Music DVD Review: The Clash - Live: Revolution Rock
Published April 21, 2008
Revolution Rock is a nice though incomplete introduction to the band that at one time many fans considered was the only band that mattered. They got their start in the UK punk rock scene but were so much bigger than the genre and stood out from their peers by experimenting with different genres like R&B, rockabilly, rap, and reggae, and having political attitudes that rose above anarchy and nihilism. Kurt Loder described them as “unabashed idealists, proponents of a radical left-wing social critique of a sort that reached back at least to... Woody Guthrie in the 1940s.”
The DVD collects Clash performances of the band playing concert halls in the late ‘70s, two television appearances from the early ‘80s, and in front of large audiences like opening up for The Who in 1982 at Shea Stadium and the US Festival in 1983, which was Jones’ last appearance with the band. It has already appeared on PBS and runs a little over an hour. Four of the songs appeared previously in the film Rude Boy: “I Fought the Law,” “London’s Burning,” “Safe European Home,” and “(White Man) In Hammersmith Palais,” although the latter song is cut short for no apparent reason.
Revolution Rock contains some very good performances of their classic songs, displaying their musical skills and intelligent songwriting. It works great as a video jukebox; however, the sticker claims the product is a documentary, and it falls very short in that regard. There is some brief narration and limited audio of band members, but it only provides a brief synopsis of what was going on with the band at the time.
Understandably, this project was a celebration of The Clash by their associate Don Letts, but a history of the band should offer up warts and all. There’s no mention of how or why the band ended. The narrator in almost a throwaway line says they lost drummer Topper Headon, and surely the break-up of a band that had as great an impact on the musical landscape as The Clash did deserves more than simply stating, “Joe Strummer and Mick Jones ended their partnership.” Why no mention that Strummer and bassist Paul Simonon continued as The Clash for three more years? To learn more about the band and its history, director Don Letts’ other Clash documentary The Clash: Westway to the World is more informative and includes interviews with the band members.
The bonus features are two interviews from 1981. The group sat down between their two performances of “This Is Radio Clash” and “The Magnificent Seven” on The Tomorrow Show with Tom Snyder, and Strummer and Simonon appeared on NBC Live at Five. Revolution Rock is perfect for the person who buys a greatest-hits album to check out a band. Those who want too dig deeper to learn about the band’s legacy will want to go elsewhere.
- Music DVD Review: The Clash - Live: Revolution Rock
- Published: April 21, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Alternative Rock, Music: Live Concerts, Music: Punk Rock, Music: Reggae and Caribbean, Music: Video, Review, Video: Documentary, Video: Music
- Writer: El Bicho
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Comments
You don't get anything close to that, Glen. All you see is the performance of "Know Your Rights." If they were going to license anything from the US Festival, that meltdown sounds awesome because right now my only memory of The Clash there is Diamond Dave calling them out, "The only people who put iced tea in Jack Daniel's bottles is The Clash, baby!" That video is on YouTube.
This dvd Sounds like a great companion piece to the Westway To The World documentary.I have the Us festival concert on dvd which has the unedited meltdown of The Clash.In the face of 200 thousand or so people Joe Strummer ask's the audience if they ever felt "cheated" as if saying the other blokes onstage were'nt pulling their weight onstage.Yeah,the look on Paul Siminon's face is priceless!I'm getting this dvd thursday and plan on blasting my surround system with it this weekend-Cheers-NBR




I witnessed that Clash show at the 1983 US Festival, and it was one of the craziest things I've ever seen. Joe Strummer berated the audienece for most of the performance for "selling out" and supporting Steve Wozniak's corporate hijack of rock and roll. The audience was leaving in droves, Mick Jones looked like he wanted to be anywhere else but there, and then the gig ended with the band more or less breaking up onstage.
I knew I was witnessing history.
I'm definitely gonna' have to get this DVD just to see how much of that is captured, and done so in an honest way that shows what actually happened that day.
-Glen