Archive for the 'Joe Strummer' Category

Rock Against Racism 35th Anniversary Concert set for April 27th in London

Good afternoon and a happy Sunday to you, low clouds and a gloomy tone here today which satiates any homesickness I might be feeling. It helps that it’s 19c as well.

A little bit of housekeeping today, first of all I wanted to thank everyone who entered the ‘Let Fury Have The Hour’ poster competition last week, I’ll be using the random mumber generator tonight to pick the winning names and sending emails to those selected tonight/tomorrow to get your delivery address. I hope we’ll have more giveaways via the blog in the months ahead.  Also thanks for your continued support of the blog, we’ve now reached 7,000 people on our facebook page which simply amazes me and visits to the site(s) is running at 11% ahead of last year so I do appreciate you spreading the word. Finally a reminder to check out the Kosmo Vinyl interview with Danny Baker on BBC Radio 5 yesterday in case you missed it on the sister site yesterday all the details are right there.

Right, let’s press on then and I wanted to alert you (especially if you’re in London or the southeast) about a very special event coming up towards the end of the month that will celebrate the 35th anniversary of one of the most important events in the history of The Clash. That event was to my mind as important to music in general and positive protest via the medium specifically as any other event to come out of the punk scene in the UK. Faced with the largest audience the band had ever performed in front of I am of course referring back to the April 1978 Rock Against Racism march and concert in Victoria Park, Hackney (NE London). Estimates on the day were that some 100,000 people attended the concert following the march from Trafalgar Square and perhaps beyond anything else that year (or even in 1977) this was the single event that saw The Clash rise to the level of the band of the moment. Age prevented me from being there or indeed being aware of it at the time but I’d put this down as the one Clash performance that I would most like to have been present for in terms of the significance. Everyone that I’ve ever spoken to who was there that day says that this was a key moment in their life, which I put down to the intent of the event as much as the performers on the stage.

In my humble opinion the fight against racism continues today and it’s nice to see the organisation somewhat active once more, in fact I’d like to see a large annual concert held in similar surrounds in London and not structured to price out the average 17 year old music fan/activist. Even Rock Against Cameron has a nice ring to it come to think of it.

In honour of the 35th anniversary of the historic day this April 27th sees a special night in conjunction with RAR at the slightly smaller setting of the Bread & Roses, 68 Clapham Manor St, London SW4 (nearest tube Clapham North, rail Clapham High St). That evening at 7:30pm sees four bands headlined by 48 Thrills who will feature a Clash heavy set of songs and guesting on vocals will be Steve North (Meeting Joe Strummer).  Also performing will be Leeson O’Keefe, Sound System and Comrade X in addition to showing clips from the RAR movie. I’m sure it will be a very Clash influenced evening so I hope some of you will be able to make it along. I’ll share additional information as I receive it, on a related note I’m not sure what the current status of Love Music Hate Racism is as the website hasn’t been updated since last Autumn, if anyone knows let me know.

Right then, that’s your lot for now – yet again I have to head into the tall grass and mow it.

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rock against racism 2013 Rock Against Racism 35th Anniversary Concert set for April 27th in London

Paul Simonon image by Syd Shelton / sydshelton.net

 

Dundee photo exhibition to feature The Clash, Orange Juice and much more

Good morning to you and by all accounts this would be Friday so no long faces. I am tempted to go on a very long dissertation about the current debate being fueled by the media and the conservative party about the welfare system in the UK, the same cruel double standard based pigeon-holing takes place in the States too – but I need to read more and not write in anger. All I will say is that the lethal cocktail of division and the rising gaps between the rich and poor put the 1970′s to shame, some seeds of revolt are surely being sewn.

On to sunnier pastures instead for the time being. I must admit that when I lived in England I wasn’t aware of the current tide of exhibitions of photography from the punk/post punk era (or they just weren’t happening yet). I’d have to assume that in the first half of the 90′s that the elevation of punk to a worthy cultural retrospective platform had yet to occur, I remember people not really taking my proclamations for the importance of The Clash seriously during the era of grunge and Nirvana which is a touch ironic.

Happily such exhibitions are now almost commonplace and I wanted to write about a new one coming up in Dundee, Scotland. It’s being hosted at The McManus which is the city’s art gallery and museum commencing on Friday May 3 and running through until August 11 so you’ve got all summer to plan a trip up to Dundee.

edwyn collins 464x700 Dundee photo exhibition to feature The Clash, Orange Juice and much moreThe What Prescense! show will feature the work of Scottish photographer Harry Papadopoulous who seemingly was exposed to every significant band and concert from the immediate post-punk years. Oh to have my time machine working properly. More than 300 photographs taken between 1979 and 1984 will make up the exhibition including images of The Clash, Orange Juice, Joy Division, The Specials and Siouxise and The Banshees.

