Overpowered by Funk

"Overpowered by Funk"
Song by The Clash from the album Combat Rock
Released 14 May 1982
Recorded September 1981, Ear Studios, London and December 1981, Electric Lady Studios, NYC
Genre
Length 4:53
Label CBS
Writer The Clash
Producer The Clash
Combat Rock track listing

"Straight to Hell"
(6)
"Overpowered by Funk"
(7)
"Atom Tan"
(8)

"Overpowered by Funk" is a song by The Clash from their fifth album Combat Rock.

The song features rapping vocals by graffiti artist Futura 2000,[1][2] who produced a sleeve for their "This Is Radio Clash" 7" single before. Poly Mandell plays keyboard on this track.

Writing, recording, and release

When we came to the U.S., Mick stumbled upon a music shop in Brooklyn that carried the music of Grand Master Flash and the Furious Five, the Sugar Hill Gang...these groups were radically changing music and they changed everything for us.

Joe Strummer[3]

White funk became prominent in London during the early 1980s with bands like The Jam, Spandau Ballet, and Haircut One Hundred. "Overpowered by Funk" was originally recorded at Ear Studios (also known as The People's Hall of Frestonia) in London in September 1981 by the four members of the band jointly with the rest of Combat Rock, using a mobile recording studio taken on loan from The Rolling Stones.[4] In December 1981, they moved to New York City to complete the album. The recording sessions were carried out at the Electric Lady Studios, located at 52 West Eighth Street, in New York City's Greenwich Village, where Futura 2000 and Tommy Mandel, credited as Poly Mandell, provided their additional parts.[5]

It was first released as a promotional recording in the United States and in Argentina, just before the release of the album.[6][7] Combat Rock was released on 14 May 1982. An instrumental version of the song is featured on Hell W10, a black and white silent film written and directed by Joe Strummer. Hell W10 was filmed in the summer of 1983 and then included in The Essential Clash in 2003. The Argentinean promo of the song is featured on the 2006 compilation albums Singles Box. The album version is also featured on the 2000 re-mastered re-release of the album, and on the 2013 box sets Sound System and 5 Album Studio Set, newly re-mastered by Mick Jones from the original tapes.[8][9]

Rock the Casbah promotional EP

Rock the Casbah
EP by The Clash
Released 1982 (1982)
Recorded
Genre
Length 14:58
Label CBS
Producer The Clash

Rock the Casbah is a 12-inch vinyl promotional extended play published through CBS (catalog number: AS 1464) in the United States in 1982.[10][11]

Track listing

All songs written and composed by The Clash. 

Side A
No. TitleLead vocals Length
1. "Rock the Casbah"  Joe Strummer 3:44
2. "Overpowered by Funk"  Joe Strummer/Futura 2000 4:55
Side B
No. TitleLead vocals Length
1. "Should I Stay or Should I Go"  Mick Jones 3:06
2. "Death Is a Star"  Joe Strummer/Mick Jones 3:13
Total length:
14:58

Live performances

"Overpowered by Funk" was rarely played live, probably because of the presence of "The Magnificent Seven" and "This Is Radio Clash" in their live setlists. It was played and also recorded on some bootlegs during the nights at the Théâtre Mogador in the fifth district of Paris, between the 24 and 30 September 1981, where the band was premiering various tracks from the upcoming Combat Rock.[12]

Reception and legacy

"Overpowered by Funk" has generally received positive reviews from music critics.

