Did the Clash play twice at Santa Barbara (19th & 30th) as tickets indicate or was the 19th cancelled and rescheduled to the 30th?

support acts ...

page started
18 January 2019 - added ticket & Quake Magazine
updated April 2020 - redesign, no new content

No known audio recording.

If you know of any recording, please email blackmarketclash

There is a 11:44 minute video back stage interview with Paul and Joe At Santa Barbara (19th or 30th?). Is there any live footage?.

Did you go? What do you remember?

We are looking for scans - articles - tickets - posters - flyers - handbills - memorabilia - photos - comments / any info - you might have. Anything welcome.

Please email blackmarketclash or post below on bmc facebook post.

Please leave any comments on the facebook page above

Group gets back to its punk roots

A fired-up Joe Strummer brings his new Clash to America

Rolling Stone March 1, 1984

Michael Goldberg
Santa Barbara, CA


LOS ANGELES--It was almost the punk summer of 1977 all over again. On Jan. 19, the latest version of the Clash--bolstered by two young, spiky-haired guitarists--made its world debut in front of 2,000 rabid fans at the Arlington Center for the Performing Arts in Santa Barbara. And it was clear from the opening notes of the first song, London Calling, that the new Clash is as angry and self-righteous a political beast as ever.

"I'D LIKE to dedicate this one to Santa Barbara," shouted singer- guitarist Joe Strummer, sporting a short-cropped, dyed-orange haircut, "the only town in America where the Bank of America was burned down!"

The show was the Clash's first public appearance since Strummer and bassist Paul Simonon kicked guitarist-singer Mick Jones, one of the band's founding members, out of the group last fall. The sacking came after more than a year of band infighting that kept the Clash from recording a follow- up to their last album, 1982's platinum Combat Rock.

Clearly, some things have changed since the release of that LP. At the Arlington, there were no more excursions into funk and reggae, rap and jazz; instead, this Clash was raw and visceral. New guitarists Vince White and Nick Sheppard sounded as if they'd grown up solely on a diet of early Clash and Sex Pistols records. And every song, from Rock the Casbah to White Riot, from Should I Stay or Should I Go to Police and Thieves, had been stripped down to the basics. "It sounded like Hiroshima up on stage," the 31-year-old-Strummer said after the concert. "That ain't bad."

Still, something was missing, and that something was the dynamic chemistry, a certain electricity, that once existed between Jones and Strummer. The two used to front the Clash together, but in Santa Barbara it was clear that none of the new members will fill Jones' shoes when it comes to the leadership of the group. The Clash is now Stummer's group.

IN ADDITION to raiding the Clash's five LPs for material at the show, Stummer introduced a handful of new songs, including Sex Mad War, an anti- pornography rant; Three Card Trick, which is about what Strummer calls the "the politics of fear"; and a powerful punk anthem, We Are the Clash! The latter number includes a chorus apparantly directed at Mick Jones: "I ain't gonna be treated like trash/I know one thing and/We are the Clash!"

Mick Jones would disagree with that final line. A few days prior to the Santa Barbara show, he called promoter Bill Graham, who had booked the Clash into the Civil Auditorium in San Francisco. "The band you are promoting isn't the Clash," Jones reportedly told Graham. "I'm going to bring the real Clash over."

Jones, who refuses to speak to the press, has been working in London with his own version of a band he hopes to call the Clash. That outfit inculdes Topper Headon, the group's former drummer and composer of Rock the Casbah, and two other musicians. "Mick says he's going to let his music speak for itself," said Elliot Hoffman, Jones' American attorney. "He says that when the truth comes out as to what really happened between himself and two of the other members of the Clash, the fans are going to see what they have been told is not true."

So why won't Jones speak for himself now? "Mick is really quite content to let Stummer do all the talking at the present time," said Hoffman. "He really is not terribly interested in getting into a public debate. He is much more interested in getting into the studio."

ACCORDING TO Hoffman, Jones has recently written a new batch of songs and will begin recording a new album, probably in London, as soon as he gets back from a vacation in the Caribbean.

