Bonds Residency
Three weeks & 17 gigs that shook up New York and America.

NOTE:

Most of the reviews were written by Steve Morse, the long time rock critic for the Boston Globe and clearly a fan of the clash (he traveled to NY, NJ and Wash DC to review the band). As a native of Boston and a 25+ year fan of the Clash I have always enjoyed and agreed with his reviews. That can't be said for Jim Sullivan who wrote the Sept. 7, 1982 review. I was at that show and I have never had such a disagreement with a review and to this day, I can't hear (or write!) the words Jim Sullivan with out thinking about how far off the mark that review was (call me obsessed!), other's radio DJs at the time agreed. I thought it was a great show. I have included Sullivan's review just for the historical record. If you post it I may send my own memories of the show at a later date.

REVIEW / MUSIC\ CLASH WORTH THE WAIT\ THE CLASH - IN CONCERT SUNDAY NIGHT AT BOND'S IN MANHATTAN.

Author(s) Steve Morse Globe Staff Date: June 2, 1981 Page: ????? Section: ARTS/ FILMS

Wanting desperately to put the sordid events of the past few days behind them, the Clash rushed on stage Sunday and just let their pent-up fury do the rest.

To say they were magnificent is an understatement. They performed like men possessed, churning out two hours of music that rocked the mind with its working-class, anti-oppressor-at-all-costs tone.

This was a political concert to end all political concerts, as the British boys from Brixton laid their leftist ideologies on the line, accompanied by a devastating slide show of napalmed babies, tanks, soldiers, Uncle Sam posters, handguns and gas masks, plus a spot appearance by an emotional El Salvador rebel (not wanting his name used), who'd flown to New York to thank the Clash for denouncing US military aid to El Salvador.

Clearly, the Clash had a lot of frustrations to work out. They'd been subjected to delicate, day-long negotiations about adding an extra week of concerts to their originally scheduled eight at Bond's (required because of the club's admitted overselling and because two shows were canceled Saturday when the city closed the club, citing fire code violations).

They also had endured an exhausting press conference, during which they doubted they'd have played the club at all if aware its legal capacity was only 1725 (manager Bernie Rhodes, not the band, had chosen the club, thinking it held 4000 - the number he'd heard had attended a Plasmatics concert there).

The band also said these controversial New York dates were supposed to be a "bonus" to their fans, and that a forthcoming American tour was being planned, though they didn't say when.

And as to who first called the fire marshals in to investigate Bond's - whether it was a jealous club rival or someone hostile to the Clash's radicalism, singer Joe Strummer shrugged: "That's the $64,000 question . . . I'm just a visitor, and only a New Yorker could get to the bottom of it."

Opening Sunday's concert, Strummer summed up the whole mess by announcing: "For those of you who've been waiting for hours or days, you're here now, so let's get on with it."

The band then blasted into the apocalyptic "London Calling," followed by the furious "Safe European Home" and relentless "Somebody Got Murdered," as slides of a mammoth handgun were projected behind them. Slides were movingly utilized on alternating songs, while the group (just the original four - Strummer, guitarist Mick Jones, bassist Paul Simonon and drummer Topper Headon; minus semi-permanent keyboardist Mickey Gallagher this time) unleashed its political vehemence.

The turbulent, machine-gun beat of "Guns of Brixton" (with English bobbies shown on the screen quelling the Brixton riots) led to a militant, unrecorded song, "Radio Clash" (with eerie bomb-dropping noises), then the antidraft anthem "The Call Up" (as Strummer screamed, "It's up to you not to heed the call-up," while Uncle Sam winked on the screen), an overwhelmingly intense coupling of "Ivan Meets GI Joe" (as the Stars & Stripes were juxtaposed with a hammer & sickle, a Cold War metaphor ending with a huge mushroom cloud), and "Charlie Don't Surf" (with a slide of a military coffin draped in an American flag, sending chills up the spine). Throughout, guitarist Jones was outstanding, adding jarring new electronic effects that marked how much he's grown musically.

Letting it all hang out, the Clash roared in with more songs from their "London Calling" and "Sandinista!" albums. They ignored, though, their first album, proving they now want to be accepted as a band that doesn't just vent anger, but merges it with positive faith, as an excellent interview in this month's Musician, Player & Listener magazine points out.

All in all, this wasn't just the boldest, most politically liberating concert I've ever heard. It was also one of the most inspirational.

