updated 25 December 2008 - punters comments added
updated 18 May 2010 - full tape review
updated June 2024 reveiw. comments
Sound 2 - 74min - unknown gen - tracks 20
Somebody Got Murdered
Sound quality
The only circulating recording is of unknown generation but it’s probably been copied several times at least. The master must be a very decent stereo-miked audience recording - can anyone provide an upgrade?
The sound deficiencies do not ruin though the enjoyment of the performance and the energy and atmosphere in the Convention Hall, packed with Clash fans comes through. Certainly not an essential Clash boot but one worth having nevertheless.
Vocals are clearest and Joe is in pumped up form throughout. Bass is blurred but there just. Guitar’s OK but drums ironically as it’s Terry first gig of his return are the poorest so it’s hard to judge his performance.
Sound dips significantly after an edit in Bankrobber.
Clash begins American tour in Asbury Park
82 05 28 Asbury Park Press Fri (Asbury Preview)
Days after Topper's sacking
Looking back 17 odd years after the event, Joe's regret at his part in the sacking of Topper still hurt badly. "I don't think we played a good gig after Topper was fired" he said bitterly. When pressed he conceded there was maybe one good gig at Asbury Park! Many thousands of people who saw The Clash post Topper would no doubt disagree with Joe but thanks to recordings circulating from all 3 of the nights from Asbury Park (just days after Topper's sacking) we can compare our judgement with that of Strummerís!
The performance on the 29th is memorable, the band responding to a wildly enthusiastic audience of their East coast fans and perhaps it is this night Joe remembered as he was taken to hospital after it when a firecracker exploded on his leg (bringing the gig to a premature end). That would make the night, stick in his memory!
Listening to the recordings from the 3 nights though it would be nice to think that Joe remembered the gig of the 31st as it is an exceptional performance (particularly from him) and luckily is captured on an excellent master audience recording.
Up the hill backwards
Topper was fired at a band meeting the day after they returned from Lochem on Friday 21st May. Accounts differ as to whether Lochem was a final test and also whether the sacking was final or whether there was a way back in if he sorted himself out. For the press the reason given was “a difference of opinion over the political direction the band will be taking” Topper was said to be taking time out before deciding his future.
A day after the sacking Clash convert, Charles Shaar Murray was called in for an exclusive for the NME. See link Up The Hill Backwards. Joe kept the reasons for Topper’s departure vague saying it was Topper’s choice. Topper has said that until Joe later let it slip to a journalist the real reason for his sacking, he was not an intravenous drug user, but after that his addiction nosed dived out of control.
Joe explained the reasons for him going AWOL, or at least those reasons he was willing to give at the time. Mick’s response with a fixed stare, “Well I felt that anything Joe does is all right” The plan was to continue as a trio with guest drummers as required. Joe; “..we're going to go over to New Jersey and start a four-and-a-half week American tour, and then we're going to come back here and do the British tour that we should have done before - that's if we can find a drummer. After that we don't have any plans." Mick ; "After that, we all disappear!"
The Return of Mr Terry Chimes
Common sense would suggest that with US Tour commitments a few days away the rest of the band would not have sacked Topper without a replacement lined up, and this was Topper’s view. However this was The Clash (!) and Terry interviewed by Chris Salewicz (for the excellent Redemption Song) was adamant that he first heard of it when Bernie contacted him on 24th May, 5 days before the first Asbury gig. In the previous 5 years Terry had played with several bands including Generation X and been a session musician.
He met with Bernie, who was typically anything but straightforward and Terry said to give him a few hours to make a decision. Phoning Mick to help him make the decision he was told Bernie deals with business! Terry agreed to do the tour but as Mick anticipated he had none of their albums. Twenty five songs needed to be learnt in a few days and Paul was already in the States so rehearsals were with Joe on guitar and Mick on bass. Terry wrote down the drum parts on paper and had them stuck in front of him so he could look at them whilst playing!
Alex Michon
Bernie was in the process of opening an office for The Clash on West 26th Street and Broadway in NYC. Alex Michon was there to work on designs for a clothing business and with Paul developed new stage outfits with camouflage designs and Vietnam era military styling. These designs were years ahead of their time (today Gap flog camouflage trousers at inflated prices!) but at the time they were cutting edge indeed prior to the Asbury Park shows they were reportedly mistaken for British soldiers on the way to the Falklands War!
