Frogtoon Musique

London Calling by The Clash

Biographie de l'artiste pour The Clash

The Clash Est L'un Des Groupes Majeurs De La Scène Musicale Rock Britannique. Il Commence Sa Carrière À Londres En 1976. Au Total Le Groupe Sort Huit Trente-Trois Tours Et Dix-Sept Singles.
Généralement Rattaché Au Mouvement Punk The Clash Porte Un Message Éminemment Politique Et Réellement Contestataire Le Groupe Ne Cesse Jamais De Remettre En Cause Le Statu Quo Du Business De La Musique Et De La Politique Mondiale I'm So Bored With The USA Career Opportunities ... .
Le Groupe Se Caractérise Également Par Sa Capacité À Intégrer Différentes Influences Jamaïcaines Américaines Anglaises Ou Latines. Ils Reprennent Notamment Le Tube Reggae Police & Thieves De Junior Murvin Sur Leur Premier Album. Lorsque Lee "Scratch" Perry Coauteur Et Producteur De L'original Entend Leur Version Punk Rock Il Ajoute Leur Photo Au "Wall Of Fame" De Son Studio Black Ark En Jamaïque Faisant D'eux Les Seuls Visages Pâles De Son Mur.
Le Groupe Est Composé De Joe Strummer Chant Et Mick Jones Guitare Parfois Tous Deux À La Guitare Et Au Chant Auquel Il Faut Ajouter Paul Simonon À La Basse Et Topper Headon Puis Terry Chimes À La Batterie.
Le Groupe Se Dissout En 1985.

Frogtoon Musique - Informations sur la chanson: London Calling

"London Calling" Is A Song By The British Punk Rock Band The Clash. It Was Released As A Single From The Band's 1979 Double Album London Calling. This Apocalyptic Politically Charged Rant Features The Band's Famous Combination Of Reggae Basslines And Punk Electric Guitar And Vocals. Writing And Recording The Song Was Written By Joe Strummer And Mick Jones. The Title Alludes To The BBC World Service's Station Identification "This Is London Calling ..." That Was Used During World War II Often In Broadcasts To Occupied Countries. The Lyrics Reflect The Concern Felt By Strummer About World Events With The Reference To "a Nuclear Error" To The Incident At Three Mile Island Which Occurred Earlier In 1979. Joe Strummer Has Said "We Felt That We Were Struggling About To Slip Down A Slope Or Something Grasping With Our Fingernails. And There Was No One There To Help Us." The Line "London Is Drowning / And I Live By The River" Comes From Concerns That If The River Thames Flooded Most Of Central London Would Drown Something That Led To The Construction Of The Thames Barrier. Strummer's Concern For Social Violence Is Evident Through The Lines "we Ain't Got No Swing/ Except For The Ring Of That Truncheon Thing". This Is Perhaps A Reference To The London Riots At The Time. Social Criticism Also Features Through References To The Effects Of Casual Drug Taking "we Ain't Got No High / Except For That One With The Yellowy Eyes". The Lyrics Also Reflect Desperation Of The Band's Situation In 1979 Struggling With High Debt Without Management And Arguing With Their Record Label Over Whether The London Calling Album Should Be A Single Or Double Album. The Lines Referring To "now Don't Look To Us / All That Phoney Beatlemania Has Bitten The Dust" Reflects The Concerns Of The Band Over Its Situation After The Punk Rock Boom In England In 1977 Had Ended. While Many Took The Line As A Slam Against The Beatles Another Interpretation Offered At The Time The Song Was Released Suggested That This Line Referred Not To The Beatles But To The Broadway Production Beatlemania Which Advertised Itself As "Not The Beatles But An Incredible Simulation." Hence The Line Castigated Late 1970s Culture For Its Lack Of Substance Such As Consuming "phoney Beatlemania " Essentially A Simulated Rather Than Actual Experience. Musically The Song Is Far Removed From Their Earlier Style Of Frenzied Punk Rock I-IV-V-I Chord Progressions As Best Exemplified On Songs Like "Career Opportunities" And "I'm So Bored With The USA". The Song Is In A Minor Key — Something The Clash Had Rarely Used Before — And The Inherent Dirge-Like Apocalyptic Feel Is Intensified By Topper Headon's Martial Drumming Without Backbeat In Synchrony With Staccato Guitar Chords Paul Simonon's Haunting And Pulsating Bass Line The Group's Deliberate Mid-Tempo Pace And Strummer's Icy Lyrics And Baleful Delivery. Strummer's Wolf-Like Howls Or Perhaps Rooster-Like Crows During The Instrumental Break Further Fuel The Atmosphere Of Desolation And Paranoia Implied Throughout The Song. Original Research? Like Many Of The Tracks On London Calling — Including "The Card Cheat" "Revolution Rock" And "Jimmy Jazz" — The Song Doesn't End By Resolving Strongly To The Tonic Or Fading Out As Most Rock And Roll Songs Do. Instead It Breaks Down Eerily With Joe Strummer's Cryptic Last Words "I Never Felt So Much A-Like..." Echoing Over Pete Townshend-Inspired Morse Code Feedback The Characters Spelling Out S-O-S . "London Calling" Was Recorded At Wessex Studios Located In A Former Church In Highbury In North London. This Studio Had Already Proved To Be A Popular Location With The Sex Pistols The Pretenders And The Tom Robinson Band. The Single Was Produced By Guy Stevens And Engineered By Bill Price.

50 Titres similaires:

Tags de musique pour London Calling:

ACCUEIL THE CLASH
POPULAIRES PISTES MIXES ALBUMS
Video 1 : 50