Here is a list of known articles from June to December 1983. If you know of anything that is missing please do let us know.
Snippets - Mick sacked - Articles - International Articles - Magazines
Topper arrested
On this date, 5 Nov 1983, Topper Headon of The Clash was arrested for walking his dog while drunk on London's Fulham Road. WE LOVE THE CLASH Facebook
NME, Joe Blows Up,
"Clash coming back", Strummer
NME Clash bouce back, Mick aids Rogers and Wakeling
83 12 12 NME Clash bouce back, Mick aids Rogers and Wakeling
Record Mirror spotted Mick Topper drinking together
Concert to beat the dole queue blues
Strummr donates £1,000
83 11 08 Liverpool Echo Tuesday (Joe cheque)
Concert of Concern
83 11 15 Liverpool Echo Tuesday (Joe Cheque)
Nick Shepperd on The Clash
RECORD MIRROR: 16 July 1977
Cortinas Interview. Check White Riot Tour Page for Micks review of the the Cortinas Fascist Dictator.
Mick Jones sacked
Classic Rock Magazine
Record Mirror, Clash Shortage, Mick to Rejoin?
83 12 31 Record Mirror Clash Shortage Mick to Rejoin
Mick Jones fired from the Clash
83 10 28 The Tacoma News Tribune Fri (Mick fired)
83 10 07 The Kansas City Star Fri (Mick fired)
83 10 09 The Dispatch Sun (Mick fired)
The Clash spike plans
84 00 00 Clash step in to stand up for sacked Rolls Royce worker
Five Alive
Mick gets the boot NME
or alternate link or alternate link
Melody Maker, Mick sacked from The Clash
Daily Mirror, Mick is fired by The Clash
83 09 02 Daily Mirror Friday (Mick fired)
The Sun, Mick cash Clash
83 09 00 Need original
NME Mick gets the Boot
NME 10 Sept 83 –
Mick Jones sacked from Clash
Should I Stay or Should I Go (Mick sacked)
unknown –
Mick Jones sacked from Clash
Clash sack Mick Jones
Clash Trouble, Mick teams up with Topper
The Courier News
Sat May 5 1984
Ex-Clash members may form new group TRAC
The Salina Journal,
Sun May 27 1984
Clash of interests
The Standard – Tue Feb 21 1984
Regrets over Clash
Clash clash over names
Punk Rock graveyard | Facebook
39 years ago The Clash fired Mick Jones on... -
Punk Rock Graveyard | Facebook
39 years ago The Clash fired Mick Jones on September 1, 1983.
"Jones and Strummer, the creative forces in the Clash, were heading in different directions. After six years or rampant touring and recording, Jones was ready for a break and desperately wanted an extended vacation. With the band’s commercial fortunes on the rise, Strummer wanted to capitalize on their fame with more touring (a move supported by Simonon).
“Mick was intolerable to work with by this time,” the late Strummer remembered in the Clash documentary, ‘Westway to the World.’ “He wouldn’t show up. When he did show up, it was like Elizabeth Taylor in a filthy mood.”
Jones later regretted his behavior. “I was just carried away really, I wish I had a bit more control,” Jones reflected. “You know, you wish you knew what you know now.”
Unable to plan a summer ’83 Clash tour because of Jones, and continually annoyed by his lack of care and punctuality, Strummer and Simonon weighed their options. They decided that the best move was to assume complete control and fire Mick from the band in September of 1983.
“We had to change the team because the atmosphere was too terrible,” Strummer said (as quoted in ‘The Rise and Fall of the Clash’). “We got so much work to do that we can’t waste time begging people to play the damn guitar!”
Simonon, who had altogether stopped talking to Jones, concurred: “We felt we’ve had enough, let’s kick him out and that’s what we decided on and to hell with the consequences.”
The consequences were that the Clash wouldn’t be able to survive the removal of a founding member (as well as the group’s prime melodic talent). Strummer and Simonon hired two guitarists to replace Jones and made 1985’s ‘Cut the Crap,’ an album Joe would pretty much disown. The Clash officially broke up the next year.
Meanwhile, Jones co-founded General Public (although he left before making much of a creative contribution) and then started Big Audio Dynamite, which took his music in a more urban/dance-oriented direction. When Strummer came calling, asking Jones to reform the Clash with him, Jones declined. Instead, the two collaborated on B.A.D.’s second album, ‘No. 10, Upping St.’ co-producing the record and co-writing half the songs.
Strummer and Jones remained friends and even played a few Clash songs together at a charity show. They also planned to play a full reunion gig as part of the band’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. Sadly, Strummer died of a congenital heart defect in December 2002, making the reunion impossible.