Joe in response to criticism of preoccupation with visual style reflected “I think you have to come up with some kind of glamour. You are stepping on stage after all, you are putting on a show…I don’t think we’d have got across to as many people if we’d just worn cable knit jumpers and baggy corduroy librarian trousers”
Baker had quit in solidarity with Topper so Ray Jordan was now one of the few remaining familiar faces among the Clash support staff.
A listen to the recordings of the three nights confirms Digby Cleaver’s (Mick’s guitar tech.) view “We were winging it, seriously winging it. The fact that the others were so good covered up for the fact that Terry wasn’t particularly let’s say anyone who’d seen us with Topper would notice the difference”
Terry’s return though appears to have re-galvanised the band as the performances are all very committed. They had to rally together to carry Terry through these first shows and perhaps a return to the first album line up helped too. The animosities and disagreements would soon return but at Asbury Park the band were reinvigorated.
We can only wonder what Terry’s thoughts were when he saw the Convention Hall audience and compared it to his last gig with the band at The Harlesden Coliseum in March 1977! A study of the set lists though debunks largely the myth that these first shows were heavily slanted to the first album to help Terry.
Thanks to Pat Richardson for supplying the 3 photos from the gig.
A comment on the support act ;’I went to some shows in Asbury Park and this awful group "Pulsalamma" was the opener. It was about 10 girls who blew into bottles and played washing boards while screeching. That's not entertainment’.
Clash begins Amercian tour in Asbury Park
82 05 28 Asbury Park Press Fri
Cover of Programme for Pulsalama
Cover of Programme for Pulsalama
(same artist that did New Jersey March 7 1980)
Venue: On The Boardwalk at Asbury Park, Convention Hall
Date: May 29, 30 and 31, 1982
Quality: No program; Cover art.
copyright Moyssi -
for further info and purchase got to http://www.moyssi.com/
Advert
Tickets
The Asbury Park Convention Hall, New Jersey
The Asbury Park Convention Hall is a 3,600-seat indoor exhibition center located on the boardwalk and on the beach in Asbury Park, New Jersey. The outside of the venue appears in the cable TV rushes from the 30th May video. Built between 1928 and 1930 it is used for sports, concerts and other special events. Adjacent to the Convention Hall is the Paramount Theatre; both are connected by a Grand Arcade. Both structures are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
This portion, which would be christened "Convention Hall", extended 215 feet over the beach and the waterline, and was supported by steel encased concrete pilings. Rock and roll has been a mainstay at Convention Hall since the 1950s.
On June 30, 1956, a concert by Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers at the Hall ended prematurely when a fistfight in the audience erupted into a full scale riot. Three people were stabbed and then-Mayor Roland J. Hines threatened a city-wide ban on rock and roll performances. In the mid-1960s, promoter Moe Septee started booking rock acts at Convention Hall, including some bands who would go on to achieve legendary status.
Between 1965 and 1975, Septee booked The Beach Boys, James Brown, The Byrds, Ray Charles, The Dave Clark Five, The Doors, The J. Geils Band, Herman’s Hermits, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, The Temptations, Pink Floyd, and The Who, among many others, including the Rolling Stones; who Joe jokes about on the 30th. It has of course a long connection with Bruce Springsteen.Concerts at Convention Hall continued even after Septee's retirement up to the present day.
credit to Jeff Rusnak
“London Calling to the faraway towns”
Recording begins as the intro music fades and Strummer announces “London Calling to the faraway towns” Despite their 5 days of practice with Terry, there are new variations in the arrangements to a number of songs including the intro to London Calling. Joe is in strong voice and focussed adding an edge to the performances tonight, which cover over the understandably wobbly nature of Terry’s contribution.
Second song unusually is Police & Thieves. The band are energised and committed, the song sounds fresh and Mick’s guitar work is strong. Again there’s the new “drop out” dub mid section but it’s not an extended instrumental as earlier at Lochem and Hong Kong. Paul’s plays a short bass solo section before the band come back in. Some tape drop-outs lose much of the left channel at the end of the song and Terry’s contribution sounds plodding and unimaginative.