On his book The Clash: The Music that Matters, Tony Fletcher described the song as "a self-evident slice of hard-hitting Clash funk".[5] Trouser Press' Ira Robbins viewed the track as a "rhythm-intensive [number]".[2] David Fricke of Rolling Stone regarded the tune as a "locomotive disco steam".[13] New Yorker author and political essayist, Mitchell Cohen, in his review of Combat Rock for High Fidelity, considered "Overpowered by Funk" as an "aptly titled" song and describes it as a "razor-sharp swipe from The Book of (Rick) James", specifying both this song and "Red Angel Dragnet" "cover aspects of the New York City transit system".[14] Jamie Atkins, a writer for Record Collector, described the song as "jittery" and views it as one of the experimentations which can be found on Combat Rock.[15] Paste reviewer Douglas Heselgrave thought "Overpowered by Funk" was one of the most "radical and challenging [song]" that The Clash have recorded during their musical career.[16] Canadian Dimension' Arthur Fuller wrote that ""Overpowered by Funk" employs a funk rhythm track for another parade of unlikely imagery, reversing the usual funk retreat into sexuality and finally emerging as a critique of power."[17] Marcus Gray, in his 2009 book Route 19 Revisited: The Clash and London Calling, stated that the song "finds Joe [Strummer] once again mocking a musical style even as the Clash play it […] it's "asinine, stupefying," apparently".[18] Mike Maneval, who wrote for The Williamsport Sun-Gazette, considered the tune as "unadulterated funk", adding that it is "less neurotic and with more confidence than late Talking Heads and just shy of the funk pinnacle George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic."[19] Brian Chin of Billboard provided a mixed review of the song ; while he regarded "Overpowered by Funk" as a song with a "great rhythm track", he also believed this song "gets a bit wordy".[20] Uncut's Gavin Martin provided a negative review for "Overpowered by Funk", considering the "half-cocked rap" of the song as a "Sandinista!-style failed [experiment]".[21]

"Overpowered by Funk" inspired MGMT's "Time to Pretend",[22] a song listed on Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time", and on NME's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".

Personnel

The Clash
Additional musicians
Production

References

  1. Gray 2009, p. 449.
  2. 1 2 Robbins, Ira. "Clash". Trouser Press. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  3. D'Ambrosio, Antonino (June 2003). "'Let Fury Have the Hour': The Passionate Politics of Joe Strummer". Monthly Review (New York, NY: Monthly Review Foundation) 55 (2). ISSN 0027-0520. OCLC 175866. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  4. Knowles, Chris (December 2003). Clash City Showdown. Otsego, Michigan: PageFree Publishing. p. 230. ISBN 1-58961-138-1.
  5. 1 2 Fletcher 2012.
  6. "Clash, The – Rock The Casbah Ep". Discogs. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  7. "Rock the Casbah (Argentina 1982 2-trk promo single CBS slv)". GMV Records. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  8. Hann, Michael (21 May 2013). "The Clash to release new box set of remastered albums and rarities: Sound System set to be accompanied by best-of album, sequenced to copy a 1982 Brixton show". The Guardian.
  9. Greene, Andy (30 August 2013). "The Clash's Mick Jones: 'This Is It for Me': Expects the band's huge new box set to be last reissue project". Rolling Stone.
  10. Rock the Casbah EP.
  11. Popoff, Martin (2010). Goldmine Standard Catalog of American Records 1948-1991. F+W Media. p. 252. ISBN 978-1-4402-1621-3. OCLC 763158718.
  12. "Up And At 'Em". Sharoma.com. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  13. Fricke, David (24 June 1982). "The Clash – Combat Rock". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  14. Cohen, Mitchell (1982). "The Clash: Combat Rock". High Fidelity 32: 72.
  15. Atkins, Jamie (October 2013). "The Clash – The Clash Sound System". Record Collector. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
  16. Heselgrave, Douglas (24 September 2013). "The Clash: Sound System Box Set". Paste. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  17. Fuller, Arthur (1983). "Urban War Drums". Canadian Dimension (Winnipeg: C. W. Gonick) 17: 41. ISSN 0008-3402. OCLC 1774886.
  18. Gray 2009, p. 448.
  19. Maneval, Mike (12 February 2009). "The Clash — 'Combat Rock'". Williamsport Sun-Gazette. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  20. Chin, Brian (5 June 1982). "Dance Trax". Billboard 94 (22): 36. ISSN 0006-2510.
  21. Martin, Gavin (November 2012). "The end of The Clash". Uncut (Take 184). The excerpt is taken from a longer article published in the September 1999 (Take 28) issue of Uncut.
  22. Dimery, Robert (2011). 1001 Songs: You Must Hear Before You Die. Hachette UK. ISBN 978-1-8440-3717-9.

Bibliography

External links

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