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  2. Complete Control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_Control

    "Complete Control" reached number 28 on the singles chart, [11] making it the Clash's first Top 30 release. It immediately became one of The Clash’s most popular songs. Listeners to the John Peel show voted "Complete Control" number 2 in 1978’s Festive Fifty. [12] [13] In 1999, CBS Records reissued the single with a live version of ...

  3. The Clash - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clash

    Headon's first recording with the band was the single "Complete Control", which addresses the band's anger at their record label's behaviour. It was co-produced by reggae artist Lee "Scratch" Perry, [3] though Foote was summoned to "ground things".

  4. List of the Clash band members - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_Clash_band_members

    Keith Levene was a member of the original band. In early September 1976, he was dismissed from the Clash. Strummer would claim that Levene's dwindling interest in the band owed to his supposedly abundant use of speed, a charge Levene has denied. [1] (Levene and John Lydon, of the Sex Pistols, would form Public Image Ltd. in 1978.) He died in 2022.

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  7. Mick Jones (The Clash guitarist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_Jones_(The_Clash...

    After his expulsion from the Clash, Jones was a founding member of General Public, with vocalists Dave Wakeling and Ranking Roger of the Beat. Though he is listed in the credits of the band's 1984 debut studio album, All the Rage, as a member, Jones left General Public part way through the recording process and was replaced by Kevin White ...

  8. Todd Rundgren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Rundgren

    Tensions further increased during the recording of Nazz's second album, as the other members bridled at the formerly unassuming Rundgren asserting complete control of the sessions as the producer. [17] [24] By the time Nazz Nazz was released, Rundgren and Van Osten had both left the Nazz, so the track selection was done without any input from ...

  9. Remote Control (The Clash song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_Control_(The_Clash...

    The band virtually disowned the song, following their record label CBS's decision to release the song as a single without consulting the band. The band had already told Melody Maker magazine that their next single would be "Janie Jones", and were irate that CBS had undermined them and made a decision to release "Remote Control" instead without the band's permission.