“Good to see your faces again - would you please welcome on the drum kit Mr Terry Chimes” says Joe before Train in Vain; the audience clapping along. Next it’s the first live outing for Car Jamming. Early on you can hear a loud bang as a firecracker goes off, then a hush in the audience but the band carry on with Joe’s vocals delayed a few seconds before he comes in; now even more fired up! A later firecracker in the encores would burn Joe’s leg curtailing the show so he could get hospital treatment. It sounds raw and hard guitar dominated and a little rough but has plenty of energy and commitment.
“Career Opportunities the ones that never knock” Fast and hard; the band sound together and determined to make a success post Topper. “The following is a public service announcement - with guitar” Know Your Rights now has the Combat Rock intro and the reference to the aristocrat Lord Lucan, who disappeared after the murder of his maid (and no trace has ever been found!)
It’s a fine performance the lyrics refined and re-recorded for Glyn Johns an improvement over the original Rat Patrol and live versions; the song though again dissolves out abruptly without any proper ending.
Terry not surprisingly struggles most with the more improvisatory songs like Magnificent Seven (that Topper excelled with). It’s again very committed, a big improvement on Lochem the “guitar city” bridge again has a funky riff section from Mick, the band then pause, Terry gives two thumps then the band then build it up to the crescendo drum ending. Not bad though for 5 days practice!
Ghetto Defendant debuted at Lochem next followed by “Mick’s gonna begin” and the band launch into a fired up Clash City Rockers. Getting the vibe from the equally pumped up audience Joe quips “Well I think we’re reading for some music” and the band blast through Janie Jones.
After an edit which may have lost some songs the tape continues with Should I Stay Or Should I Go, - now as per the album version with Joe’s cod Spanish, whoops and cries; adding to the song which still here sounds fresh. The “round the back…” lyrics gone.
Joe apparently reading a note says; “Be quiet please I’m trying to concentrate! Lord, Lord it says here, I got the sickness blues so I must have done something wrong. This is from Larry Ross, you’re biggest fan. This is from Vince Taylor who hates our guts!” and the band tear into Brand New Cadillac. Mick adds new variations on the lead guitar lines, their music still changing not yet stagnating.
Terry’s drumming on Bankrobber is unimaginative and plodding but Joe’s urgent vocals and Mick’s guitar fills make up for it, the audience sing along. An edit loses
the last third of the song it restarts with sadly much poorer sound with Somebody Got Murdered. Tape not seated, twisted or similar, sound now flatter with distortion.
“OK we’re gonna try and rock the casbah!” First live Rock The Casbah is fast paced and Mick’s lead guitar sound is different from the album version. Mick was experimenting at Asbury with different guitars and effects with decidedly mixed results. Despite the level of under rehearsal the song sounds fresh, Joe’s really involved and Mick joins him on the choruses.
“Jacko, the light switch, Jacko!,yeah” and the band go into a slow leaden intro to Complete Control before Joe finally comes in adding his energy and the performance picks up, he adlibs (not clear) over Mick’s lead guitar over the ending. Clampdown up until now had always been a set highlight and a showcase for Topper’s drumming talents. Terry though slows it down and it lacks any drumming finesse; but to be fair he did only have 5 days to learn it! Mick does not help though and at the adlibbed Three Mile Island point he adds strange distorted guitar effects (underwater sounds!). Usually his guitar playing at this point adds to and complements Joe’s adlibs but not here. Joe’s adlibs are unclear but include “drinking vodka on Capitol Hill ..like a Swiss Cheese ..we ain’t got no ‘59 Chevy wheels falling off !” It almost breaks down at one point Terry unable to hold it together like Topper when the band improvise. “Let there be drums” orders Joe but lo there were none! Terry just thumps away; the realisation of their error in sacking Topper must have been very apparent at this point!
Very unusually the encores begin with Guns of Brixton, the tape running slow and Paul’s voice is distorted. I Fought The Law is also poor lacking any teeth; Topper had always given it the explosive crescendo intro but here Terry painfully never gets there!
