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TERRELL’S TUNE-UP

Steve Terrell pop cd reviews

Celebrating a patriotic punk Some of the interviews are gushing. Steve Buscemi, who was in the Jim
Joe Strummer was so bored with the USA. He identified more with the Jarmusch movie Mystery Train with Strummer, confesses that he was just as
Sandinistas than he did with Ronald Reagan. Yet he loved America. He nervous to be working with the rocker as he would be working with Brando
loved the craziness of the cities and the weirdness of the countryside. or De Niro. Bono does a typical Bono rap about how important The Clash was.
He loved cowboy stuff, big cars, big pizzas, big drinks, and, of course, But some are not so worshipful. Mick Jones still seems to feel pain about
the music — Woody Guthrie, Elvis, the Bobby Fuller Four, Bukka White, being kicked out of The Clash. One old friend calls Strummer a coward.
Eddie Cochran, and the MC5. He probably would have agreed with Leonard Strummer was born John Graham Mellor in 1952 in Turkey, where his father
Cohen that America is “the cradle of the best and the worst.” (who was born in India) was a British diplomat. Strummer spent part of his
“He knew the culture of America,” says Joe Ely in The Future Is Unwritten, childhood in Egypt and Mexico and was sent off to boarding school in Surrey,
a documentary about Strummer. Ely, a country rocker from Texas, toured England, along with his brother, David. The film tells of David’s suicide and
with Strummer and The Clash about 30 or so years ago. “He knew the how that tormented Strummer.
culture. He knew the music of it backward and forward. And so we hit it Hooked on American folk music, Strummer took the name Woody, prob-
off immediately. Here was this unlikely meeting of two guys who grew up ably in honor of the Dust Bowl balladeer. He attended art college in Wales,
thousands of miles apart. But the same things moved us.” busked on the London underground, and then became leader of the 101ers,
Maybe he was a Brit — technically. But The Future Is Unwritten reminds us a band of fellow squatters. (The group performed the New Orleans classic
that Strummer can also be seen as a great American, one worth celebrating “Junko Partner” years before The Clash did.)
this Fourth of July. Had he been around in 1773 he’d have helped us dump tea By the mid ’70s, Strummer shed his new name and snapped at anyone
in the harbor. And after the revolution, he’d have provided the soundtracks to who called him Woody. He was becoming Joe Strummer. “I can only play all
Shays’ Rebellion and the Whiskey Rebellion. strings or none,” he explains in the documentary. “And not all the fiddley
The Future Is Unwritten, directed by Julien Temple, tells Strummer’s story: bits. That’s why I called myself Joe Strummer.”
from his boyhood, through his years as the leader of a hippie/squatter band, During The Clash years segment, the movie takes on a bit of a VH1
through the glory years of The Clash, through the lean years when his music Behind the Music veneer. There’s some great footage of the band, but soon
was scarce and obscure, and though his musical rebirth leading a band called the creativity, energy, and idealism are crushed beneath the weight of egos,
The Mescaleros — a comeback cut short by his unexpected death in 2002. drugs, management problems, “creative differences,” and most of the other
The movie is scheduled for release on DVD on Tuesday, July 8. crap that kills great bands — except airplane crashes and Yoko Ono. “We
Temple — who created two Sex Pistols movies, The Great Rock ’n’ Roll have fallen into every pitfall that you can possibly fall into ... and invented
Swindle and The Filth & The Fury — tells Strummer’s story through family some new ones along the way,” Strummer says in the film.
movies and photos as well as through footage that Temple shot during There are many memorable moments in the documentary. Jarmusch
the pioneer days of punk rock. There are clips from a BBC film of George talks about seeing Strummer weep when he saw a television news report of
Orwell’s 1984 and an animated Animal Farm. There are Strummer doodles American troops listening to The Clash’s “Rock the Casbah” as they were
brought to life through animation. And there are interviews with the bombing Iraq during the 1991 Gulf War. There’s the interview in which
musician’s friends, family, and celebrity admirers — almost all of which are Strummer rants about anti-smoking laws, saying that nobody who doesn’t
set around campfires in both rural and urban locales. smoke should be allowed to buy works created by artists who do smoke.
And there’s the moment when the 1990s Strummer is raving about raves.
Even though earlier in the film he snarls, “Hippies can shove off,” by the ’90s,
Strummer says, “Quite frankly I am a hippie. I want to be a hippie. Punks and
hippies are now fighting together here in England. ... In fact, you can’t tell
them apart. And they’re coming together in some new strange style.”
Yes, basically, Strummer was just a big bundle of contradictions. Light some
fireworks for him on the Fourth. Check out joestrummerthemovie.com.

Also noted:
▼ The Clash Live: Revolution Rock. Except for the music here — 22 Clash
songs recorded at various concerts and television appearances between 1977
and 1983 — the best thing about this DVD (released earlier this year) is that
it gives you the option of “just play music” and skipping the cheesy narration,
AP Photo/Mario Cabrera

which tells the story of the rise and fall of the band.
The music, indeed, is great. But if you already own The Essential Clash
DVD or the movie Rude Boy you already have several of these performances.
Weren’t there other versions of these songs that could have been used?
One twisted little treat is a bonus feature — The Clash’s 1981 interview
with the ultimate befuddled American squarejohn Tom Snyder, who is, as
usual, unintentionally funny here. But Snyder’s weird sincerity sometimes
get sincere responses from band members. Even so, Strummer, at one point,
Head of the clash: from left, Joe Strummer, Paul Simonon, Topper Headon,
and Mick Jones gets away with quoting “They’re Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!” ◀

20 July 4 - 10, 2008

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