Strummer on Man, God, Law - and the Clash
Has Joe Strummer lost his ambition and Drive? It was strange last month to see one of rock's all-time most
involving performers serving simply as a sideman for another
band, even one as colorful as the Irish folk-punkers the Pogues.
The former Clash Leader's more familiar position is at the eye of
the rock 'n' roll hurricane. It's also odd that Strummer, who filled in on rhythm guitar on
the Pogues recent U.S. tour, dismisses his recent activity doing
music for the films "Sid and Nancy" and
"Walker," a bit of acting, the Pogues gig -as
"holiday." "I just want to go back to rockin'," Strummer said,
"but I'm uncertain as to what to actually do . . . . The
truth is, I never stopped thinking about rock 'n' roll for a
second that I'm on holiday." The ragged-voiced Strummer led the Clash through a stormy
10-year career that began in 1976 when the London band emerged as
the English punk group. Unlike many of their cohorts, Strummer,
guitarist Mick Jones, bassist Paul Simonon and drummer Topper
Headon survived that intense, brief period, first broadening
their music and finding a larger audience with 1979's London
Calling, and hitting the Top 10 in 1982 with the single
"Rock the Casbah," from the million selling LP Combat
Rock. But things were coming apart. Headon had been fired because of
his drug use, and Jones was given the boot in '83. There was one
more album with a revamped lineup, 1985's Cut the Crap,
but Strummer regrets that move, even referring to that band by a
different- name: "the Clash Mark Two." Since then, one of rock's most colorful, impetuous and
provocative figures has kept a low profile. Though he claims his
creativity is undiminished, he's found that age and fatherhood
have changed his priorities, and he's not ready to commit himself
to anything like a Joe Strummer rock album right now. Sitting down for an interview in the small bar of the West
Hollywood hotel, Strummer, 35, was sharp, loquacious and given to
a salty vocabulary that would make Tom Lasorda blush. But into
his second Margarita his mood darkened slightly as he considered
more cosmic issues. Carefully balancing a small acoustic guitar on the floor
behind his bar stool, he started off, in his thick Cockney
accent, talking about music today. Joe Strummer: What's holding me up is I'm confused about the
nature of the music. Because the modern music doesn't reach me. I
mean to say the sound of the modern electric production. A lot of
sequencers. . . synths. That's what people are buying. Because
that doesn't reach me, it throws me back to like 1948, but I
don't want to be there. Back there, I'm talking about blues
records . . . . The roots of rock 'n' roll is rhythm and blues
and that's like really where I'm at, where I was always at. I want to go back to '48 because something there that isn't
now. But then I don't want to re-create '48, OK, that would be a
jive. So, therefore, I'm kind of just basically juggling with
that. Also I don't like the idea that people who aren't adolescents
make records. Adolescents make the best records. Except for Paul
Simon. Except for Graceland. He's hit a new plateau there,
but he's writing to his own age group. Graceland is
something new. That song to his son is just as good as "Blue
Suede Shoes": "Before you were born dude when life was
great." That's just as good as "Blue Suede Shoes,"
and that is a new dimension. Question: What are your feelings looking back at "Clash
Mark Two"? Was it a mistake? JS: Yeah. If you're allowed to make your mistakes, I think you
should. But people don't really like hearing you admit them.
Although I'd never wanted to dump on the musicians that were
involved in that . . . . Because it was not their fault. The problem was really that we shouldn't have done it. I felt
they were haplessly involved in something that they shouldn't
have been involved in, and I always felt bad that when I
eventually decided it was forget-its-ville, that it might have
reflected on them. 'Cause it shouldn't have. Q: Why did you do it? Were you trying to prove something? JS: Yeah. I was trying to prove that I was the Clash and it
wasn't Mick (Jones). I learned that that was kind of dumb. I
learned that it wasn't anybody, except maybe a great chemistry
between us four, and I really learned it was over the day we
sacked Topper, and not the day we sacked Mick. There was quite
some time between them. We played a whole tour between those
times. But it was the day we sacked Tops. Because it's between humans. (Clash managers) Bernie Rhodes
and Cosmo Vinyl I think perhaps didn't understand that. You
couldn't just jigsaw-puzzle it, take out a piece and put in
another piece. That it was something weird between four humans
that when they played it sounded OK, you know. And that's fairly
rare, that's all. And when we knocked out Topper for excessive drug abuse, I
don't, think honest to God, we ever played a good gig after that.
