#THE CLASH band
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QUOTE OF THE DAY: "NO BEATLES, ELVIS, OR THE ROLLING STONES IN 1977!"
PIC(S) INFO: Mega spotlight on live shots of London, UK punk rock band THE CLASH, performing live at the Electric Circus, greater Manchester, UK, c. 1977. đ¸: Kevin Cummins.
Source: www.threads.net/@the_clash/post/C6t9qrtoUF4.
#THE CLASH#THE CLASH UK#THE CLASH band#1977 CLASH#THE CLASH 1977#CLASH 1977#77 CLASH#UK punk#Punk rock#English punk#London punk#Punk Style#77 punk#1977#70s punk#CLASH#Punk gigs#Live gigs#The Electric Circus UK#The Electric Circus#Punk photography#Punk fashion#Mick Jones#Joe Strummer#Paul Simonon#Manchester UK#First Wave UK punk#Kevin Cummins#Super Seventies#Kevin Cummins photography
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The Clash in a New York taxicab , 1982 .Â
Šď¸Â Dave Hogan/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
#paul simonon#terry chimes#joe strummer#mickjones#the clash#punk boy#80s punk#70s punk#uk punk#punk rock#new wave#post punk#experimental rock#reggae#dub#funk#ska#rockabilly#punk aesthetic#the only band that matters#black and white photography#punk attitude#new york#1982#dave hogan#hulton archive#getty images
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"Uh, you can start with these," Eddie said, handing Steve a few of his CDs. "There's Dio, Ozzy, and Iron Maiden."
Steve took them gratefully. "Thanks. The kids tell me Wham! won't cut it for the car."
Eddie smiled. "Yeah, no." He turned back to his CD rack. "I also have less metal and more punk, but I feel like the kids wouldn't like that. But like, uh, Dead Kennedys and The Queers. Also Sex Pistols, but they're kinda basic. And I know Baby Byers is familiar with The Clash, so..." he laughed awkwardly, realizing he was rambling.
Steve was listening with interest. He would never admit it, but he liked hearing Eddie talk. "I think these three are good," he said finally, holding up the CDs. "Thanks again."
"Yeah no problem," Eddie walked him to the door.
Steve walked down the grass before Eddie called out to him, "A Different Corner! It's a good song!"
Steve turned around, looking confused and Eddie chuckled awkwardly, scratching his head. "Uh, Wham!-?"
Steve nodded in understanding. "I dunno, I'd say pretty basic," he said, copying Eddie's earlier words and he continued to walk back with a smile on his face, leaving Eddie standing by the door of the trailer.
"Bastard," Eddie muttered, closing the door, smiling wide.
#music is good for you#stranger things#steve harrington#steddie#eddie munson#music#bands#80s bands#wham!#dio band#dio#ozzy osbourne#iron maiden#dead kennedys#the queers band#would recommend#the queers#sex pistols#i like them dont get me wrong but theyre overrated#the clash#will byers#metal music#punk music#alternative music#alt music#steddie fic#fic idea
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#the clash#joe strummer#mick jones#paul simonon#topper headon#london calling#combat rock#punk rock#punk band
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Coming at you LIVE from my bedroom, is Tim in his bedroom!
This is a dc gotcha for Gaza prompt! Was excited to do this one, and naturally went overboard with the background!
