Every creative work begins with a draftâor two, or three, or four. Great American novel, iconic painting, generation-defining poem, album of the decade⦠each represents a palimpsest of sketches, blind alleys, dead ends, demos, and outtakes. So itâs no great surprise to learn that London Calling, the Clashâs double-album masterpiece, exists as an earlier version, recorded by the band themselves on four-track tape machines at their rehearsal space in central London. What is maybe surprising is how good these early recordings are, and that they exist at all. Called The Vanilla Tapes, after the name of their studio, the tapesâthough certainly roughârepresent what The Guardian calls âa collection of demos and rehearsals that still manage to sound more focused, intelligent and relevant than most of todayâs young pretenders.â No need to name names; itâs not much of a stretch to say that no rock and roll band today sounds as interesting as the Clash did in their practices 25 years ago.
Recorded in 1979, then lost, it seemed, forever, the tapes lived only in rumors and sly hints dropped by Joe Strummer of a self-recorded LP. That is until March of 2004, when Mick Jones discovered them in a box and ârecognized them instantly for what they were.â The tapes, he said, âhadnât been heard since before the record was made. It was pretty amazing.â These versions, writes Pat Gilbert at Mojo, are âclean, bright recordings that reveal a group who are evidently enjoying creating something organic and musical.â
Paulâs bass walks, hops and lopes as he feels himself into jazz, funk and disco. Mick plays economically, expertly and fluidly â intelligent licks and chops. Joeâs rhythm guitar cuts through like a man who learned his craft from old Bo Diddley, Bukka White and Chuck Berry records. Topper is magnificent â light, precise and clever. Itâs London Calling stripped bare for combo playing: no horns, Hammond, piano, whistling.
At the top of the post, hear a rough take of âLondon Calling.â Aside from some hesitancy in Strummerâs delivery and a somewhat plodding opening, the recording capturesâperhaps even more than the studio takeâthe apocalyptic dread of the songâs lyrical imagery. Some of the lines are differentâLondon calls to the âthe fools and the clownsâ and âthe mods on the run.” But this early version does have Strummerâs werewolf howl and canny summation of the turn-of-the decade zeitgeist. Above, we have the Vanilla Tapes version of âRudie Canât Failâ in all its funky ska immediacy. (Notice the descending melody in the chorus—which I almost like better than the album version’s ascending chorus—and the toasting interjections.) Just below, hear âHeart and Mind,â one of “five completely unknown Clash songsâ that appears on the tapes, âa rocker,â writes Gilbert, âpitched somewhere between âThe Prisonerâ and âDeath or Glory.ââ
Why this didnât make the album, weâll maybe never know, but the chorus is greatââYouâve got a heart / Youâve got a mind / But you canât / Keep them in time.â The other four unearthed outtakes are “Where You Gonna Go (Soweto),” a rockabilly tune called “Lonesome Me,” “bluesy instrumental “Walking the Sidewalk,” and a reggae version of Bob Dylanâs âThe Man in Me.â The tapes âincluded 37 tracks in total⦠pared downâ for release âto the 21 best versions.â Missing from The Vanilla Tapes are London Calling tracks âSpanish Bombs,â âThe Card Cheat,â âWrong âEm Boyo,â and âTrain in Vain,â confirming âthe received wisdom that (except âWrong âEm Boyoâ), these were written when The Clash were in Wessex recording the album proper.â
âMuddy, raw, and insistently vague,â writes Pitchfork, the tapes see the band âworking hard, but also grasping for a muse.â They found a guiding creative force in producer Guy Stevens, who crafted their demos into the more polished, but still rough enough for punk, studio versions we know well. But even without the benefit of comparison with the brilliant realizations on the record, these early versions stand up on their own as the sound of a band with more rangy creative energy than most groups can muster over their entire careers. The tapes were included in the 25th anniversary legacy edition of London Calling, but you can hear them all on Youtube (listen to âLost in the Supermarketâ above). Like some commenters, you might be surprised to find you like some of these raw demos even better than their celebrated studio versions.
Related Content:
Surviving Members of The Clash Recount the Making of âLondon Callingâ & Discuss New Box Set
Watch Audio Ammunition: Googleâs New Documentary Series on The Clash and Their Five Classic Albums
Documentary Viva Joe Strummer: The Story of the Clash Surveys the Career of Rockâs Beloved Frontman
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
Hear The Clash’s Vanilla Tapes, Demos of Nearly Every Song From London Calling is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Hear The Clashâs Vanilla Tapes, Demos of Nearly Every Song From London Calling
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