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Music Rare Clash footage surfaces, still the only band that matters by Adrian Mack on February 6th, 2014 at 10:57 AM 2 of 3 ...
Asked who his favourite band is around the two-minute mark above, he responds with: “Look this is either The Clash or The Rolling Stones, and mainly I listen to the Rolling Stones nowadays, so ...
The son of a British diplomat, born John Mellor in Turkey in 1952, he stood at the forefront of the punk rock movement as the front-man for the Clash, dubbed "the only band that matters." ...
The Clash used to bill itself as "the only band that matters," and undoubtedly it has been proved one of the great bands, with awesome live performances and some of rock's most muscular, anthemic ...
The Clash were widely referred to as “the only band that matters.” And the Sex Pistols enjoyed infamy as “the most dangerous band in the world.” I’m sure there ar… ...
To get a sense of why the Clash was once called "the only band that matters," you'll learn more from putting on a Clash record than watching the film.
Headon is booted just as Combat Rock turns "The Only Band that Matters" into "The Biggest Band in the World"-in waiting. And at Rhodes' behest, Jones is the next to go.
In a span of just six records, and the last one barely counts, the band found its way to the Rock and Rock Hall of Fame, placed three records on Rolling Stone’s top 500 albums of all time ...
It's one of the oldest cinemas in the UK. The Clash, Sex Pistols and Buzzcocks played together there on the night Aug. 29, 1976. It was the end of the long, hot summer when punk was born.