#peculiar art#dc comics#robin#red robin#tim drake#batman#dc gatcha for gaza#WE LOVE TIM IN THIS HOUSE apparently#Iâm tagging the bands. sorry everyone else.#nirvana#the clash#green day#the one you can barely see is a black canary poster#lol#the whole Batfam are fans of her?? canonically?? theyâve all worn her merchâ#yj98#young justice#teen titans
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me when i mention palestine in 1978 and there's still people that deny its existence in 2024
and before you go "this song is about terrorism!!!!" it's majorly about terrorism by the german RAF and italian BR and members of the clash also have openly supported palestine
if you're punk you're against the israeli genocide of palestine and nothing less
source for images above
#free gaza#free rafah#gaza genocide#free palestine#palestine#gaza strip#rafah#punk rock#punk#the clash#punk band#punk music#saves
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extra shirts i have but didn't include in my last post
#where there's half a closet of goth/punk clothes is the other half of merch and weird shirts#cw eyestrain#cw suggestive#<- prev tag just in case for the pekpek shirt lmao#i rarely wear the jollibee one cause that specific shade of pink clashes with my skin sigh#but i adore that stupid âsubwayâ shirt it brings me joy#pingdoobles#also i need more fnaf merch damn it#i have too many band tees (but my laufey hoodie is my prized possession i will die with it on)
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THE PINK STREET CRED REVOLUTION OF FIRST WAVE UK PUNK ON FULL DISPLAY.
PIC(S) INFO: Mega spotlight on the Dutch pressing of "(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais," b/w "The Prisoner," 7 inch vinyl single by UK punk rock band, THE CLASH, released in 1978 under CBS Records. From the private collection of @completecontrol77, uploaded in July 2024.
Source: www.picuki.com/media/3388816177578268497.
#THE CLASH#THE CLASH 1978#Joe Strummer#Mick Jones#Topper Headon#THE CLASH UK#THE CLASH band#Paul Simonon#UK punk#First Wave UK punk#London punk#Punk rock#Punk#70s punk#Super Seventies#Records#THE CLASH The Prisoner#CBS Records#CBS#THE CLASH White Man in Hammersmith Palais#Dutch Vinyl#Made in Holland#1970s#Vinyl#Punk Vinyl#Reggae#Dutch Records#Reggay#Holland#70s
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The Clash performing live at the Vorst Nationaal , Forest , Brussels-Capital Region , Belgium , 1979 .
ÂŠď¸ Gie Knaeps/Getty Images
#mick jones#joe strummer#the clash#punk boy#punk aesthetic#70s punk#80s punk#uk punk#punk rock#new wave#post punk#experimental rock#reggae#dub#funk#ska#rockabilly#the only band that matters#black and white photography#vorst nationaal#forest#brussels-capital region#belgium#1979#gie knaeps#getty images
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13-year old Winona Ryder (next to Allison Hart, another young actress of the mid-'80s) sporting a Clash t-shirt during her first movie audition back in 1984. According to the Reddit thread this was found on, the movie was Desert Bloom and she didnât get the role but her audition tape made its way to an agency which led her to be cast in her first film Lucas.
Ryder has explained how she was considered 'different' during her high school years, when she used to sport a boy-ish short haircut and dress in menswear -which actually resulted in her getting horribly harassed and bullied at school: "âŚpeople thought I was a boy. At the time, I was obsessed with Bugsy Malone but also very into the Clash and the Replacements. I believe my friend cut my hair, and I remember reading somewhere that if you mixed beer and egg whites and put it in your hair, you could get it spiky like that."
(via & via)
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arctic monkeys for clash magazine, april 2010
ON THE ROAD WITH⌠ARCTIC MONKEYS
Words by Simon Harper Photos by Jason Joyce
As Britainâs favourite band headed out on the European leg of their âHumbugâ tour, Clash discovered that Arctic Monkeys were less sex, drugs, and rock ânâ roll, and more cakes, ping-pong and Coco PopsâŚ
The city of Offenbach, about twenty minutes south of Frankfurt, was once noted for its abundant leather industry, and is currently the base of the German weather service, but such claims donât negate the fact that itâs basically a sterile, grey, typically German suburban borough. The arrival of a fleet of trucks and buses, carrying Arctic Monkeys, their crew and stage gear, heralded the notion that for one night only, Offenbach may just come alive with suitably bustling energy.
Offenbachâs Stadthalle is the smallest venue on the Monkeysâ three-week tour of Western Europe. The band have been through Portugal, Spain and France, and know how to kill time during the day while everyone works around them, building the stage for that nightâs show. And so, when Clash finds them, upstairs in the Stadthalleâs back rooms, theyâre in the middle of a fierce ping-pong match â the game scores being tallied up across the tour. The table, it transpires, is the bandâs own, and follows them wherever they go. A set of football goals lie waiting for action, but the small white balls prove more enticing.