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London Calling
Safe European Home
The Leader
Somebody Got Murdered
White Man In Ham Palais
The Guns Of Brixton
This Is Radio Clash
The Call Up
Complete Control
Junco Partner
Lightning Strikes
Ivan Meets GI Joe
Charlie Don't Surf
Bankrobber
The Magnificent Seven
Wrong 'Em Boyo
Train In Vain
Career Opportunities
Clampdown

missing encore tracks
One More Time
Brand New Cadillac
Janie Jones
Armagideon Time
Washington Bullets
I'm So Bored with the USA

Wrong 'Em Boyo

Boston Globe
Steve Morse

Any further info / reviews
appreciated

2. Newspaper & Magazine Articles

Band Arrives at JFK
3 newspaper photos

Private Super8mm film footage of the rucus outside Bonds

30 April New York Post
On the Town
New York Calling The Clash
..tickets go on sale tomorrow...

2 May - New York Post
10,000 Clash fans queue for tickets for only US appearance
6 mounted police and 12 squad cars to control the crowd

NME - Win a week in New York with The Clash!

Early May - New York Post
Bonds Sold Out - Christgua

Poster 'Extra' Clash Sold Out

Blister Fanzine
A weeks at Bonds (main piece)
Cover Only
BMC desperately wants the inside pages!!

NYC Advert for Magnificent 7 & Bonds dates

24 May - New York News
Passport Impasses Crimps Clash's style
5 British Groups left at Heathrow
Clint Roswell

New York Times 24 May
scan
or text

26 May - New York Daily News
Clash Promise 'Something Special'
Clint Roswell

MM review of the 28th

29 May - New York News
For Bonds Disco it was double capacity or nothing. Police and Fire Dept shut down Bonds. Vincent Lee

30 May - New York News?
city and Disco Clash, and Clash cools it
Disco forced to close - extra dates
Larry Sutton

30 May New York Post?
City calls a truce in Clash wars and the band plays on. Building Dept Inspectors have lifted a vacate order...

Music press photos 1... 2...

31 - May New York Times?
scan
or text
Stephen Holden

31 May - New York Times Gig review
The Clash rocks with raw energy
Ira Mayer

New York Times June 3, 1981
Clash Melee Points Up Danger of Overselling
by Robert Palmer

Bondage at Bonds (full text version)
Creem - Sept 81
Clash face unrully mobs - Bondage at Bonds
Michael Barnard
First page only

Under Fire in New York - NME
Clash forced to lplay 16 date season after ticket fiasco - When the Clash landed at Kenney Airport last Tuesday, it was nore than clear that America wanted the band... Mick Farren

How The Clash Fed The Wonderbread Generation, Made The Mountain Come to Mohammed - And Other Miracles
Mick Farren, NME, 20 June 1981
The winner of NME's Flatter The Clash competition checks out the ramifications when an English band's world is at Bonds. KOSMO VINYL shoots both fists heavenward, for all the world like a man who had just scored for West Ham at Wembley. "I got the news on every channel! I got the news on every channel!....

Boston Rock Summer 81 No 19
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Face NO 16 August 1981
1.. 2..

Unknown Clipping (The Face?)

MOJO Clash Special No79
pages 1.. 2.. 3..

Fanzine piece by: J Blocher
can some1 transcribe this it is very poor

Clash Contre Mafia - French Mag
1.. 2.. 3.. 4..
translation required

Anne Toone from The Bloods remembers opening for the Clash

The Clash on Broadway Part 1
Chris Salewicz, Mojo, August 1994

IF THERE WAS ONE PIVOTAL EVENT IN THE HISTORY OF THE Clash's assault on the USA it was the season of 17 shows they played at Bond's, a tacky former disco on Broadway and Times Square, New York, New York in May and June 1981.

The Clash on Broadway Part 2
Chris Salewicz, Mojo, August 1994

Joe Strummer talks to Chris Salewicz. When was the first time you toured America? I think it was in 1978. We went to finish off Give 'Em Enough Rope in San Francisco. So it would have been to tour that.

Best Magazine [French]
6 page review with photos form Bonds
...page1&2 ...page3&4 ... page5&6

3. Posters, video, photos

The Clash @ Bonds NYC 1981
joe streno's blog
Photos, comments

Posters and Radio / TV Commentary

Gig poster black & white

Radio interview with Mick/Kosmo backstage after the opening night

Classic Rock Photos

Bonds Photos 1
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Bonds Photos 2
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Clash & Slits at Bonds 1981 photos

{  joe streno } seattle wa
www.go2jo.com

Radio Commentary on ticket fiasco - 20mins

NBC TV on ticket fiasco 3mins video

Bonds 25th Anniversay Page

CBS Live tapes
Quote, "Eventually, via Jeff Jones at Legacy in New York, I contacted Bruce Dickinson who'd worked at CBS in the 1970s and 80s and was a fan of the band. He knew of a company in the States who specialised in archiving live radio tapes. They had two nights of the Clash at Bonds on Broadway and two nights in Boston."

