Billy on Joe

Here’s a great obit for Joe Strummer by Billy Bragg which I got from Blogjam

Billy Bragg: The Joe I knew

By Billy Bragg
Musician and songwriter

The Clash were the greatest rebel rock band of all time. Their
commitment to making political pop culture was the defining mark of the
British punk movement.

They were also a self-mythologising, style-obsessed mass of contradictions.

That's why they were called The Clash.

They wanted desperately to be rock stars but they also wanted to make a
difference.

While Paul Simonon flashed his glorious cheekbones and Mick Jones threw
guitar hero shapes, no-one struggled more manfully with the gap between
the myth and the reality of being a spokesman for your generation than
Joe Strummer.

All musicians start out with ideals but hanging on to them in the face
of media scrutiny takes real integrity.

Tougher still is to live up to the ideals of your dedicated fans.

Joe opened the back door of the theatre and let us in, he sneaked us
back to the hotel for a beer, he too believed in the righteous power of
rock'n'roll.

And if he didn't change the world he changed our perception of it. He
crossed the dynamicism of punk with Johnny Too Bad and started that
punky-reggae party.

Radical band

He drew us, thousands strong, onto the streets of London in support of
Rock Against Racism.

He sent us into the the garage to crank up our electric guitars. He made
me cut my hair.

The ideals that still motivate me as an artist come not from punk, not
even from the Clash, but from Joe Strummer.

The first wave of punk bands had a rather ambivalent attitude to the
politics of late 70s Britain. The Sex Pistols, The Damned, the
Stranglers, none of them, not even the Jam, came close to the radicalism
that informed everything the Clash did and said.

The US punk scene was even less committed. The Ramones, Talking Heads,
Heartbreakers and Blondie all were devoid of politics.

Were it not for the Clash, punk would have been just a sneer, a safety
pin and a pair of bondage trousers.

Instead, the incendiary lyrics of the Clash inspired 1,000 more bands on
both sides of the Atlantic to spring up and challenge their elders and
the man that we all looked to was Joe Strummer.

Inspiring form

He was the White Man in Hammersmith Palais who influenced the Two Tone
Movement. He kept it real and inspired the Manic Street Preachers.

And he never lost our respect. His recent albums with the Mescaleros
found him on inspiring form once again, mixing and matching styles and
rhythms in celebration of multi-culturalism.

At his final gig, in November in London, Mick Jones got up with him and
together they played a few old Clash tunes.

It was a benefit concert for the firefighters union.

One of the hardest things to do in rock'n'roll is walk it like you talk it.

Joe Strummer epitomised that ideal and I will miss him greatly.

1 Comment on “Billy on Joe”


  1. 1 Dad

    Hmmm, interesting that, along with Madonna’s rather ugly title track, the “other” song on the Bond movie Die Another Day was “London Calling”. Strummer got a good obit in the Houston Chronicle today, which says volumes so far from his home.

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