“Whatever a group is, it is the chemical mixture of those four people that makes a group work,” Strummer said, a few years before his death. “That’s a lesson everyone should learn: you don’t mess with it. If it works, just let it… do whatever you have to do to bring it forward, but don’t mess with it. We learned that bitterly.”
Read the entire article here: 30 Years Ago: The Clash Fire Mick Jones | https://ultimateclassicrock.com/clash-fire-mick-jones/...
In 1983, “the only band that matters” was poised to become the biggest band in the world. Over the course of a few years, the Clash had gone from punk upstarts to a passionately eclectic band capable of rocking stadiums. The British quartet were riding high on ‘Combat Rock’ (their first top 10 album in the U.S.) along with a pair of hit singles, ‘Rock the Casbah’ and ‘Should I Stay or Should I Go.’ The Clash were booked to co-headline (with David Bowie and Van Halen) the US Festival and played to more than 140,000 people. And they were completely miserable.
Things had begun to disintegrate right before the release of ‘Combat Rock’ when drummer Topper Headon was fired because his heroin addiction was a drag on his precision. But the other three members (Joe Strummer, Mick Jones and Paul Simonon) soldiered on with drummer Terry Chimes, who had played on the band’s 1977 debut. The friction within the band only got worse and Chimes left the group at his first opportunity.
Ultimate Classic Rock, The Clash Fire Mick Jones
Jones and Strummer, the creative forces in the Clash, were heading in different directions. After six years or rampant touring and recording, Jones was ready for a break and desperately wanted an extended vacation. With the band’s commercial fortunes on the rise, Strummer wanted to capitalize on their fame with more touring (a move supported by Simonon).
“Mick was intolerable to work with by this time,” the late Strummer remembered in the Clash documentary, ‘Westway to the World.’ “He wouldn’t show up. When he did show up, it was like Elizabeth Taylor in a filthy mood.”
Jones later regretted his behavior. “I was just carried away really, I wish I had a bit more control,” Jones reflected. “You know, you wish you knew what you know now.”
Unable to plan a summer ’83 Clash tour because of Jones, and continually annoyed by his lack of care and punctuality, Strummer and Simonon weighed their options. They decided that the best move was to assume complete control and fire Mick from the band in September of 1983.
“We had to change the team because the atmosphere was too terrible,” Strummer said (as quoted in ‘The Rise and Fall of the Clash’). “We got so much work to do that we can’t waste time begging people to play the damn guitar!”
Simonon, who had altogether stopped talking to Jones, concurred: “We felt we’ve had enough, let’s kick him out and that’s what we decided on and to hell with the consequences.”
The consequences were that the Clash wouldn’t be able to survive the removal of a founding member (as well as the group’s prime melodic talent). Strummer and Simonon hired two guitarists to replace Jones and made 1985’s ‘Cut the Crap,’ an album Joe would pretty much disown. The Clash officially broke up the next year.
Meanwhile, Jones co-founded General Public (although he left before making much of a creative contribution) and then started Big Audio Dynamite, which took his music in a more urban/dance-oriented direction. When Strummer came calling, asking Jones to reform the Clash with him, Jones declined. Instead, the two collaborated on B.A.D.’s second album, ‘No. 10, Upping St.’ co-producing the record and co-writing half the songs.
Strummer and Jones remained friends and even played a few Clash songs together at a charity show. They also planned to play a full reunion gig as part of the band’s induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. Sadly, Strummer died of a congenital heart defect in December 2002, making the reunion impossible.
“Whatever a group is, it is the chemical mixture of those four people that makes a group work,” Strummer said, a few years before his death. “That’s a lesson everyone should learn: you don’t mess with it. If it works, just let it… do whatever you have to do to bring it forward, but don’t mess with it. We learned that bitterly.”
Read More: 30 Years Ago: The Clash Fire Mick Jones
Daily Mirror, Cooling the Clash war
Radio sessions, get back together?