An edit restarts with the intro to Straight To Hell, another firecracker goes off mid song but does not stop Joe but at the end of the song the band leave the stage. After a long pause and edit Kosmo announces “Hello, The firework .. hit Joe on the leg and took part of his leg away! So there won’t be anymore tonight, see you tomorrow!”
Radio interview with Joe Strummer at the after show at Asbury Park, New Jersey; May 1982
THE CLASH ON PAROLE | Facebook
I did my first interview with Joe Strummer at the after show at Asbury Park, New Jersey; May 1982.. This is a flyer for the radio station at the University of New Haven. I spent 6 months in New Haven and got friendly with some local d.j.'s who wanted to broadcast my interview.
Advert for Radio Interview
The Clash triumph in Jersey concert
82 06 07 The News Mon (Review Asbury 29)
Did you go? Comments, info welcome...
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Please email blackmarketclash
John Shipley
John Shipley I was there for all 3 shows also!! My car was in the shop so I rented one. I took 3 different friends on all 3 different nights. A 410 mile round-trip from Hanover, PA to Asbury Park, NJ each night. Arrived home each morning at 4 AM. A total of 1,230 miles to see the Greatest Band in All of the Land in ONE weekend! I was exhausted on the last trip home & almost fell asleep on the NJ Turnpike. Pulled over for about an hour's nap before I headed home. Wish I would have just went alone and stayed all 3 days in Asbury Park in hoping to catch a night or day out with The Clash. Gotta love my girlfriend at the time who let me do this when she wanted to spend that weekend with me. Days with her, CLASH By Night!
Someone threw a cherry bomb
KWNielsen - Thinking about #internationalClashday made me want to check out the set list from this show I attended.
I remember someone threw a cherry bomb or some other firework on stage. It landed at Mick Jones' feet and clearly scared the hell out of him. The band walked off stage, then reappeared briefly to let everyone know they would not play any longer.
Awful group "Pulsalamma" was the opener
I went to some shows in Asbury Park and this awful group "Pulsalamma" was the opener. It was about 10 girls who blew into bottles and played washing boards while screetching. That's not entertainment.
THIS show was great, and the crowed went nutty
The CLASH...Convention Hall, Asbury Park, Saturday, May 29, 1982....
My first time seeing the Clash WITHOUT Topper Headon. This show was only a few days after Topper was unceremoniously booted out of the band, so there were many different perspectives written about these shows, but I went into it with an open mind.
But seeing as Terry Chimes was in the band BEFORE Topper, I knew what to expect. Obviously two different drumming styles, but as far as I was concerned Terry held his own. He was no Topper, but he kicked some major ass. THIS show was great, and the crowed went nutty. The CLASH in those days owned NYC, and Jersey. Can't speak to the other two gigs at this venue, but for Hedy and I, this show was a winner...
T shirt in photo was bought at the venue.
After the gig, we couldn't get a bus back to the city because it was too late, so we had to take a bus to Newark and then catch a cab back to the city ($60). During the cab ride, while we were still in Newark the first red light that we stopped at, a group of kids who were hanging on the corner checked us out...and started to chuck empty bottles at the cab. Suffice to say the cabbie blew the light...and hauled ass. We eventually made it to the tunnel, and just as we got to the Manhattan side, something blew out under his hood...lots of smoke and fire, and we had to abandon his vehicle, and catch a SECOND cab back to the house. A great night!
Drew Testa I was there that weekend too. Were you at the show where someone threw a firecracker at Joe Strummer? Joe wasn’t too happy and ended the show early. Fortunately the show was almost over anyway.
James Pearson I was there. I stayed in Empress inn hotel. To my amazement so did the clash next morning i sat with joe and had breakfast with him in hotel. He actually asked me to hop on bus and go to Georgia for next gig. Sadly i couldnt. Still kickin myself for not going.
a great night!
The CLASH...Convention Hall, Asbury Park
Saturday, May 29, 1982....
My first time seeing the Clash WITHOUT Topper Headon. This show was only a few days after Topper was unceremoniously booted out of the band, so there were many different perspectives written about these shows, but I went into it with an open mind.
