting the standards and are still so nasty. Any of the popular English criticisms of them pale against their admirable achievements. GOT TO MOVE NOW - NEXT WEEK THE MEANING OF LIFE, to be continued...
This corrected text appears to be a review or personal account of The Clash's performance at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago on September 14, 1979
Pt 5 Great American Greases
What am I doing here? I got on this tour because I wanted to do some paintings about rock and roll. About what shows are like. The light and the lights, the audiences, the performers from the audience point of view, the stage. I had an idea that I could convey something that the camera and the kind of heroic, icon-like images that most rock and roll paintings have been concerned with, perhaps couldn't. That was a month and a continent ago and I've had plenty of second thoughts along the way. Simply being out of England at a time when things are getting tougher is obviously guilt-inducing. I've stood among American audiences or at the side of the stage on many nights through this tour wondering what the hell I was doing here and why the Clash were away from England as another winter and all that entails, closes in. I'm massively compromised of course, but it's never going to be 1977 again, there's such a transparent desire by the band that they galvanize the audiences out here into doing something for themselves, (what they've always been striving for in England) and the fact is that if there's anything honest and worth caring about in contemporary music, it's still best embodied in this band. And paintings. Do paintings matter at all? At the moment, I don't know.
SINCE ATLANTA, Georgia, the band have played five shows in seven nights through Texas to Los Angeles taking in the Armadillo World Headquarters in Austin (one of the few American towns I've seen that I could imagine living in) Dallas and its schoolbook Depository, horrible Houston and Lubbock with Buddy Hollymania. Joe Ely has been supporting again, through Texas. It's supposed to be heresy to say so but he could be a great rocker if he got a tight band instead of the usual pedal-steel, accordion, kitchen sink and all mod cons arrangement that he has at present. After the Austin show on the 4th, he did a spot of jamming with a local band plus one M. Jones and one N. Headon for one number (Be-Bop-A-Lula) running through a bunch of straight old rockers like That's Alright, Whole Lotta Shakin' etc., in a local boozebar. Good stuff which I'd like to see him do with his own band. The Clash show in The Armadillo was a good one - the club has a nice atmosphere and I nicked a Coors beer jug. By Houston, on the fifth, I was walking in my sleep and I vaguely remember the show. Pennie Smith flew back to England with vast numbers of Clash photographs. It's a great pity that only a small percentage can be used by the weekly music press.
DALLAS, on the sixth, was another big city, another small gig, but a well-won audience and a look at the spot where John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The book depository is far closer to the point where the bullets hit the Presidential limousine than films of the event ever indicate and standing on the road in bright sunlight it's hard to believe that people wouldn't have spotted Oswald and any accomplices and nabbed them within minutes. A very surprising place and oddly disturbing to see traffic trundling along the short stretch of road and into the underpass as though nothing special had ever happened there.
What happened in Lubbock on the seventh, was that after the show at the Rox nearly everyone got wasted in their chosen fashion and made a middle of the night visit to Buddy Holly's gravestone. This was my great error of the tour because I was in such a zombie-like state that I went to sleep right after the show and missed, what to me, should have been an essential trip. Dreadful time to get knackered but I'm completely well again now and rode the famed Route 66 to Los Angeles on the famous Arpeggio rock and roll bus. The band flew it. What a bunch of softies! NEXT WEEK: I WALK HOME
P.S. I believe they're cramming their itches into smaller spaces. Write to complain now.
I GROW MY FINGERNAILS LONG SO THEY CLICK WHEN I PLAY WHITE RIOT! JOE ELY COWBOY PUNK
Pt 6 Flight Home
Clash USA '79 Final Curtain
The final scene was farce with flight-home time nearer & no plane tickets, no luggage nobody ready, no idea what was happening. An hour or so before flight time attempts at organization were abandoned in favour of personal salvation and a dash to the plane. The band didn't make it. What does this mean?
