White Riot
Last update: Thursday 08th of January 2009
| “White Riot” |
|---|
 | Single by The Clash from the album The Clash |
|---|
| B-side | "1977" |
|---|
| Released | March 18, 1977 (1977-03-18) |
|---|
| Format | 7" vinyl |
|---|
| Recorded | 1977 |
|---|
| Genre | Punk rock |
|---|
| Length | 2:01 |
|---|
| Label | CBS CBS 5058 |
|---|
| Writer(s) | Joe Strummer/Mick Jones |
|---|
| Producer | Mickey Foote |
|---|
| The Clash singles chronology |
|---|
| "White Riot" (1977) | "Remote Control" (1977) |
| | Music sample |
|---|
|
"White Riot" was the first single put out by seminal punk band The Clash, in 1977. The song is featured on their debut album. It exists in two versions: the original on the UK version of the album, and the second (re-recorded, with a different intro) on the "White Riot" single and US version of the album released in the States two years later in 1979. The UK album version is 1:56 in running time, while the single and US album version run in at 2:01. The song is short and intense, drawing influence from the Ramones' style of three chords played very fast. Mick Jones counts off "1-2-3-4" at the start (In the re-recorded version, it instead begins with the sound of a police siren). Lyrically, the song is about class economics and race and thus proved controversial: many people thought it was advocating a kind of race war. Rather, lyricist Joe Strummer was trying to appeal to white youths to find a worthy cause to riot, as he felt blacks in the UK already had. It contains a positive message in the lines "Are you taking over / Or are you taking orders? / Are you going backwards / Or are you going forwards?" The song was written after Joe Strummer and bassist Paul Simonon were involved in the riots at the Notting Hill Carnival of 1976. "White Riot" is considered a classic in The Clash canon, although as the band matured, Mick Jones would at times refuse to play it, considering it crude and musically inept. Over two decades later, Joe Strummer would perform it with his band the Mescaleros. The B-side of the single was "1977", a non-album track. This song was along similar lines to "White Riot", suggesting that the music of Elvis Presley, The Beatles, and The Rolling Stones was no longer relevant. In March 2005, Q magazine placed "White Riot" at number 34 in its list of the 100 Greatest Guitar Tracks. This song was featured in the soundtrack for the game Tony Hawk's Underground and is played when Derby County run out at Pride Park Stadium.
White Riot
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." — Stephen Crane
Read more...
White Riot
Read more...
Official White Light Riot Website
White Riot: Martyn Waites: Amazon.co.uk: Books ... Product Description When the savagely beaten body of a Muslim student is discovered in a rundown area of Newcastle, blame falls ...
Read more...
White Riot: Martyn Waites: Amazon.co.uk: Books
i remember the first come first serve basis (According how he said it!!!) saying...i was with the band in all around europe.. in the summer..actually a roadie..i remember this ...
Read more...
YouTube - The Clash - White Riot Live (1978 Victoria Park London)
It's minus 35 outside and still dark at 9am - Alaska in winter is just the place for adventure seekers. Simon Mills wraps up, revs up and heads into the wild
Read more...
|