Thursday, 9 January 2020

Davis Road Blues


This is 22 Davis Road, Shepherd's Bush, West London. In 1976 this was a squat occupied by Viv Albertine and Alan Drake, both studying art at the Hammersmith School of Art and Building, Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush (later known as Chelsea Art College). Viv met a fellow art student Mick Jones who enrolled mainly because he thought art college was the best place to go to start a band. Mick began visiting the squat at Davis Road, along with Paul Simonon who he met through an audition for a band he tried to put together months earlier and had recently bumped into again- he couldn't sing or play but looked right and Mick began to teach him bass. Alan Drake's friend Keith Levene was another regular visitor to Davis Road. Paul moved in downstairs and rehearsals took place there, for an as yet unnamed band. Viv's friend Simon (Sid) moved in. Mick had met Bernie Rhodes who wanted to manage Mick's nascent group and began looking for a new rehearsal space, out of the squat. This would take them to Camden. Before that Jones, Simonon and Rhodes saw a pub rock band perform, The 101ers, and approached the lead singer/guitarist about leaving the old guard and jumping in with them, now called The Clash (a word that leapt out at Simonon while leafing through the local rag, the London Evening Standard). On June 1st 1976 Joe Strummer turned up at 22 Davis Road to tell them he was in. Future members of The Clash, Sex Pistols, PiL and The Slits all came from the squat at 22 Davis Road.

Prince Blanco was born Mark Atrill on the Isle of Wight in 1965. By the mid 90s was playing in ska and reggae bands. He became involved with various reggae producers and musicians including Dubmatix, who in 2009 made an album of dub versions of Clash songs called Shatter The Hotel, a tribute to Strummer and a benefit for the Strummerville charity (the album also involved Don Letts and Dan Donovan). There's something about Clash songs that lend themselves to covers, dubs, versions, re-edits, remixes and refits. There are some groups whose songs should be left alone but I'm always open to reworkings of Clash tunes. Prince Blanco's track here isn't a Clash cover as such, it's a dub track with Mick Jones' guitar from B.A.D.'s The Bottom Line dropped in and a vocal from an interview with Joe Strummer.

Davis Road Blues


6 comments:

  1. Very timely - took me a while to get round to it but now I've nearly finished 'Clothes Clothes Clothes...' and have 'To Throw Away Unopened' waiting in the wings. Feel like I've been on quite a journey with Viv so far...
    The house is much as I imagined it. I was thinking of tracking down all the places mentioned on Google Maps (not stalkery at all...) but you've saved me the trouble with this one, thanks!
    Enjoyed the track too, Joe Strummer sounding very well-spoken in this one.

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  2. And yes absolutely agree with CC!

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  3. Always great to hear this....and yes, 22 Davis Road definitely merits a Blue Plaque.

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  4. Clothes Clothes Clothes... is great, loved it. I haven't got to To Throw Away Unopened yet. Joe sounded more well spoken towards the end of his life, I guess he got to a point where his accent mattered less than it did during the punk years. It was always a bit of an amalgamation of accents and twangs.

    A blue plaque seems justified doesn't it?

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  5. Thank goodness there is Viv Albertine...Clothes Clothes Clothes is an immense tome. Thinking about it, all my recent favorite music related writng is from women...for example Tracey Thorn is on an absolute writing tear...

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