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The Ear That Made the Clash

Posted by: Alan Cross | Feb 1 2010 12:00AM

Here's the story of how the ear belonging to Pogues singer Shane McGowan gave the Clash their first important bit of exposure.  When the Clash was just starting out–this would be 1976–Shane was a major punk rocker. 

He'd show up at all the gigs, including virtually every single Clash show.  That summer he was at a Clash gig with his girlfriend---and she was a little crazy.

Depending on who you ask, they either (a) got into a fight during the set or (b) she began to passionately nibble on his ear.  Whatever the case, she actually bit off part of Shane's ear. 

A photographer got a shot of the blood streaming down Shane's neck---and that photo was picked up by newspapers around the UK, captioned with something about the horrors of punk rock fans and their bloodthirsty appetites.  Strangely, that was the first bit of major press coverage the Clash ever received.



Filed Under: Ongoing History of New Music


COMMENTS (1)

GordZ06
RE:The Ear That Made the Clash
Feb 2 2010 10:57AM
The Clash, I've been a Fan my whole life, and will be til the day I die. R.I.P Joe Strummer. If it's not The Clash, it's Trash. GordZ06

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Ongoing History of New Music LogoThe Ongoing History of New Music debuted in February 1993 on radio station 102.1 The Edge/Toronto. Since then it's...well, it's taken on a life of its own. Consider: More than 500 different one-hour episodes have been produced, making it the longest-running music documentary in Canada and one of the longest in North America. More than 5,000 one-minute daily features have been written and produced. The program is syndicated on virtually every major rock station in Canada. The Ongoing History of New Music show has spun off four books (all written by Alan Cross), which have worldwide sales of over 30,000 copies, not to mention almost 20 different compilation CDs (including four official Ongoing History discs).

 

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The A-Work: "Alternative" (1980-1984)

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