The exhibition may sound familiar to you as it previously had a very healthy stay in Glasgow at the Street Level Photoworks at the end of 2011, there are some great photographs here from that previous showing of Harry’s work.  In fact I believe the Glasgow gallery is the residence for the exhibition.

In addition to the photo exhibit various talks and performances will also be scheduled during the Dundee exhibition. I hope that everyone of you who reads in Scotland and a fair few from further afield might be able to put this on your calendar, it looks brilliant. I didn’t find an ideal Clash photograph for today but I think you’ll be alright with a brilliant shot of Edwyn Collins during his time with Orange Juice.  Edywn is class, it’s just that simple. For full details about the Dundee run at the McManus vist their site here.

Don’t forget that today is the last day to enter the competition in association with ‘Let Fury Have The Hour’ so remember to enter that if you’re in the US or Canada.

More soon, thanks for dropping in.

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The Ivy House, a pub where Joe Strummer played is being saved

Good Sunday evening to you wherever you may be reading and I hope that your weekend went well, in fact I hope that it went very well, the sort of well you feel when you find a few notes of cash in the pocket of something you haven’t worn in a long time. I love that feeling, it’s like robbing yourself with no victims – just free found money.

Over the years on the blog I’ve found myself lamenting the closure of music venues and pubs, record shops and other spots that I think are a crucial part of our collective musical heritage. It seems that the vast majority of the time greed and ‘progress’ win out and another building filled with irreplaceable memories is turned into dust to build new flats or more shoebox retail or coffee shops. Therefore it’s pleasing to sometimes report that the odds are defeated such as the famed 100 Club in London’s Oxford Street surviving what looked like imminent closure when I wrote about it fairly recently.

the 101ers 700x467 The Ivy House, a pub where Joe Strummer played is being savedA less celebrated but still Clash related venue earlier looked doomed in South London and I wrote about The Ivy House back on January 24 of this year. The locally famous and historically significant pub hosted Joe Strummer when he was with the 101′ers, Dr. Feelgood and Elvis Costello along with many others.  Great news then that the pub is the first to be saved in the UK under the auspices of a new law that allows residents to demonstrate that the building is vital to the community. The building which holds Grade II-listed status looked almost certain to face the axe when the owners placed it on the market a year ago, a property developer purchased the building for close to £500,000 in October and later placed it back on the market with the intention of a conversion to flats at a significantly higher price.

As I mentioned in the previous post local residents formed an active group that used the Localism Act to put pressure on Southwark council to protect the pub from closure. Under the law residents can cite to the local governing body that the building merits being listed as an ‘asset of community value’ which halts any plans to change the property and allows local groups the opportunity to purchase the site.  According to the London Evening Standard:

“Southwark subsequently have approved the application and last weekend The Ivy House Community Pub Limited, formed by the campaign group, completed its £810,000 purchase of The Ivy House with the help of a £500,000 loan from the Architectural Heritage Fund (AHF) and another grant. The group has launched a community share issue scheme under which people can invest anything from £200 to £20,000 to help reopen and run the pub as a going concern”

It’s great news in terms of holding onto musical heritage but also keeps alive an important part of the community. Another location to add to my (still to be written) Clash Blog guide to the world!  I do hope that the end result is as positive as it now appears it may be, but I can’t help wondering how many other important buildings might have been saved if this law was already on the books. You might find interesting this interview with Paul Heaton (ex Housemartins/The Beautiful South) about the struggles being faced by British pubs throughout the land. My sincere apologies that it’s in the Daily Star.

The only other thing this morning is a huge thank you – I made a commitment to writing more often this year and so far the blog(s) have received a 12% increase in traffic over the first 3 months of last year, especially from countries outside the top 3 (US/UK/Canada) so thank you so much for reading, commenting and sharing. It’s nice to know the audience keeps growing, in fact March saw the most visits in the last fifteen months which was excellent. Thank you.

I’ll be back with more soon, don’t forget to enter the competition from the last post if you haven’t already done so and keep an eye on the sister site for more updates too.

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pixel The Ivy House, a pub where Joe Strummer played is being saved


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