"Radio Clash" is another funk, rap, punk hybrid from them that has that you-can't-not-move-while-listening-to-it groove. Turn it up loud--the neighbors will love it. 😏
Oh man. This song always makes me think of the Coast to Coast radio show, back before it turned into a Norry-run informercial for dietary supplements. One of the longtime guest hosts, Ian Punnet, used the Magnificent Seven as bumper music. It always got ya bopping in your seat, and his other music picks were always fun and unexpected. Just googled him to see what he’s been up to and found out he passed away back in December. He was 63. RIP, Ian.
Apart from comments about like or dislike the band ( of course I love the band) the whole sound is about side chain circuit. Technical staff first, later comes the aesthetics. That is why the sound is so well bounced
A few recommendations: White Man in Hammersmith Palace, Straight To Hell, I Fought The Law, Know Your Rights, Somebody Got Murdered, Death Is A Star, Police and Thieves, White Riot, Ghetto Defendant, Carreer Opportunities, Rudy Can't Fail, The Card Cheat, Lost In The Supermarket, Jimmy Jazz, Hate and War, Tommy Gun, Safe European Home and Stay Free.
After you've "done" The Clash you could try out one of their successor bands, Big Audio Dynamite, formed by Mick Jones. Some very interesting stuff, very sample heavy but quite catchy also eg E=MC², The Bottom Line, Medicine Show, V Thirteen, C'Mon Every Beatbox and Rush.
The most interesting Clash tunes for a drummer to listen I guess would be: Guns of Brixton Atom Tan Overpowered by Funk Four Horsemen Red Angel Dragnet Version City Hateful Groovy Times The Equaliser Rudie Can't Fail But I'm not a drummer, what would I know. I play the guitar. Only Clash tunes tho
The Clash, Talking Heads, and Blondie were all hanging out in the late 70s in NY when the punk and pretty brand new or underground hip hop/rap scenes were happening, and very unknown for everyone outside of there. Blondie and The Clash both ran with it and did a 'rap' song. Talking Heads stuck to more of a new wave/post punk sound. There was a lot of experimentation coming out of the NYC scene in those days, especially CBGBs. Ooh, you're gonna make me get up early on a Saturday. 😵💫 I need to start going to bed and getting up earlier anyway lol! Hope you liked it.
@@L33Reacts Lee, are you like the nicest person in the world, or what. You didn't have to do that, but thank you so much. Hope things have been better today for you 💖
@L33Reacts The Clash around this period were about to fall apart and for a few years before they must have been the best band on the planet, Simple Minds from 79-82 recorded 6 Albums and the best British band, not hit Albums but ambient artistic beautiful music...a few years later they recorded " Don't you " and the American sell-out was complete 😮
The Magnificent Seven is a 2016 American Western action film directed by Antoine Fuqua and written by Nic Pizzolatto and Richard Wenk. It is a remake of the 1960 film of the same name, which itself was a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 film Seven Samurai. T
Rap was starting to have an influence of pop music around this time. Rapture by Blondie, Genius of Love by Tom Tom Club and a few songs by the Clash. Grand Master Flash, Afrika Bambara, Sugar Hill Gang and Egyptian Lover were about to break out. So many genres starting/evolving at this time. Amazing times.
When you named the Bassist, I thought 🤨🙄Not Paul S' - Wiki does say the Bass was played by the Bassist of The Blockheads, led by Ian Dury. I have learned a new aspect to this epic.
Wooo, the "Butcher" cover of Yesterday and Today, gritty. The Clash were, as some folks know, "the only band that matters". They were their own British Invasion.
I requested the song because he liked what he heard of them so far, and this is really different for them. Their early stuff is great! I even like Joe's prior band, The 101ers.
Lee if you can split decades, give me 75 to 85(or 84) as the best, most varied and interesting of eras. You gotta check out Should I Stay or Should I Go for an amazing Clash song!
That's a good one of theirs, but they have a big variety, too. I would love to see Tommy Gun, White Man in Hammersmith Palais, so many of theirs done here! I would take a decade and a half for varied like from 70 or so to 85. Then again, there was some crazy stuff in the later 60s too.
@@MikeWalsh-f1g It sometimes backfires to recommend the big songs to people new to the artist, I've noticed. In the case where they're like me and don't like the 'big' songs as much they can get turned off an artist in that way. I like to feel out what they like and decide based on that.
If you want to check out someone new and awesome from the 80s...check out Billy Idol...Rebel Yell and or my fav, White Wedding...Rock on! LOVE your videos...watching people discover the music I grew up loving brings a weird joy to my heart and your reactions are so real from the heart...you show how much you love the music and I have about 3 people I enjoy watching their reviews, but, you remind me of my nephew (also a drummer, lol) and I enjoy yours the most!!!