Itâs a cold, February Tuesday, and these back rooms are where the band will spend the whole day.
Previous encounters with Arctic Monkeys have been somewhat tough â notoriously reticent and famously press-shy, thereâs a tangible wall that surrounds them, which is seemingly hard to penetrate. Suspicious stares cut through you, while succinct answers frustrate you. Today, however, they couldnât be more accommodating.
Clash sits with the quartet in the band-only room, where their personal equipment is kept in a vertical flight case of drawers, and a small fridge is at hand for cold beers. Nick OâMalley, Jamie Cook and Matt Helders sprawl on the leather couches, while Alex Turner perches on the table, often pacing the room, then escaping in search of a lighter. Weâre here to talk about life on the road. What starts as an interview eventually descends into louche conversation; daft chat punctuated by much laughter. Perhaps theyâre glad to see a friendly face; perhaps the monotony of touring makes them crave any respite; perhaps thereâs nothing better to do in Offenbach.
Is being on tour like real life, or does it feel like youâre detached from what real life is?
Matt: Itâs probably real life. It doesnât seem like itâs too separate or miles away.
When you go home is that normality or is it just a continuation of what you do on the road?
Matt: I donât find it hard to settle back and switch between the two.
Nick: You feel like youâre unemployed when you go home properly.
Like youâve got nothing to do?
Nick: Yeah, or like if youâve got a couple of weeks off.
Matt: Like school holidays.
Alex: Does that make this school then?
Matt: Yeah, but itâs like basketball camp or something you enjoy.
How do your friendships cope with life on the road?Â
Matt: Itâs fine.
Nick: Yeah. We know how to not annoy each other. Weâve never really had friction, because weâve all got a similar outlook on how not to annoy people, I suppose, so thereâs never really been any problems.
Alex: (Mock nastily) Thatâs what you think, mate.
Nick: (Laughs) I suppose if you see the same people every day, after a while youâre bound to get a bit annoyed, but as long as you keep in your mind that itâs just because of the situation and not because you donât like the person, then you can kind of avoid outbursts that you might not mean. Itâs never really been a problem so far.
Do you notice a huge cultural difference between touring Europe and America?Â
Alex: Even between places in Europe. I mean, often, to be honest, certainly at this stage that weâre at, days like today arenât uncommon, where youâre out of town and you donât even really see where you are, as Iâm sure youâre aware. But you can really tell the difference just in the show, from the crowd. We did Madrid and Barcelona over tâweekend, and last week Portugal, and they were really excitable and there was like a frenzy going on when we were playing. Whereas I think crowds elsewhere can be a bit more reserved, canât they, depending on where it is. I reckon one of the best crowds on this tour was a gig we did last week in Porto. Weâve never played there before. There was this real appreciation or something just from the start. You can just sort of feel it, canât you; âWeâre all here to have a laughâ.
Alex lives in the States now. Have any of you considered moving to somewhere youâve visited on tour?
Matt: Yeah. Itâs good that you do get to see places that you might consider moving, like Berlin. I could imagine living there.
Does living apart make you appreciate each other more when youâre back together?
Jamie: [Long pause] MmmmâŚyeah.
Gone are the days when youâre living round the corner from each other.
Alex: Yeah, I suppose thatâs true. Youâve got to sort of organise to be in one place. I suppose that is a bit of an inconvenient drag.
Are there any essential items that you have to pack before you come out on tour?
Jamie: One of them rolly things that gets fluff of your coat. (All laugh)
Alex: I feel like youâre a lot better equipped than the rest of us with things like that.
Yeah, youâre looking very bobble-less.
Jamie: Ah, cheers. Yeah, I did it this morning actually. A quick roll.
Matt: A skipping rope â except I forgot it this time. Iâve lost mine.
Nick: DVDs, stuff like that.
A ping-pong table?
