Advertisement

The Clash’s Transmissions Broadcast Beyond All Borders

The Opus studies the political influence of 1979's London Calling with Spoon's Britt Daniel, Killing Joke's Jaz Coleman, Robert Evans, and many more special guests

Advertisement
The Clash, The Opus, Politics
The Opus – The Clash’s Transmissions Broadcast Beyond All Borders

    Listen via Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google Play | Stitcher | Radio Public 

    Purchase The Clash’s London Calling Scrapbook | Stream via Apple Music | Spotify | Amazon

    The Opus has one more lesson about The Clash.

    The same curiosity that drove the English rockers to discover new genres of music also drove them to understand and empathize with the struggles going on far from their homes. That call for political action, of course, is all over London Calling — right down to its title.

    Yet the reason why generation after generation continues to answer their call stems from the songwriting itself. These aren’t just any ol’ political anthems; they’re catchy rock songs, the likes of which have crossed borders and cultures for decades.

    (Read: 40 Reasons We Still Love The Clash’s London Calling)

    In the third and final episode of our London Calling series, host Andy Bothwell attempts to explain these cross-cultural transmissions. Once more, he’s aided by a rotating panel of guests, specifically Spoon’s Britt Daniel, Killing Joke’s Jaz Coleman, AJJ’s Sean Bonette and Ben Gallaty, Worriers’ Lauren Denitzio, Let Fury Have the Hour author Antonio D’Ambrosio, journalist Robert Evans, and filmmaker Joseph Patel.

    Advertisement

    Learn more about the “Revolution Rock” above. You can also revisit past episodes here.

    In celebration of the 40th anniversary of London Calling, revisit a selection of The Clash’s best tracks via all major streaming services, and enter to win a Fender Player Precision Bass just like the one Paul Simonon played.

    Follow us on Facebook | Podchaser

Latest Stories

Advertisement