Oh! This is some Radio Clash on pirate satellite. On Sandinista, the Clampdown needs to be played where ever & whenever. It it just too relevant in this specific year. Edit: Paul not on bass due to the movie: Ladies & Gentlemen The Fabulous Stains. He, the drummer & guitarist of the Sex Pistols & the fat guy triple crosser from IJ & the Crystal Skull was the lead singer. Diane Lane & Laura Dern in a punk band.
He was away making a movie when this was recorded, and Norman Watt-Roy from the Blockheads played bass. The whole song was built up from the bass track he laid down.
For people who dont really care for The Clash, Sandinista is a sprawling borefest, for fans it should have been a triple triple LP (for the price of one).
The Clash, after the Beatles, rearranged my DNA. Perpetually relevant.
Same, and Bowie too, for me.
To an old hippy like me 'vibe' is a word we used a lot. Clash were such good musicians, their "Armageddon Time" is a reggae classic.
English Punk Rockers were listening to reggae early on.
I was lucky to see The Clash at Bonds in 1981 three times. OMG! Inside when they came on it was a monkey house.
"Radio Clash" is another funk, rap, punk hybrid from them that has that you-can't-not-move-while-listening-to-it groove. Turn it up loud--the neighbors will love it. 😏
Radio Clash is a killer song, too, yes, very worth blasting one's neighbors with. :D
YES, love that one. I've seen several reactions to this song (deservedly so) but sadly, never to '(This Is) Radio Clash'.
Oh man. This song always makes me think of the Coast to Coast radio show, back before it turned into a Norry-run informercial for dietary supplements. One of the longtime guest hosts, Ian Punnet, used the Magnificent Seven as bumper music. It always got ya bopping in your seat, and his other music picks were always fun and unexpected. Just googled him to see what he’s been up to and found out he passed away back in December. He was 63.
RIP, Ian.
Apart from comments about like or dislike the band ( of course I love the band) the whole sound is about side chain circuit. Technical staff first, later comes the aesthetics. That is why the sound is so well bounced
A few recommendations: White Man in Hammersmith Palace, Straight To Hell, I Fought The Law, Know Your Rights, Somebody Got Murdered, Death Is A Star, Police and Thieves, White Riot, Ghetto Defendant, Carreer Opportunities, Rudy Can't Fail, The Card Cheat, Lost In The Supermarket, Jimmy Jazz, Hate and War, Tommy Gun, Safe European Home and Stay Free.
Great recommendations!
Bank Robber !!
Worth to note that the bassist and drummer grew up around Brixton , the Mecca of Reggea in the 70s . I heard Burning Spear Live there . Amazing
Greatest time be young. Saw them live
After you've "done" The Clash you could try out one of their successor bands, Big Audio Dynamite, formed by Mick Jones. Some very interesting stuff, very sample heavy but quite catchy also eg E=MC², The Bottom Line, Medicine Show, V Thirteen, C'Mon Every Beatbox and Rush.
Nobody sounded like this in 81! More Clash broooooooooo
It was 1980 but yeah! Only Grandmaster Flash and others in the early underground hip hop scene :)
The most interesting Clash tunes for a drummer to listen I guess would be:
Guns of Brixton
Atom Tan
Overpowered by Funk
Four Horsemen
Red Angel Dragnet
Version City
Hateful
Groovy Times
The Equaliser
Rudie Can't Fail
But I'm not a drummer, what would I know. I play the guitar. Only Clash tunes tho
This is a fun triple album . May be up and down but exiting !
Definitely listen to Train In Vain (Stand By Me), Know Your Rights, I Fought The Law, Clampdown, Bankrobber..
Mick Jones left later to form Bid Audio Dynamite.... some cool stuff there
I saw The Clash live in Auckland New Zealand 1982. Great show!!
The Clash, Talking Heads, and Blondie were all hanging out in the late 70s in NY when the punk and pretty brand new or underground hip hop/rap scenes were happening, and very unknown for everyone outside of there. Blondie and The Clash both ran with it and did a 'rap' song. Talking Heads stuck to more of a new wave/post punk sound. There was a lot of experimentation coming out of the NYC scene in those days, especially CBGBs.