Jamie: A ping-pong table is essential actually. I donât think weâd go on tour without that.
Alex: Some kind of seriesâŚ
Matt: A box-set.
Alex: Kinda really discovered that this last year. It was summat Iâd never really got into before.
Nick: Any HBO series.
Alex: (Laughs) Yeah. Iâve really learned to appreciate that sort of continuum, because you can follow a thread.
Matt: You know what you need to do the next day.
What have you been watching?
Alex: Weâve got into Deadwood a bit on the last tour. Thatâs whatâs been missing, I think, for me on this tour, some sort of thing like that.
Have you done The Wire?
Alex: Yeah. Â I went Wire mad on that tour. I just got so greedy. I get so greedy with them things.
Matt: I couldnât catch up.
Jamie: Yeah, he ditched everyone. I got ditched on tâsecond series!
Matt: Six in tâmorning, I could hear him.
Jamie: Youâd get up and that [theme] song would be on. Itâd just be crisps all over, a bottle ofâŚ
Nick: âWire Beastâs been up all night again!â
Alex: âWhereâd you get that dressing gown from?â
Jamie: Just laying there with crumbs all over him.
Have you ever had any scares at customs?Â
Nick: I got searched yesterday actually.
Matt: It was your squeaky wheels, just as Iâd said. I said, âThem wheels are gonna attract attention.â
Nick: In Germany. A very thorough search, but luckily no glove action.
Jamie: They probably wanted to mend your wheels for you.
Matt: âIâve got summat for that, some GT85.â
Nick: They were really suspicious of me. They really took everything apart and didnât put it back as neat as Iâd put it in.
Alex: At this end, yesterday?
Nick: Yeah, when we arrived in âMunchenâ.
Alex: Theyâre quite, like, strict, arenât they, Bavarian authorities.
Nick: Yeah. They had a look at me belt, everything. All me case and bag. Took everything apart. Then he were like, âWhere have you come from?â I went, âBarcelonaâ. He were like, âHave you had any contact with drugs in Barcelona?â I went, âNo.â He went, âWhat do you do?â I said, âIâm in a band.â And he went, âAhâ, and then, like, swabbed everything.
Alex: When I got in tâcar yesterday, the fella were like, [German accent] âIf you like to do drugs, do not try and do it in Bavaria.â
American customs scare me most.Â
Matt: Yeah, itâs a load of questions.
Alex: âWhat are you doing here?â
Jamie: New Zealand were quite funny. We all got pulledâŚ
Matt: We had to sit in them chairs for a bitâŚ
Jamie: And this guy was asking us directly the last time we ever did drugs. Then someone came over who worked for usâŚand he soon disappeared rather fast. We were fine. (All laugh)
Alex: Iâve come to quite enjoy the American customs people. (All laugh)
Matt: Theyâve always got weird names.
Alex: Theyâre like, [American accent] âSo youâre in a band, huh?â You go, âYeah, yeah.â âWhat do you do in the band?â âOh, Iâm the singer.â âYeah? You donât look like a singer to me.â
Nick: âDo you sound like Coldplay?â
Alex: Yeah, âWhat kind of music do you guys play?â
Jamie: âDo you sound like Staind?â I went like, âStaind? I know them⌠Fuckinâ hell!â It took me ages. âYeah, yeah, we sound a bit like Staind.â When he said it I were like, âYeah, a bit.â
Youâve said before that you wanted to try and get an album out this year. Do you get any time on the road to do any work on that?
Alex: Not really. Thatâs a bit of a pain in the arse, not being able to rehearse and work stuff out. I donât think I write very good songs on târoad. Theyâre all a bit wonky. You get back and youâre like, âHmmmâ.
Does it detach you from what we were talking about earlier, âreal lifeâ? Does it detach you from the things that you want to be writing about?
Alex: I dunno. You can still use your imagination, but I just think, yeah, in your surroundings thereâs always about to be something thatâs going to happen. You canât think. I always write wherever I am, but I dunno if the things that come out when youâre touring around always have the shelf life that the other things do.