83 12 03 Saturday (Split)
Punk: 1977 - Two Sevens Clash
Chris Salewicz, The History of Rock, 1983
Full Article
AS A REBEL MUSIC, punk rock had close affinities with reggae. When the punk movement found a focal point and place of worship in the Ro'y in Covent Garden, a former gay club that opened as a temple to punk in December 1976, it was Jamaican music ‚spun by the then up-and-coming film-maker Don Letts ‚Äì that provided much of the entertainment between acts. Reggae, declared the hippest punks, was the only music to which they listened. Bob Marley recorded 'Punky Reggae Party' the Clash covered Junior Murvin's 'Police And Thieves' and the dominant reggae LP of the year was Culture's Two Sevens Clash. The title song referred to the supposed mystical significance of the year 1977 which was claimed to foreshadow great social change. ... more
Combat Rockers
Penny Valentine, The History of Rock, 1983
Full Article
IF THERE WAS one band that successfully rose above punk‚'s swift and premature decline, it was the Clash. Although historically the Sex Pistols remain the most important mid-Seventies group for their shattering effect on the complacency of the music business, it was the Clash‚'s achievement to hone and structure punk‚'s original wildly anarchistic intent into a more mature and durable form. ...more
MOJO FOUND The unheard Clash 1984 tracks
October 2018 / 2 pages
MOJO What are we going to do now?
From Xmas 1979 onwards including the bands demise
October 2004 / 7 pages
Clash Map of London
MOJO FOUND The unheard Clash 1984 tracks
October 2018 / 2 pages
MOJO / Punk: the whole story
Online viewer (very good)
History of Rock 1983
NME FEB 19 "I thought they were mad" Page 8
MM APR 23 "We're all really upset" Page 41
M1CK JONES HAS been sacked from The Clash Page 73
MOJO Meltdown, The Clash Confess
October 1999 - Feature; in the studio, records and biography - 20 pages
THE CLASH - For the first time since their acrimonious split, all four members of The Clash have agreed to set the record straight for Mojo
MOJO CLASSIC; ULTIMATE COLLECTORS EDITION
THE CLASH 146 pages
The first issue of Punk Icons unfolds the story of The Clash, from Mick Jones and Paul Simonon poaching Joe Strummer from pub rockers The 101’ers to form the group, to the chaos and destruction of their 1977 White Riot tour; and thereon from the controversial visits to America that inspired the London Calling, Sandinista! and Combat Rock albums, to the dramatic dismissal of first drummer Topper Headon in 1982, and then Jones the following year.
In between you’ll find rucks, riots, ripping tunes and a devotion to all things reggae, as The Clash earned their reputation as rock’s ultimate rebels.
UNCUT Combat Rock
September 1999 The Clash, Joe Strummer brings back the glory days (Biog, 101ers - Clash - Mesaleros) - 22 pages
THE CLASH - Sidelined for a decade by record company politics following the bitter disintegration of The Clash, Joe Strummer is back this month with a triumphant new single. In this exclusive interview, he relives his glory days as punk's defiant rebel warrior and explains why going down fighting is the only way to go.
MOJO Paul Simonon interview
June 2023 - 6 pages
Paul Simonon on joining The Clash, the tensions that broke them apart and the reunion that never was.
MOJO Revolutionary Spirit
November 2022, Strummer review
From joints in the depature lounge to mayhem on the bus, the last years of JOE STRUMMER were a chaotic, uproarious reiteration of his rock’n’roll code. Along for the ride: a maverick new band, The Mescaleros. Lurking in the backgrounds The Clash, and a momentous legacy to honour and challenge. Twenty years after his death, Pat Gilbert rounds up the gang to salute Strummer’s last stand. “He made you feel invincible,” they remember. Photograph: Birian Rasic
UNCUT Clash Reunited
October 2013 - UNCUT Clash Reunited (Retrospective) - 14 pages
The Clash... reunited Jones, Simonon and Headon look back at the band that changed so many lives.
UNCUT Ultimate Music Guide The Clash
The Last Gang in Town
9 Januury 2012 – 148 page special
Uncut presents The Clash: The Ultimate Music Guide. The complete story of the punk firebrands who revolutionised rock’n’roll. We unearth remarkable interviews, unseen for years, from the archives of NME and Melody Maker. Our peerless team of critics contribute in–depth new reviews of every Clash album. We look at Joe Strummer and Mick Jones’ careers after The Clash, dig out dozens of ultra–rare photos, and even enlist Mick to write an exclusive new introduction. The Clash: The Ultimate Music Guide – it’s a 148–page riot!
UNCUT NME Originals Clash White Riot
THE CLASH NME Originals (2003 UK 146-page magazine devoted to the Punk Gods, containing interviews, reviews and rare photographs from their early days to heady adventure at the top and beyond. Packed with information including all their greatrecords, gigs and fights, along with a tribute to the true rock rebel Joe Strummer. The cover has a only a little light storage wear, but the inner pages are near 'as new'). 146 pages
A Riot of our own Discography
85 11 09 Record Mirror
UNCUT The Clash Their Greatest Songs
03 12 00 UNCUT The Clash Their Greatest Songs - 34 pages
Support Bands for the Clash
https://www.45worlds.com/live/artist/the-clash
Joe Strummer The complicated Truth
Book: Chris Salewicz. Redemption Song review
06-10-00 WORD
The Clash Special Edition by Music Legends Magazine
Youtube videos within the ebook
Author Garry Mulholland Describes The Critical Reaction To 'Cut the Crap'.