Ooh, you're gonna make me get up early on a Saturday. 😵💫 I need to start going to bed and getting up earlier anyway lol! Hope you liked it.
hey i switched the times so you don't have to. sorry i forgot about that. it should be 9am your time now im guessing. i set it for 12pm est
@@L33Reacts Lee, are you like the nicest person in the world, or what. You didn't have to do that, but thank you so much. Hope things have been better today for you 💖
@L33Reacts The Clash around this period were about to fall apart and for a few years before they must have been the best band on the planet, Simple Minds from 79-82 recorded 6 Albums and the best British band, not hit Albums but ambient artistic beautiful music...a few years later they recorded " Don't you " and the American sell-out was complete 😮
@@James-hd6ez I liked a couple of those early albums quite a bit, especially New Gold Dream and Sons and Fascination.
The Magnificent Seven is a 2016 American Western action film directed by Antoine Fuqua and written by Nic Pizzolatto and Richard Wenk. It is a remake of the 1960 film of the same name, which itself was a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s 1954 film Seven Samurai. T
Rap was starting to have an influence of pop music around this time. Rapture by Blondie, Genius of Love by Tom Tom Club and a few songs by the Clash. Grand Master Flash, Afrika Bambara, Sugar Hill Gang and Egyptian Lover were about to break out. So many genres starting/evolving at this time. Amazing times.
When you named the Bassist, I thought 🤨🙄Not Paul S' - Wiki does say the Bass was played by the Bassist of The Blockheads, led by Ian Dury. I have learned a new aspect to this epic.
Joe Strummer gone way too soon but damn . The Clash were like a lightning strike
The great Norman Watt-Roy doing most of the studio bass work on this album. And he's definitely cooking with gas here.
For a hot minute , the clash was the only band that mattered.
Bass was Norman Watt-Roy of the Blockheads on a loop
Magnificent. 😊❤
Yeah! They were good at Reggae too. Check out Armagideon Time, live in the studio and their best recorded track to me... ;)
MORE Clash please.
London bad boys.
Wooo, the "Butcher" cover of Yesterday and Today, gritty. The Clash were, as some folks know, "the only band that matters". They were their own British Invasion.
Yasssss!
This groove is so in the pocket
Thanks for coming back to The Clash. Please consider Clash City Rockers from their earliest punk beginning.
I requested the song because he liked what he heard of them so far, and this is really different for them. Their early stuff is great! I even like Joe's prior band, The 101ers.
@@lauraallen55 agree. Post Clash I love his Coma Girl...
@@davidwalsh7128 Me too - love it all really!
Magnificent!
Lee if you can split decades, give me 75 to 85(or 84) as the best, most varied and interesting of eras. You gotta check out Should I Stay or Should I Go for an amazing Clash song!
That's a good one of theirs, but they have a big variety, too. I would love to see Tommy Gun, White Man in Hammersmith Palais, so many of theirs done here! I would take a decade and a half for varied like from 70 or so to 85. Then again, there was some crazy stuff in the later 60s too.
@@lauraallen55 I like to recommend the big ones for the newbies, then they can work their way through the catalog. Those are great tracks tho!
@@MikeWalsh-f1g It sometimes backfires to recommend the big songs to people new to the artist, I've noticed. In the case where they're like me and don't like the 'big' songs as much they can get turned off an artist in that way. I like to feel out what they like and decide based on that.
Banger! 🙌
If you want to check out someone new and awesome from the 80s...check out Billy Idol...Rebel Yell and or my fav, White Wedding...Rock on! LOVE your videos...watching people discover the music I grew up loving brings a weird joy to my heart and your reactions are so real from the heart...you show how much you love the music and I have about 3 people I enjoy watching their reviews, but, you remind me of my nephew (also a drummer, lol) and I enjoy yours the most!!!
Boogie guys, Clash
Oh! This is some Radio Clash on pirate satellite. On Sandinista, the Clampdown needs to be played where ever & whenever. It it just too relevant in this specific year.
Edit: Paul not on bass due to the movie: Ladies & Gentlemen The Fabulous Stains. He, the drummer & guitarist of the Sex Pistols & the fat guy triple crosser from IJ & the Crystal Skull was the lead singer. Diane Lane & Laura Dern in a punk band.
Know Your Rights!!!!!!!!!! combat rock album.
quel bonne époque
Great great song. Cheese boigha
Cheeseboiger!
Paul Simonon is the bass player.
He was away making a movie when this was recorded, and Norman Watt-Roy from the Blockheads played bass. The whole song was built up from the bass track he laid down.
Look op dutch Herman Brood and the Wild Romance. Saturday Night. A live version
Stiff Little Fingers are a brilliant Punk Band among so many, worth a listen👍
Great band!
For people who dont really care for The Clash, Sandinista is a sprawling borefest, for fans it should have been a triple triple LP (for the price of one).