But seeing as Terry Chimes was in the band BEFORE Topper, I knew what to expect. Obviously two different drumming styles, but as far as I was concerned Terry held his own. He was no Topper, but he kicked some major ass. THIS show was great, and the crowed went nutty. The CLASH in those days owned NYC, and Jersey. Can't speak to the other two gigs at this venue, but for Hedy and I, this show was a winner...
T shirt in photo was bought at the venue.
After the gig, we couldn't get a bus back to the city because it was too late, so we had to take a bus to Newark and then catch a cab back to the city ($60). During the cab ride, while we were still in Newark the first red light that we stopped at, a group of kids who were hanging on the corner checked us out...and started to chuck empty bottles at the cab. Suffice to say the cabbie blew the light...and hauled ass. We eventually made it to the tunnel, and just as we got to the Manhattan side, something blew out under his hood...lots of smoke and fire, and we had to abandon his vehicle, and catch a SECOND cab back to the house.
I stayed in Empress inn hotel. To my amazement so did The Clash!
I was there that weekend too. Were you at the show where someone threw a firecracker at Joe Strummer? Joe wasn’t too happy and ended the show early. Fortunately the show was almost over anyway.
I was there. I stayed in Empress inn hotel. To my amazement so did the clash next morning i sat with joe and had breakfast with him in hotel. He actually asked me to hop on bus and go to Georgia for next gig. Sadly i couldnt. Still kickin myself for not going
Coast to Coast Tour
Topper leaves
Alex Michon clothing
Asbury 29th
82 06 11 The Ottawa Citizen Fri
82 06 15 Philadelphia Daily News Tue (Asbury MIchon)
Advert
Kosmo, Topper, Asbury
82 05 29 The Windsor Star Sat (Topper Asbury kosmo)
Poster
WUSB 10TH ANNIVERSARY INTERVIEW:
DAVID DURST (MARCH 1987)
This is another in a series of interviews with WUSB people as part of the station's tenth anniversary, recorded in March of 1987. This unedited interview with WUSB's David Durst focuses on the "Business Digest" feature he used to do at the station and his current job as a commodities trader, while also sharing thoughts on Stony Brook. We reminisce about the time we saw The Clash in Asbury Park and did an interview with their manager Kosmo Vinyl (a recording of which people have been trying to track down for years).
Letter to the editor of the Columbia Daily Spectator re: Asbury Park concerts
Clash crashing at Asbury Park tomorrow night. Asbury Park 3 night preview
Lisa Robinson
Clash City Rotters
Trouble at Atlanta Gig (2nd June) following problems at Asbury Park
Combat City Rockers
Clash Chronicles On road to people
Folly of Sandinista, brief interview
Asbury Boardwalk photos
Strummer: Why I ran out on the Clash
NME - 29th May 1982
Cover only. Interview appreciated.
Vaughn Martinian: I did my first interview with Joe Strummer at the after show at Asbury Park, New Jersey; May 1982.. This is a flyer for the radio station at the University of New Haven.
I spent 6 months in New Haven and got friendly with some local d.j.'s who wanted to broadcast my interview.
The Clash Official | Facebook
Asbury Park Photos and blog
including after show photos/flyer - fantastic page
www.go2jo.com/?p=242
Photos
The Clash: Joe Strummer, Mick Jones and Paul Simonon at Asbury Park Amusement Casino Party, 1982. The Clash Official | Facebook
2x photos courtesy Jeff Rusnak
Photo courtesy of Pat Richardson
Extensive archive of articles, magazines and other from the Coast to Coast Combat Rock US Tour May June 1982
Full page - Strummer disappears, reappears saga- Adverts - Fanzines - International articles - Memorabilia - Snippets - Tickets, passes - UK articles - US articles - Video/Audio
Setlist
1 |
London Calling |
There are several sights that provide setlists but most mirror www.blackmarketclash.co.uk. They are worth checking.
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ARTICLES, POSTERS, CLIPPINGS ... A collection of A colection of articles, interviews, reviews, posters, tour dates from May to June covering the US Tour period.
Extensive archive of articles, magazines and other from the Coast to Coast Combat Rock US Tour May June 1982
Strummer disappears, reappears saga
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