Have you got any songs earmarked for the next album?
Alex: Yeah. I mean, thereâs some ideas, but we havenât really had the chance to get out the fine toothed comb.
âHumbugâ was a departure in sound from your previous albums â do you think youâll continue in that direction, maybe bring Josh Homme in again?
Alex: Not sure, really. We would like to do something with Josh again â it was terrific for us to go on that adventure â but whether or not itâs this next thing, Iâm not sure. And also, like, heâs busy! (Laughs) Heâs got a schedule himself, doesnât he?
You went to record over in his place, so do you think next time youâll have him over to...
Alex: High Green? (Laughs) Homme in High Green? I quite fancy that.
Nick: Heâd look like a superhero in High Green, all the bad genetics there are in High Green. Heâd look amazing.
Matt: Heâd be the biggest man there.
Youâve released a couple of singles exclusively through Oxfam. What made you decide to do that?Â
Jamie: Laurence and Jonny at Domino came to us with that idea â a great idea for the charity reason, and then cos Woolworths and stuff had shut down, but there were always an Oxfam.
Alex: Like, in towns where there perhaps arenât, like, an Our Price or something.
Do you have to think of more creative ways to get your records out there?
Jamie: Yeah, rather than just sat at home.
Matt: They should think about making the journey exciting â paint paths a nice colour to the record shops.
Alex: The yellow brick road.
Matt: Something that makes people want to walk to a record shop. Even if itâs just free parking. (All laugh)
Jamie: Itâs just too easy to buy music now.
How do you feel as artists about the devaluing of music? Does it annoy you that youâre working hard to make something, but people can just pick it up from their friends?
Jamie: I suppose we were never in the industry when it were big money, when people used to sell twenty million albums. Has that ever happened since weâve been around?
Probably someone like Dido has.
Jamie: Yeah, that were probably the last.
Matt: Itâs like, we wouldnât expect anything like that to happen to us, soâŚ
Alex: I do think there is people that always will want to go and get records.
Matt: Yeah, it wonât change everybody.
Alex: I was reading a couple of months ago about thereâs an idea where you wonât even have â you know like you pull songs off iTunes or whatever â but they were saying you subscribe to a database and pay to get âemâŚ
Jamie: Spotify, thatâs what that was.
Alex: Yeah. But you canât get them onâŚ
It streams the music â you canât download them.
Alex: But you canât do that on your phone, can you?
Matt: Yeah, you can do Spotify on your phone if you pay about ÂŁ10 a month. Nokia did that thing where you can just pay a monthly thing and you can have as many as you wantâŚ
Alex: The fella had a quote, heâs like, âThereâs nothing sexy about an MP3 on your desktopâ. (Laughs) Heâs like, âThereâs nothing sexy about having a subscription to a databaseâ. (All laugh) But then you could just sort of buy a record and stand it up against your wall. Not that thatâs particularly sexy, but, you know what I mean⌠I like things that you can stand up.
Jamie: Like you said the other day, everyoneâs just gonna have an empty house.
Matt: Yeah, thereâs gonna be nothing on tâshelves. Not even books now.
Jamie: No oneâs got any photos anymore, no onesâs got any CDs or recordsâŚ
Matt: Youâll just have a screen and a chair.
Jamie: Youâll just go, âSound. This is sound.â
Matt: With nowt on your wall.
Jamie: You can just have everything [at your fingertips]; turn your fire on, open your curtainsâŚ
Alex: Youâd get in it for your bath. (All laugh)
[Alex goes into the bandâs equipment drawer, pulls out a giant figure of Freddie Mercury in full-on rock pose. âSee, he said he likes things that stand up,â Matt says.]
Does being on an independent label give you the freedom to experiment with your marketing or promotions?Â
Matt: Yeah. They [Domino] have as many ideas as us for stuff like that, like the Oxfam thing. They tend to think on a similar level, and, at the same time, if we have a suggestion, theyâre open to it. It sometimes is a good thing to have a label like Domino, cos theyâre experienced in doing weird stuff, and have obviously signed things that arenât necessarily to make any money or anything, so weâll listen to them if they have a suggestion, and vice versa. Theyâd put records out on tins of beans and all sorts. (All laugh)
Jamie: I wanted to do it on a conifer. I wanted to put an MP3 out on a conifer.