Meanwhile, Jones' British attorneys are investigating the legal specifics of the name "Clash," and Jones and Headon are planning to tour America shortly with their band. In addition, the two Clash camps are wrangling over finances. "It has to do with the division of certian funds," said Hoffman. "It's a matter of their having to work out how the money is to be divided, and they couldn't work it out without outside help. There- fore, there is an arbitration proceeding in London right now."

After midnight, in a sparse dressing room beneath the stage at the Arlington Center, a tired but excited Joe Strummer smoked cigarets (he gave up all drugs about seven months ago) and sipped from a cup of black coffee. "At times, I felt like a frog in a microwave oven," Strummer said of his performance, his voice echoing in the empty room. He was about to answer a question when a female fan shouted through the grating at the bottom of the dressing room door. "What happened to Mick?"

"He's gone," said the singer, grimacing. "He'll be rocking around with some kind of piano nonsense, you'll see." "I MISS him," the girl said.

"Yeah, well, go see him," snarled Strummer.

"Why did you kick him out?" asked the girl.

Strummer reached over and turned off the tape recorder: "'Cause he's an a------."

The tensions between Stummer and Jones date back to at least 1977, when a journalist who spoke with them in London observed the dichotomy between Strummer's fierce politics and Jones' pop-star tendencies. When asked when he and Jones first began to drift apart, Strummer said, "Being kind, I'd say three years ago. We felt iffy on the team for the last couple years, 'cause Mick was moaning and groaning. He wanted to go on holiday, and he didn't want to tour, and he didn't want to play guitar, and he thought he was an artist and he thought it was all beneath him."

STRUMMER WAS unhappy with the music the Clash was making, too. Strummer said the last demo Jones made "wasn't our music. He was playing around with beat boxes and synthesizers. I was thinking, `It's time for us to stop ripping off the black people so much that they don't get on the radio anymore.' I didn't want to play South Bronx music, you know?"

But for Strummer, Jones' worst offense came when he lost sight of what the Clash were all about. "He turned to me, supposedly his close buddy. I was his partner, right? Remember? He turned around to me and said, `I don't mind what the band does as long as my lawyer checks it out first."

Strummer shook his head from side to side, as if he still couldn't believe it. "So I said, `Well, you can go to your lawyer, and you can write the bleeding songs with him.' Because there wasn't any lawyer when we invented this spirit, this raging force. I feel that he turned bad on us."

The group was at its rehersal studio, located in a warehouse in London's Camden Town section, when Simonon and Strummer gave Jones his walking papers. "I asked him, `How have you enjoyed the past seven years?' And he said, `Okay, why do you ask?' And I said, `Because I think itis time we come to a parting of the way. I think it's time that you left. I think you should leave this room right now.' And he picked up his guitar and left."

SITTING IN the dressing room, looking lean and tough, Strummer was all hyped up. He wanted to explain what had gone wrong with the Clash. "Wrong turnings, pitfalls along the way. First was the musician bull. We thought we were musicians. Fatal, because you become self-indulgent. Second fatal mistake: `Hey, I'm an artist.' I'll tell you, Robert Johnson never thought he was an artist."

But while Strummer was critical of his band's mistakes, he was even more vitriolic in his criticism of America. "Truth is illegal. I sit there looking at the Declaration of Independence and all that. You get rid of the lousy British and that bull the English were coming on with, and you said, `We are the land of the free, where a man is free to carry a gun, walk the streets, say what he thinks, worship anything, do what he likes.' And in 200 years, you've turned it around. If anyone shows any individuality whatsoever, he's fired. And this is the place that was going to be the land of the individuals. The government, they're insane. They are smashing around the world in hobnail boots, crunching people, crunching people's hopes, condemning them to starvation and ignorance, still waving the banner that says DEMOCRACY AND FREEDOM, when back home, truth is illegal."

Strummer was talking nonstop; it was as if he were plugged into an electric socket. "People think I'm a raving idiot. I go to radio stations and say, `Look, ninety-two percent of Americans have no idea where Central America is or what's happening there,' and they go, `Yes, but, uh, tell us about your new hairstyle...."

The singer slammed his fist down in frustration. "I've been elected. I seriously believe I've been elected to say the truth and stamp out all the bull."