Critics Discuss The Repercussions Of Topper Headon’s Heroin Addiction
The Clash Are Interviewed About The Bond’s Casino Shows In 1981
Joe Strummer Discusses His Socialist Views In 1978
NME; Why we love The Clash
How they changed our lives
07 05 19 NME The Clash (Career, Generic, Quotes) - 5 pages
The Clash’s 30 best songs
An all-star panel – including Mick Jones, Paul Simonon and Terry Chimes – vote for their greatest cuts (from Uncut's December 2003 issue)
Jun 76 - Black Swan , five piece ....
Sept 76 - 100 Club, London gigs ....
Dec 76 - Anarchy Tour ....
Jan / Mar - Early 77 Gigs ....
May 77 - White Riot UK Tour ....
Jul 77 - European Dates ....
Oct 77 - Out of Control UK Tour ....
Jan 78 - Sandy Pearlman UK Dates ....
Apr 78 - UK Festival Dates ....
Jul 78 - Out on Parole UK Tour ....
Oct 78 - Sort it Out UK Tour ....
Feb 79 - Pearl Harbour US Tour ....
Jul 79 - Finland + UK dates ....
Sep 79 - Take the Fifth US Tour ....
Dec 79 - Acklam Hall Secret Gigs ....
Jan 80 - 16 Tons UK Tour ....
Mar 80- 16 Tons US Tour ....
May 80 - 16 Tons UK/Europe ....
May 81 - Impossible Mission Tour ....
Jun 81 - Bonds Residency NY ....
Sep 81 - Mogador Paris Residency ....
Oct 81 - Radio Clash UK Tour ....
Oct 81 - London Lyceum Residency ....
Jan 82 - Japan Tour ....
Feb 82 - Australian Tour ....
Feb 82 - HK & Thai gigs ....
May 82 - Lochem Festival ....
May 82 - Combat Rock US Tour ....
July 82 - Casbah Club UK Tour ....
Aug 82 - Combat Rock US Tour ....
Oct 82 - Supporting The Who ....
Nov 82 - Bob Marley Festival ....
May 83 - US Festival + gigs ....
Jan 84 - West Coast dates ....
Feb 84 - Out of Control Europe ....
Mar 84 - Out of Control UK ....
April 84 - Out of Control US Tour ....
Sep 84 - Italian Festival dates ....
Dec 84 - Miners Benefit Gigs ....
May 85 - Busking Tour ....
Jun- Aug 85 - Festival dates ....
Sept 85 - European Tour ....
Jan 86 - Far East Tour ....
1986 onwards - Retrospective
74-76 - Joe with the 101ers ....
Jul 88 - Green Wedge UK Tour
Aug 88 - Rock the Rich UK Tour ....
Oct 89 - Earthquake Weather UK ....
Oct 89 - Earthquake Weather Euro ....
Nov 89 - Earthquake Weather US ....
Jun 99 - Comeback Festival dates ....
July 99 - Short US Tour ....
July 99 - UK Tour ....
Aug 99 - Festival Dates ....
Oct 99 - UK Tour ....
Nov 99 - Full US Tour ....
Dec 99 - European Xmas dates ....
Jan 00 - Australasian Tour ....
May 00 - Mini UK Tour ....
Nov 00 - supporting The Who Tour ....
Jul 01 - UK & US Instore Tour ....
Oct 01 - Full US Tour ....
Nov 01 - Japanese Tour ....
Nov 01 - Full UK Tour ....
April 02 - Brooklyn NY Residency ....
Jun 02 - UK Festivals ....
Jul 02 - Hootenanny Tour ....
Aug 02 - UK Festival Dates ....
Sep 02 - Japanesse Dates ....
Nov 02 - Bringing it all Back Home ....
Audio exists and circulates | |
Audio exists but is not in circulation | |
No known Audio | |
Audio (radio) interview | |
Soundcheck |
Video exists and circulates | |
Video exists but is not in circulation | |
No known Video |
Gig cancelled | |
Never took place / bogus date | |
Unoffical release | |
Offical release |
Clash pages only - Rated 0-5 for iTunes. How real the sound feels re: the sound you'd hear in the concert hall. |
to Rated 0.5 to 5 for sound (for iTunes) |
Unknown generation |
Master source |
Low generation (better) |
High generation (copied too much) |
Soundboard |
FM |