Saturday, November 08, 2008

Locked Up: the Jail Mixtape

Back in 1981, someone pointed out to me the macho cartoon aspect of The Clash, mostly in their choice of lyrical content and song/album titles. I wasn’t too interested in that kind of analysis at the time, but I filed away the information anyway. Visual image-wise, of course, they loved dressing up. Sometimes you’d see pictures of the group and they would look like bikers-- other times, they would be cowboys, policemen, soldiers, foppish dandies (is there any other kind?) -- or all of the above. That’s it! The Clash were the Village People!

I’m not sure if they ever dressed up specifically as jailbirds, but they certainly looked liked some kind of prisoners on the cover of their very first single. Some editing was required to get the Jail Mixtape to include only three Clash songs. In Jail Guitar Doors, they sang about real-life musicians who fell foul of the law, including Peter Green, Wayne Kramer and Keith Richards. Stay Free was a sweet ode to a thieving friend. Julie’s Been Working for the Drug Squad was inspired by the bust of a drug factory in Wales, IIRC.

They put him in a cell, they said ‘you wait here’
‘Now you got the time to count all of your hair’


Other jail songs on the tape feature more serious crimes, including at least three murders. You'll have to scroll down, though. Too clever by half with the Jail song table -- there's a big blank space and I can't get rid of it:






































































































Song Artist Crime(s) Sentence(s)
Worried Man BluesThe Carter FamilyWent across the river and lay down to sleep
21 years on the R.C. Mountain line
John Hardy Billy Childish Murder (multiple) Death
Jail Guitar Doors The Clash Deals of cocaine / gun threat / heroin possession 2 years / institutionalized / out on bail ($25,000)
Julie's Been Working for the Drug Squad The Clash Illegal manufacture of tablets…in their millions 10-25 years
Stay Free The ClashWent on a nicking spree Three years in Brixton
Jailhouse Rock Dean Carter Unknown Unknown
007 (Shanty Town) Desmond Dekker Looting and shootingProbation
Folsom Prison Blues The Huns Shot a man in Reno just to watch him die Life (implied)
On ParoleMotorhead Looking for fun / forgot the reason Forever and a day / parole
Prison Cell BluesBlind Lemon Jefferson Nell Undetermined number of days
The Old Main Drag The Pogues Vagrancy Beaten and mauled at Vine Street lock-up
Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos Public Enemy Draft dodging Serving time in the state pen
The Auld Triangle Ronnie Drew Unknown Death
Your Funeral and My Trial Sonny Boy Williamson II Threat of murder None--yet
Prison Cell of Love Werly Fairburn Love Love
Bad Lee Brown (Cocaine Blues ) Woody Guthrie Blowed his woman down Life in the penitentiary


Traditional music features heavily when it comes to the Jail Mixtape, but not everything is pure roots. There's comedy, too, from Motorhead, and from Public Enemy:


I got a letter from the government the other day
I opened and read it
It said they were suckers
They wanted me for their army or whatever
Picture me givin' a damn - I said never


For such an over the top song, I find its opening verse hilarious. Chuck D. deserves credit for inserting humor where you least expect it: there's plenty of wit dispensed throughout his otherwise often angry oeuvre.

Other stuff: I used to see Ronnie Drew around town before he passed away this year, having lived in his parish for the last while...The 80s Huns (not the 70s Texas ones) demoed Folsom Prison in Iowa...I've been to the Vine Street police station, where the protagonist of the Old Main Drag was brutalized "between the metal doors", but only to give a statement as a witness...Dean Carter's performance is the wildest on the mixtape, Desmond Dekker's the prettiest, and Werly Fairburn just has the best name.



Click here for Bob Dylan's Jail mix.

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