IT WAS nearly two a.m., and Joe Strummer still had to make the long trip back to L.A. He joined the rest of the new Clash in a white van behind the auditorium. And as the van began to move, Strummer shouted, "Print some of that!"

Did you go? What do you remember?
Info, articles, reviews, comments or photos welcome.
Please
email blackmarketclash

CrazyStrain - 9 Mar 2019, 19:13  - User
Joe Strummer yelled at the people throwing stuff onstage that the band would pack it up right then and there and go to Mexico if one more object was hurled. More stuff landed on stage but, fortunately, the band stayed and finished their set.

Setlist: ... I was there too

Arlington Center for the Performing Arts

No known audio or video
If you know of any recording, please email blackmarketclash

There are several sights that provide setlists but most mirror www.blackmarketclash.co.uk. They are worth checking.

from Setlist FM (cannot be relied on)

from Songkick (cannot be relied on)
... both have lists of people who say they went

& from the newer Concert Database

Also useful: Ultimate Music datbase, All Music, Clash books at DISCOGS

Any articles, interviews, reviews, posters, tour dates from the first part of the Out of Control 84 tour of the USA

If you know of any articles or references for this particular gig, anything that is missing, please do let us know.

1984 01 30 THE QUAKE MAG
Joe Interview prior to Santa Barbara and the tour

3 pages

Jan. 19, Arlington Center review
& Tour Interview
It was almost the punk summer of 1977 all over again. On Jan. 19, the latest version of the Clash--bolstered by two young, spiky-haired guitarists--made its world debut in front of 2,000 rabid fans at the Arlington Center for the Performing Arts in Santa Barbara. And it was clear from the opening notes of the first song, London Calling, that the new Clash is as angry and self-righteous a political beast as ever.

Vince White's view
And a far cry from the mess of my first Clash gig in Santa Barbara. So if it turns up that would be the indicator of an original recording. Also it was the only show I played completely sober!!! I'd love to hear it. I really had my shit together on that one."


The Last Days of the Clash,
Vince White describes this gig extensively in his Clash biog, The Last Days of the Clash, page 64

We Are The Clash: Reagan, Thatcher, and the Last Stand of a Band That Mattered
By Mark Andersen, Ralph Heibutzki
reference Stockton, Long Beach and San Diego

If you know any please let us know

Backstage interview with Joe and Paul, Santa Barbara, the opening night. The full interview is 11:44mins

Part 2 is here

Joe Strummer Interview Ltd Edition picture disk

Entertainment Tonight
The Clash - January 1984 Interview

Joe interviewed by Mary Hart, includes live Clash performance for around a minute (brief Clampdown, I Fought the Law from the January US tour). The video is of the band on a bus and playing somewhere which could be from any of the early gigs on this mini-tour. Also interestingly includes Bonds press conference snippet.

Joe Strummer Interview Radio Stockholm,
1 January1984

Joe Strummer interviewed by Lisa Robinson for WNYC?

This 2-part interview presents polar extremes of Joe Strummer. The first part most likely takes place in late 1983, after Mick Jones left the band but before the new Clash line-up started touring together. The majority of this segment involves Strummer heatedly discussing all the reasons Jones was fired. He then goes on to talk animatedly about the new incarnation of the band and how everyone in America is on drugs.

In the second part of the interview, recorded in the beginning of 1984, Strummer sounds melancholy and exhausted. However, with the departure of Mick Jones from The Clash being old news by this point, Lisa Robinson is able to steer the questioning towards what Strummer makes of performing, success, and his music.

Part 1
00:00 Why Mick was fired: emotional blackmail
01:15 Bitterness
01:56 Success vs. personal problems
02:48 Mick's vision for the band / guitar synth
03:59 Who/what constitutes The Clash
06:10 Making a not-so-great Clash album: Combat Rock
07:05 Glyn Johns saves Combat Rock (as per Joe Strummer)
07:55 Glyn Johns ruins Combat Rock (as per Mick Jones)
08:35 Forcing Mick Jones to sing "Should I Stay or Should I Go?"
10:22 An honorable way for a band to go out
11:00 The two new guitarists (Vince White, Nick Sheppard)
11:39 Hoping to be possessed
12:40 A divorced writing partnership with Mick / "Death is a Star"
14:02 Writing with Paul Simonon / road-testing new songs
14:55 Pete Howard on drums
15:07 Recording a new album
15:49 The US Festival
16:46 Everybody in America is on drugs
18:29 [phone]: Mick Jones' response