My last dispatch was suppressed by the authorities but chronicled Clash shows in Austin Texas on the 4th October. Clash quadruped Dallas on the 5th, President Killers with Houston the world! And Lubbock on the 7th as Hollymania sweeps Clash as all this was, I've only space here to write tour from Lubbock, the band flew, and the alcoholics bussed (via Route 66) to Los Angeles and the wildest show of the whole tour. The Hollywood Palladium audience looked different - as mean and nasty and posy looking as an English audience and were determined to go all over anything onstage that wasn't the Clash and to hurl a good bit on them as well. Joe Ely (a constant presence on this tour) and the (Rockabilly) Rebels played through non-stop abuse and spit and the Mi Ely band made them a dustbin of water which understandably made the front rows even more hostile to anything on the stage a lot of this was the ritual belligerence that audiences everywhere.
I keep my fingernails long so they click when I play White Riot.
Joe Ely Cowboy Punk
At the Armadillo World Headquarters trash armoured, burrowing Clash assassinate on the 6th arsehole of - Bullocks to Lubbock Bus! Interesting and informative of the last five dates of the think that they have to display, and the Clash came on to great cheers mass jumping up and down, surges on to the stage, fighting, cursing, spitting and stomping ass (obscure Americanism - see also Gittin' Down and Kickin' Ass). At the end of the set with Joe Ely, the Rebels, a few dozen of the audience one shoulderson liggers the stage plus a constant stream of bodies being hurled off into the pulsating mass, the hall looked like one of those big Cecil B. DeMille blowouts just before Samson comes out and pulls the roof down or Moses enters on a mountain top with a message from God for all the fornicating sinners down below. Good show. San Francisco (13 Oct), Seattle (15) and Vancouver, all tried but couldn't really match Los Angeles, San Francisco was a great show but the audience were a bit less boisterous than L.A. Don't ask, Seattle, I didn't remember too much of it. Vancouver (16) a drink all night and was a quiet end to the tour with Joe Strummer again railing against passive audiences stealing his soul. The paradox here, of course, is that the reward for going over the top and showing ultimate enthusiasm by clambering on stage bundled off and out of (as the Lone Groover kind of was asking recently) is jumping up and down any intelligent response to music that aspires to deal with reality.
Questions, questions back home... and already sick of making plans for Nigel and the Seung at night and authoritarian violence near and so personal again, the soptimism and the naive hope that this optimisock and roll upsurge was actually going to change anything has gone, of course, but it's still issues cake return inward anoughnereto the pop hat the Clash ferest, or revile them that field of inte ferturn the government music failing to overturn the allash packed identomorrow we'd for fail if there le living the sole t aspires to lose roll a be anything more plescapism and they'd be andan blind es bluby something infinitely less worthy within thin weeks. I'd like to be back on the bus with the last rock 'n' roll band.
I've Heard of Elvis Presley, A Rebel I was sick beneath the Hollywood Tiggers Cans Prameri Sign - I vomited that other S of America Ca
By Ray Lowry
Pt 1 meet the Clash Enlarge 22 October
Pt2, Brothel Creepers over America, Enlarge 29th Sept
Pt3, The shape I'm in, Enlarge 6 October
Pt4, Have you heard the news?, Enlarge 13 October
Pt 5 Great American Greases Enlarge 20 October
Pt 6 Flight Home Enlarge 27 October
Open photos in full in new window
courtesy of Jeff Rusnak
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Peter Rusnak?
Jeff Rusnak - facebook - Again, this was my first Clash show - Photo by my brother Pete, eternal thanks for showing me the way. Walnut Street Theatre Philadelphia PA USA - Saturday 22 September 1979. (Photo: Brother Pete.)
Below image: Peter Rusnak
Philly Chris Joseph
Chris Joseph - Listened to that every morning driving to HS my senior year. Then saw them in Philadelphia Fall 1979. Here’s a pix I took.
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