The Clash Super Black Market Clash

Great B-Sides: Justice Tonight / Kick it Over by The Clash

Growing up in a white middle class neighbourhood, The Clash were an important gateway band for me. Buying Clash albums introduced disco, hip hop, and dub into my record collection. While you could argue that explorations into disco and hip hop were merely flirtations from an adventurous band, their love for dub and reggae was deep.
Their affection for reggae was led by bassist Paul Simonon, who grew up in Brixton, an area of south London with a large West Indian population. The group had already collaborated with Lee “Scratch” Perry and covered Junior Murvin’s ‘Police and Thieves’ on their debut record, while Bob Marley shouted out to them with 1977’s ‘Punky Reggae Party’.
Hidden away on the b-side of the 12 inch single of ‘London Calling’ was another great foray from The Clash into Jamaican music – the lengthy dub version of ‘Armagideon Time’. It’s a cover – the original version was recorded by Jamaican reggae artist Willie Williams.
The Clash also released a straightforward version of the song as the b-side for the 7 inch single, but it’s the extended dub version that shines. Simonon’s bass is chunky, Mick Jones overdubs electric sitar, and Joe Strummer sounds comfortable with lyrics like “A lot of people won’t get no justice tonight”, because they’re exactly the angle his own lyrics took.

You can find this song of the b-sides collection Super Black Market Clash, which in my opinion, is stronger than most of the band’s studio albums.

Stay around don’t play around
This old town and all
Seems like I got to travel on
A lot of people won’t get no supper tonight
A lot of people won’t get no justice tonight
The battle is gettin’ hotter
In this iration
Armagideon time
A lot of people runnin’ and a hiding tonight
A lot of people won’t get no justice tonight
Remember to kick it over
No one will guide you
Armagideon time


13 Comments

  1. Big YES for Super Black Market Clash. That and Standinista! are two records that add deep deep canyons to the bands discography. With those int heir arsenal they could be relevant to so many burgeoning music scenes in a era where punk was over relatively quickly.

  2. Love this song, love this band. Personally I love side 3&4 of the vinyl, I like sides 1&2 and almost never listen to sides 5&6 except for Charlie Don’t Surf.

Leave a Reply

Read about the discographies of musical acts from the 1960s to the present day. Browse this site's review archives or enjoy these random selections:

More review pages

Bill Withers Album Reviews

It’s difficult to discuss this enduring 1970s acoustic soul singer...

The Beths Album Reviews

The Beths met at jazz school in Auckland, New Zealand...

Julia Holter Album Reviews

Julia Holter was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her family moved...

1980s Miscellany

This page collects odds and ends from 1980s artists: Beastie...
Tracy Chapman 1988 Debut

Queen Album Reviews

Bassist and vocalist Tim Staffell quit trio Smile, but not...
Queen II

Natalie Prass Album Reviews

Natalie Prass was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and grew up...

I add new blog posts to this website every week. Browse the archives or enjoy these random selections:

More blog posts

Goodbye Yellow Brick Road – a single-LP version

Elton John became a superstar in the early 1970s. But...

Five Best Songs by The Front Lawn

The Flight of the Conchords weren’t New Zealand’s first musical/theatrical...

Harness Your Hopes by Pavement: Great B-Sides

The streaming era has scattered previously held views on the...
Pavement Brighten the Corners

Sweetest Thing by U2: Great B-Sides

Irish rock band U2 peaked with their 1987 album The...

The Band: Albums Ranked from Worst to Best

After years of playing live, The Band recorded the Basement Tapes with...

Subscribe

Subscribe to receive new posts from Aphoristic Album Reviews.