Except for one night in New Jersey we played a good one, but I
reckon that was just by the law of averages. Out of a 30 gig
tour, one night, you've got to say it's a fluke. Q: Could Topper have continued to function? JS: Yeah, considering what happened straight after that when
everybody I bloody knew in London was on smack. I mean it wasn't
rare, it was like ho hum, who isn't? I think we could have. But
then we were ignorant . It was like hoo hoo hoo, the big heroin,
horse. I didn't know anything about it . It was only after we
fired Topper and my friends began to go down like flies. Now most
of my friends in London are in Narcotics Anonymous. They can't
even have a glass of wine. Just cigarettes and coffee. It's
forever. I never liked heroin. I never even took it. I might have
smoked it once in Holland. I remember the bloke said, "Zis
next joint has the heroin in it." . . . I took like a show
puff, the one where you keep it in your mouth . . . . And that
was the only time I ever got really near heroin. Q: Was the Clash as political as people made it out ? JS: Probably not. I always tried to stress that in the later
interviews. I didn't want to pretend to be somebody I wasn't. I
kept saying, "Hey you know, we're drug addict
musicians." That's what I used to say to journalists --
"Hang on, don't get the wrong idea that were carrying around
'Das Kapital' and loads of pamphlets." We had Mott the
Hoople records and reefer, you know'? I often felt that all got a bit unbalanced. I kept trying to
stress that -"Hang on, we're be-bop guys, we're down in the
alley on 57th Street. We're not in there with John Reed and
"Ten Days That Shook the World." We'd be in the alley
with (Charlie) Parker shooting up junk. That's where we were at
really. I mean not shooting up junk, but if you had to say which
camp are you in I'd have to say hey, we were up Bop Alley. I
often felt worried that people thought we were Che Guevara. Q: Where did the politics come from? JS: Don't misconstrue me. I'm a human being. I'm not dumping
on what I've done. I mean I know we were doing social (stuff),
all right? I just don't like boastin' about it, OK? I know what
we were doin'. I know damn well what we did. But I ain't gonna
start crying about it now, all right? But the fact is that we were drug addict musicians first and
foremost. We loved Chuck Berry, Slim Harpo. We never heard of
Friedrich Engels, you know what I mean? The politics were on the
street in front of us, man. I didn't have anywhere to live. Don't
ask me where my politics came from. I couldn't find anywhere to
live. I was willing to wash dishes. I washed plenty of dishes. I
dug graves. I cleaned the toilets. I'm not joking on any of
these. None of that is an exaggeration. I did exactly what I say.
I washed dishes, made omelets, I dug graves, cleaned toilets. And
cut grass in the parks. I did the usual things that young men do.
I didn't have nothin, behind me. I didn't have nowhere to live. Q: What are you proudest of that the Clash did? JS: "Rock the Casbah." It's such a groove. Long live
groove. Screw the rest of it. Meanwhile can I interject something about "Rock the
Casbah" here? The true genius of "Rock the Casbah"
is Topper Headon. I was in Electric Ladyland (studio) and he
said, "Look, I've got this tune, can I put it down?" I
said, "OK, Tops, let's put it down . . . ." He ran out
in the studio and banged down the drum track to "Rock the
Casbah." And then he ran over to the piano and he banged
down the piano track to it, and then ran over to the bass and he
banged down the bass part. This is, like, I suppose, within 25
minutes, and "Rock the Casbah" is there, boom. Topper
Headon did that in 25 minutes. And now he's serving 15 months in
(prison) . . . . For partially supplying the heroin that killed
some guy. Q: Where's your home? JS: I live in West London. I grew up in Ankara. It's the
capital of Turkey. My father was in the foreign I was born there.
I also have Armenian blood. And Scottish . . . . I grew up 18
months in Turkey, 18 months in Cairo, two years in Mexico, two
years in West Germany, then I went to boarding school in Epsom
and I visited my parents in Tehran for 5 years, and then Malawi
for a few years, and then went to art school, dropped out, became
a bum, better chew gum. Q: Are you married? JS: I have two children, with a girl I've lived with for 10
years. Two girls, aged 4 and 2. And we live in West London. Q: Are you uncomfortable talking about your personal life? JS: Do I give that impression? Well I don't hide nothin'. Q: Did the birth of your daughter change your outlook? JS: I'll tell you something. When you see you become part of
the cycle of generations, you lose your ego in the process,
because you ain't nothin' special. You're just another cipher in
the generations. When you devote all your interest into another
person, you lose your self-obsession, and that's when you
understand what it is. You don't know (anything) without that
moment. You don't want anything to harm this helpless being.
That's a fantastic change. And that's when you understand what's
happening. I never understood anything until my first baby looked
at me. I didn't understand (anything). Now I understand. Q: Are you as driven to create as you were, to make music? JS: Creativity don't stop. It just gets more intense if you
feed it right. The only people that have to worry about their
creativity is the junkies. The coke freaks and the heroin freaks,
they're the ones that have to worry.... Bet you Paul Simon ain't
no coke freak or no junk freak, you know. Q: Do you feel good about things now generally? JS: Oh man, you know. There's certain things you gotta decide
in life.... If you ain't confronting them--if you ain't thinkin'
about man and God and law, then you ain't thinkin' about nothin'.
There ain't no use thinkin' about sex or drugs or rock 'n' roll.
That's all red heriings. If you ain't thinkin' about man and God
and law then you ain't thinkin' about nothin'. Q: What do you think about man and God and law? Do you believe
in God? JS: Well, I would say it was about time that you believe in
something. And sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll ain't it.... A lot
of people used to think they were. Cromelin, Richard. Los Angeles Times January 31, 1988