Bonds Photos

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...play on music: “6 Seconds To Watch” by Ennio Morricone, from For A Few Dollars More...Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five are among the opening acts...after the first gig of the original seven-show run, the NYC fire marshall orders the club closed for safety reasons; eventually, the shows are rescheduled to accomodate all ticket-holders...

A strike in Britain had left 5 British bands in the UK and only 3 managed to make it with the Clash. Only the Slits, Funkapolitan and The Equators, who were slated for the matinee shows, made it. Left behind were the remains of Selector, The B-People , The Bell Stars, Aswad and most of all Theatre of Hate whom Mick had produced their debut album.

There were two opening acts each night: one British or Jamaican and one American. Hopefully the correct artists are listed by the correct dates. Support Acts included Grandmaster Flash and the Treacherous Three, The Sirens, The Sugerhill Gang, Funkapolitan, Lee Perry, Texan bard Joe Ely, and a forgotten horn-section-and-skinny-tie band called the Nitecaps. And, plucked fresh off the stage of CBGB's, Miller Miller Miller & Sloane and a KRAUT who had formed 3 weeks earlier with only 3 demo songs and who never played live. Plus bands that showed The Clash’s continuing identification and admiration for punk; The Dead Kennedys, Bad Brains, The Fall, The Slits, and The Bloods (not to mention The Brattles!). ESG a womans funk band from New York. The Rockets and the Equators were scheduled for the first matinee show which got cancelled.


May 28 Bonds Times Square, New York
Support The Sirens and Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five

Thanks to Laura for the following info on the Sirens...

From: "Laura DJ" <dejesuslauraann-at-gmail.com>
Date: 22 October 2008

i noticed you have the sirens on the tour date list from 81 as playing with treacherous three, that's not true, I was one of the Sirens, the guitarist, and we played after Grand Master Flash, and before the Clash.

It was my idea to support the Clash. My manager charlie martin who built the sound system at CB's and Bonds was getting directions from the owners/managers who were in jail (studio 54 fame) and i had read an article in the nme or soho news or one of the music papers of the day and joe strummer said in the article they like all girl bands opening up for their shows. So i ran over to charlie showed him the article and suggested he get on the phone and reach out to his contacts and get the clash. The rest is history. He did it and we opened their first show at bonds. Grand Master Flash opened for us!

May 29 Bonds Times Square, New York

May 30

Bonds Times Square, New York

Matinee show cancelled by NYC Building Dept - Riots

May 30

Bonds Times Square, New York

Evening show cancelled by NYC Building Dept

May 31 Bonds Times Square, New York
Jun 1 Bonds Times Square, New York
Jun 2 Bonds Times Square, New York
Bad Brains and the Slits opened
Jun 3 Bonds Times Square, New York
The Treacherous Three
Jun 4 Bonds Times Square, New York
The Bloods opened the show f/b The Bush Tetras.
Jun 5 Bonds Times Square, New York
Four female singers singing accapella and Lee Perry opened
Jun 6a Bonds Times Square, New York
(afternoon) I was at the June 6th matinee show in 1981 in Bond's. The Dead Kennedys did NOT perform then. It was the Hi-School band The Brattles who opened the matinee show, followed by Funkopolitin. The "We love you clash" that is heard mid-show is caused by a mic that fell into the audience. Joe just watched kind of amused while these guys in the first rows yelled into the mic. After a while, the roadies got it back and set it up again.
Jun 6e Bonds Times Square, New York
(evening) The Dead Kennedys?
Jun 8 Bonds Times Square, New York
Jun 9 Bonds Times Square, New York
The Fall were the support act. This is the pro-recorded concert.
Jun 10 Bonds Times Square, New York
Allen Ginsberg makes an appearance
Jun 11 Bonds Times Square, New York
Jun 12 Bonds Times Square, New York
Jun 13a Bonds Times Square, New York
(afternoon) Hi-School band The Brattles opened the matinee show, plus The Rock-cats? who they had a slap bass and played Stray Cats-type music.
Jun 13e Bonds Times Square, New York
(evening) The Dead Kennedys