Matt: Or just seeds. Christmas tree seeds.
Alex: Yeah. What did they actually do?
Matt: Thereâs a Jewish guy, I forgot what his name is, and they did it on a kosher chicken noodle soup or something. You buy the soup and you get the code [for the MP3]. Which is good in a way, because heâs just poo-pooing the fact that thereâs not much point. Itâs an incentive, but it doesnât get it in the chart, you see. Itâs a give-away. So you can sell anything and just have an MP3 code on it. You can sell a car and youâd just get one song.
Jamie: But then it doesnât count towards tâcharts?
Matt: No. The Oxfam thing donât either, does it. Only the download bit does. Youâre not allowed to give away incentives like free stuff, because thatâs obviously encouraging people. See, thatâs the thing â people might buy the soup and not download the song. âI wonder if they make good soup?â
Jamie: When you see a good cover sometimesâŚ
Matt: Yeah, you buy it for the cover.
Alex: Perhaps the epitome of that is you buying a Lady Gaga picture disc. (Laughs)
Matt: Yeah, I did. Iâve been a fool.
Alex: Itâs great, cos sheâs wearing like a fuckinâ box of Coco Pops or something. (Laughs)
Matt: You could buy that Freddie Mercury thing and get a Queen album, for instance. You donât need to put it on or owt.
Jamie: You want to make it awkward.
Matt: Buy a chair. Buy a flat pack piece of furniture and you get a code for an album.
Jamie: You have to put your furniture up and send a picture to someone, then they send you the MP3.
Alex: That would make a good video: playing in a bowl of Coco Pops. (All laugh) Remember that kids programme where they used to have to go swimming in a bowl of cerealâŚ
Jamie: Ah yeah. Didnât they used to do something like that on The Big Breakfast?
Matt: They did, yeah.
Jamie: It were a massive cup of tea and you used to have to get the sugar lumpsâŚ
Matt: Yeah, yeah, that was it: One Lump Or Two.
Jamie: One Lump Or Two, yeah!
Alex: It would be great: kid comes down, heâs having his breakfast â Coco Pops â and then, like, Arctic Monkeys are in his cereal. (All laugh)
Jamie: Hot milk, though.
Matt: Hot milk in tâafternoon.
Alex: (Laughs) âWhy not try Coco Pops after school?â
Jamie: (Laughs) I love that advert!
Alex: Itâs the best!
Do your fans give you CDs of their bands?
Matt: They throw them on tâstage! Imagine if you got one of them in tâeye! Fuckinâ hell! Remember in America, a kid got on stage and he had a handful [of CDs] and someone had to grab him to get him off, but he threw them. So he were getting pulled away and he threw them.
Alex: Iâve been getting less CDs thoughâŚ
Matt: Now theyâre throwing download cards at you!
Alex: I got a pair of underpantsâŚ
Jamie: People are chucking downloads at you. Youâre like, âWhat the fuck?â
Matt: People are throwing zeroes and ones at you â itâs like the credits of The Matrix!
Jamie: You canât get any flick on a download.
Alex: Theyâre chucking Spotifys at me. Maybe thatâs what them pants were â some sort of code.
I think itâd be a totally different sort of code! Do you listen to the music that fans give you?
Matt: I listened to one that someone gave me the other day. It just were at home though, he just gave it me.
Alex: No more than Iâd wear that pair of pants! (Laughs)
Matt: It were just convenient â I were getting in me car and thereâs a CD player there.
Whatâs the strangest thing a fan has given you?
Matt: Just in Japan â everything you get is weird! Like, a monkey hat â it left your own face in but itâs got ears and a tail.
Jamie: And sweets.
Matt: A lot of sweets.
