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Joe Strummer

Artist

Joe Strummer

Last updated: 4 hours ago

As frontman and main songwriter of <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">the Clash</a>, Joe Strummer created some of the fieriest, most passionate punk rock -- and, indeed, rock & roll -- of all time. Strummer expanded punk's musical palette with his fondness for reggae and early rock & roll, and his signature bellow lent an impassioned urgency to the political sloganeering that filled some of his best songs. After <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">the Clash</a> disbanded in 1986 in the wake of the album Cut the Crap, Strummer sporadically pursued acting while also contributing music to films by Alex Cox, and released a solo album, Earthquake Weather, in 1989. After walking away from music for several years, a reinvigorated Strummer returned at the end of the '90s with a new group, <a href="spotify:artist:2j0a6SKKTAXaaNWU3pl86d">the Mescaleros</a>, cutting a trio of albums that fused rock & roll with a variety of flavors of world music.

Joe Strummer was born John Graham Mellor on August 21, 1952, when his father, a diplomat, was stationed in Ankara, Turkey. During his time at London boarding schools, the teenage Strummer immersed himself in rock and reggae, and began busking on the streets under his newly adopted stage name. In 1974, he formed the pub rock group <a href="spotify:artist:75s7RfViwIXirjnRYkZWPe">the 101'ers</a>, and though they rocked pretty hard (judging from the posthumous collection Elgin Avenue Breakdown), they couldn't quite match the raw fire Strummer discovered when he saw Johnny Rotten and <a href="spotify:artist:1u7kkVrr14iBvrpYnZILJR">the Sex Pistols</a>. He promptly quit pub rock to join the fledgling punk movement, and co-founded <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">the Clash</a> in 1976; the rest was history. Six albums, many more singles and EPs, and one frequently brilliant body of work later, <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">the Clash</a> broke up amid rancorous infighting and uncertainty of direction, particularly after Strummer reworked the band following the departure of co-founder <a href="spotify:artist:6QFIIkwi4R2erQsIp0TDSb">Mick Jones</a> in 1983.

Strummer contributed two songs to the soundtrack of Alex Cox's Sid and Nancy, a 1986 chronicle of the doomed <a href="spotify:artist:1u7kkVrr14iBvrpYnZILJR">Sex Pistols</a> bassist; the two hit it off so well that Strummer acted in Cox's next two films, Walker (which he also scored) and the bizarre Western Straight to Hell. His relaxed, natural screen presence earned him further work with directors Robert Frank (1987's Candy Mountain) and <a href="spotify:artist:7uwCnAgRDUzftIAkJDFfdy">Jim Jarmusch</a> (1989's acclaimed Mystery Train); Strummer also wrote five songs for the soundtrack of 1988's Permanent Record. In 1989, he released his first solo album, Earthquake Weather, which blended straight-up rock & roll with touches of world music. However, following a temporary stint filling in for <a href="spotify:artist:68lZHeroea1NAuEDsfBUjv">Shane MacGowan</a> in <a href="spotify:artist:2wzMOQwNT6ZvVB4amvhFAH">the Pogues</a> (both as rhythm guitarist and in-concert lead vocalist), Strummer largely fell silent after the very early '90s. The first peep of a return to the music scene occurred in 1996, when he appeared on the <a href="spotify:artist:147FGf3bdxV1L0mmVtgaJR">Black Grape</a> single "England's Irie." The following year, Strummer scored the John Cusack hitman comedy Grosse Pointe Blank, which relied heavily on new wave and the British ska revival for its song selections.

In 1999, Strummer released his second solo album, Rock Art and the X-Ray Style, featuring his new backing group <a href="spotify:artist:2j0a6SKKTAXaaNWU3pl86d">the Mescaleros</a>, which largely forsook straight-ahead rock & roll in favor of eclectic, rhythmic, world music-flavored compositions, plus elaborate singer/songwriter-ish lyrics. He further refined this new direction with the follow-up, 2001's Global A-Go-Go. In December 2002, Strummer was in the midst of recording his fourth solo album when he died suddenly of a heart attack at his home in Somerset. His final album with <a href="spotify:artist:2j0a6SKKTAXaaNWU3pl86d">the Mescaleros</a>, Streetcore, appeared in October in 2003. One of his final concert performances, a benefit show where he was joined on-stage by his former <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">Clash</a> cohort <a href="spotify:artist:6QFIIkwi4R2erQsIp0TDSb">Mick Jones</a>, was given a limited-edition release in 2012 under the title Live at Acton Town Hall. September 2018 saw the release of Joe Strummer 001, an overview of his recordings outside <a href="spotify:artist:3RGLhK1IP9jnYFH4BRFJBS">the Clash</a> that included 12 unreleased tracks. Another posthumous collection of overlooked and unreleased solo recordings, Assembly, arrived in March 2021. Acting as a sequel to the 2018 overview, 2022's Joe Strummer 002 offered a deep dive into Strummer's final recordings with <a href="spotify:artist:2j0a6SKKTAXaaNWU3pl86d">the Mescaleros</a>. The elaborate set included all three <a href="spotify:artist:2j0a6SKKTAXaaNWU3pl86d">Mescaleros</a> LPs along with a compilation of demos and alternate versions. ~ Steve Huey & Mark Deming, Rovi

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