Part 2
00:00 Other aspirations / graphic artist
00:51 Growing up with a diplomat father
01:57 A feeling of homelessness
02:29 Slagged for being middle-class
02:59 The reaction in Britain to the disbanding of The Clash
03:45 Taking some criticisms to heart
04:25 Not enjoying playing in stadiums
05:45 Crowd behavior / whose fault
07:13 The ideal performing situation
07:49 Pros and cons for The Clash getting bigger
08:30 Avoiding the problems of The Who
09:09 The commercial success of Combat Rock
10:48 [A false start]
11:07 Joe's opinion of The Clash's music
12:11 Musical influences
12:45 The blues boom of the 60's in Britain
15:05 Re-selling R&B to the U.S.

Search all of facebook

Search all of Twitter

Search for a local library

Search auction site

Search flickr

Search Instagram

Search the internet

Any further info, articles, reviews, comments or photos welcome.

Submit an article here

We are looking for scans - articles - tickets - posters - flyers - handbills - memorabilia - photos - comments / any information - you might have.

Please like and post on our Facebook page or alternatively email blackmarketclash

You can also follow us on Twitter
We also have a Clash Twitter list of other notable Clash Twitter accounts here

Blackmarketclash Links
Extensive links page can be found here with links to web, twitter, Facebook, traders etc..

If Music Could Talk
The best Clash messageboard and which also has links to downloads on its megalists

www.Blackmarketclash.co.uk
Go here for uploads and downloads. It's not a massive space so its on an as and when basis.

Contact your local library here and see if they can help.

If you are searching for articles in the USA - DPLA Find the local US library link here

WorldCat? - find your local library Link

British Newspaper Archive - United Kingdom Link (£££ / trial period)

Newspaper ARCHIVE - USA+ Link ($$$ / trial period)

Historical Newspapers - USA & beyond $$$ Link ($$$ / trial period)

Elephind.com - international Link (free)

New York Times - USA Link ($$$)

Gallica - France - Not very helpful Link (free)

Explore the British Library Link (free to UK users - ask if you find something)

Trove - Australia National Library Link (free)

The Official Clash
Search @theclash & enter search in search box. Place, venue, etc

Clash City Collectors - excellent
Facebook Page - for Clash Collectors to share unusual & interesting items like..Vinyl. Badges, Posters, etc anything by the Clash. Search Clash City Collectors & enter search in search box. Place, venue, etc

Clash on Parole - excellent
Facebook page - The only page that matters
Search Clash on Parole & enter search in the search box. Place, venue, etc

Clash City Snappers
Anything to do with The Clash. Photos inspired by lyrics, song titles, music, artwork, members, attitude, rhetoric,haunts,locations etc, of the greatest and coolest rock 'n' roll band ever.Tributes to Joe especially wanted. Pictures of graffitti, murals, music collections, memorabilia all welcome. No limit to postings. Don't wait to be invited, just join and upload.
Search Flickr / Clash City Snappers
Search Flickr / 'The Clash'
Search Flickr / 'The Clash' ticket

I saw The Clash at Bonds - excellent
Facebook page - The Clash played a series of 17 concerts at Bond's Casino in New York City in May and June of 1981 in support of their album Sandinista!. Due to their wide publicity, the concerts became an important moment in the history of the Clash. Search I Saw The Clash at Bonds & enter search in red box. Place, venue, etc

Loving the Clash
Facebook page - The only Clash page that is totally dedicated to the last gang in town. Search Loving The Clash & enter search in the search box. Place, venue, etc

Blackmarketclash.co.uk
Facebook page - Our very own Facebook page. Search Blackmarketclash.co.uk & enter search in red box. Place, venue, etc

Search all of Twitter
Search Enter as below - Twitter All of these words eg Bonds and in this exact phrase, enter 'The Clash'

www.theclash.com/
Images on the offical Clash site. http://www.theclash.com/gallery

www.theclash.com/ (all images via google).
Images on the offical Clash site. site:http://www.theclash.com/