Jamie: We once said, âOh, we like these sweetsâ in an interviewâŚ
Nick: Thereâs someone that makes baked goods.
Matt: You got a good one, where it were like a picture of youâŚ
Alex: Yeah, I got like a diagram of myselfâŚ
Matt: A diagram, pointing at every bit, and then asking to fill in, like, what his favourite brand of jeans were.
Alex: Hand it back, and then sheâd sort of kit me out.
Matt: Sheâd buy it all! So, like, âFavourite shoes? Trainers or boots?â It would be like that. Heâd fill it in and send it back and then sheâd buy it. âWill this do?â
Alex: Back it came with this jumper that were perfect actually. She really knew me better than I knew meself.
Nick: With baked goods, I know itâs not [spiked], but you never know⌠Itâs probably fine â itâs more than likely fine â but it is a gamble.
Matt: Itâs innocent, but someone might have seen that opportunity.
Jamie: I donât think Iâm ever gonna eat a baked good that some strangerâs made. You learn about that. There is a story thereâŚ
Whatâs the first thing you do when you get home after the tour is finished?Â
Nick: See your friends and family that youâve not seen.
Matt: I go and get my photos developed. Thatâs actually one of the first things I do.
Alex: I usually pick up me guitar. Honestly. Itâs a deep breath.
Later that evening, Clash is back in the ping-pong room. The tour manager comes to break bad news to the band - the curtain at the front of the stage is broken. They won't be able to make their usual grand entrance. "Ah, we've got to do it," grins Alex. Do what? "We've been saying on this tour if ever the curtain doesn't work, we've got to go on to this song." Which song? "Black Eyed Peasâ âI Gotta Feelinââ," Alex beams. The band are giddily bouncing around, electrified by the prospect of taking the stage to the song that's soundtracked many a menopausal vodka-stained Saturday evening's preparatory gathering.
âBut when do we go on?" Matt asks.
"The rap. We gotta wait for the rap," Alex asserts.
"We should wait until "Mazel tovâ,â Jamie smirks.
Ten minutes later, Clash is amidst the Offenbach crowd when the lights go out and the song bursts from the PA. A wave of euphoria swells, the irony not lost, and right on cue, just as the Peas declare, "I know that we'll have a ball", the four Monkeys stride towards their instruments.
The nineteen-song set covers their three albums - with Nick Cave's 'Red Right Handâ thrown in for good measure. The last song before their encore is 'Secret Doorâ from 'Humbugâ. Just as Matt cracks the snare drum that launches the song's long psychedelic outro, cannons on the roof blast out gold and silver confetti over the joyous crowd below, proving that the Monkeys aren't averse to a bit of showmanship every now and then.
The after party is a subdued affair (well, in Offenbach it's bound to be!), with just the band, some friends, crew, and Clash, diving into the beer and nibbles on offer. A fairly drunken chat with Alex about Johnny Cash, Billie Holiday and Gram Parsons rounds off our time with the band, as they retreat back to the confines of their bus, about to depart for Dusseldor and their next gig.
Such a welcome and warm atmosphere is often rare backstage, especially with a band as celebrated as this, but the Monkeys - ever changing and ever surprising - are beginning to make a habit of defying expectations. Growing up has never been such fun.
#arctic monkeys#alex turner#matt helders#nick o'malley#jamie cook#humbug era#clash magazine#interviews#not my scans#bands#screenshots from vk#in another universe they wouldve started a four white men talking podcast#eye contact#my image id
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#the clash#joe strummer#mick jones#paul simonon#topper headon#london calling#punk rock#punk#punk band
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Beth Ditto photographed by Steph Wilson, 2019
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still two of the playlists im most proud of
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PEACHES -Â Merrill Nisker
#peaches#peaches band#merrill nisker#disco#electronic#electronics#electro#electroclash#Dance Music#music#dance#danse#synth-pop#synthpop#punk#hip hop#hiphop#hip-hop#women in music#electro clash#riot girl#girl power#alternative music#musician#filmmaker#Actress#producer
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