Paris Residency
Supported by The Beat, Wah (and Zero de Conduite?)

updated 19 Feb 02
updated 08 Nov 06

cdr - from 2nd gen - Sound 4 - time 112min - 2nd gen - tracks 26

Up and At Em LP (Compilation from all nights)

video - mpeg1 - Antennae 2 with Freddy Hauser -
Safe European Home partly & interview

The Clash’s Paris residency in 1981 was a commercial and artistic success. The seven sold out audiences were wildly enthusiastic, almost adulatory and the resulting electric atmosphere in the packed Theatre de Mogador fired The Clash to deliver terrific charged and inspired performances. The audience recording from the 26th (4th night of 7) provides ample evidence of this. The band are on fire particularly in the second half of the concert and there is no evidence here of the growing gulf between Mick and Joe, indeed Mick’s singing on the increasingly rare White Riot is very enthusiastic indeed. 

The Clash continued at the Mogador to trail blaze the pushing back of the narrow musical barriers of white rock music; playing rap, funk, and reggae, with Futura 2000 rapping (and also painting a graffiti backdrop as the band played) and tonight Ranking Roger toasting on Police and Thieves. In addition

Zero de Conduite
Furthermore with echoes of The Brattles at Bonds the band are joined on the encores by the singer of the punk group Zero de Conduite aged 9 or 11! 

The Ledoux brothers Johan (born in 1972) and Guillaume (in 1970) were closely involved with the music scene from an early age, accompanying their parents to all the major French folk music festivals almost as soon as they were old enough to walk.  

However, by the end of the 70's the Ledoux brothers' musical taste had undergone a radical transformation. Johan and Guillaume deserted the folk music circuit after discovering the thrilling world of punk, abandoning flutes and violins to listen to the thrashing guitar sound of the Clash and Gun Club.  

Inspired by their punk rock idols, it was not long before Johan and Guillaume decided to form their own band. In 1981 the brothers got together with two friends of their own age - Anne-Sophie Bolender (on vocals) and Franck (on bass guitar) - to form the group Zéro de Conduite, who soon began performing their first gigs.  

The young group had barely got their career off the ground when they were spotted by talent scout/artistic director Bernard Batzen. Impressed by Zéro de Conduite's raw energy and fresh-faced talent, Batzen helped the group kickstart their career. And by 1983 the Ledoux brothers and their friends would find themselves performing as support group for their punk idols Gun Club at the Printemps de Bourges festival. 

The young French rockers would then go on to fulfil another teenage dream, supporting their British punk idols the Clash. In 1984 Zéro de Conduite were also invited to perform at the inauguration of the new Paris music venue Le Zénith, where they shared the stage with a host of top French stars.  

Besides playing all these high-profile concerts, Zéro de Conduite were also busy at work in the studio. In the course of their highly successful career, the group would record five singles and an eponymous album (released on the Off the track label in 1988). In spite of their lightning rise to fame, however, Zéro de Conduite would decide to split when they were in their late teens. 

However, barely two years after the demise of Zéro de Conduite, the Ledoux brothers resurfaced on the French music scene with a brand new group called Blankass who covered “Death or Glory” and have enjoyed some success and longevity.

It maybe that Zero de Conduite supported The Clash on this gig or it may have been later, but certainly a very young voice is heard on the encores and a number of accounts attribute this to Zero de Conduite. The photo below from the Mogador shows a very young guest vocalist much to the very apparent amusement of Mick and Joe.

Venue

See 24th September review for details.


This evidently second generation audience recording is similar in quality to the 24th although a little more distant, and is almost certainly by the same taper. It’s an enjoyable recording despite the distance of the taper to the stage and with bass boosted all the instrumentation comes through OK, preserving an excellent Clash performance.  If the 24th tape has plenty of audience cheering and clapping then this recording is the ultimate in audience participation! The enormously enthusiastic audience surrounding the taper sing, cheer, scream and clap throughout and if as a result it does not focus on the music played as much as it could it undoubtedly captures the special atmosphere in the theatre. 

The recording begins with audience cheers then an edit goes into the start of Broadway. Joe sounds distant but on good form, speaking his lyrics at one point for effect. Mick’s guitar playing is great at the Mogador and the recording captures it quite well, his crashing power chords sound great at the start of One More Time. The highly enthusiastic audience chant then clap along loudly to a, powerful and committed performance. There are some adlibs on a fine Radio Clash with an improvised ending. Mick’s backing vocals sounding clearer than Joe’s reflecting presumably the position of the taper.

Despite the unfamiliarity, the audience give a very warm response to the many new songs played tonight. Know Your Rights sounds like a song in transition with Joe talking the lyrics over the music including “you have the right to free speech, as long as its not the truth, or anything to do with the truth and furthermore in anyway connected to the truth” and as such is not as effective as the later performances where the lyrics are integrated into the music.

Guns of Brixton shouts Paul to cheers and Mick plays some great guitar as the audience sing along. “Don’t forget your seat,” says a cryptic Joe before Charlie Don’t Surf. Mick sings lead vocals (and plays some great imaginative guitar) before Joe comes in adlibbing about  “napalm, neutron, its Saigon gold, Saigon pop music, Saigon prostitutes” but most is unclear. The band drop it right down to a hushed ending then with a scream from Joe and a double drum pattern from Topper the band blast into Magnificent Seven. Again not extended, as at Bonds for example and it’s a fine if unexceptional performance as is Train In Vain with the audience clapping along enthusiastically. 

“Any requests?” asks Joe to the audience “Would you like to hear Little by Little… this here’s Topper Headon” Ivan Meets GI Joe is followed by an intense Clash City Rockers and Koka Kola (returning at Mogador to the set after a gap since June 80).  A sing-along Bankrobber ends the first CD, the band clearly enjoying themselves.

The second CD begins with The Leader strangely without the usual lead guitar intro (or there is a particularly seamless edit). Performances tonight are all good but from Washington Bullets onwards the band hit a higher level with some terrific performances, the band feeding off the energy of the audience. Mick plays some terrific guitar and the band improvise an extended performance including Joe who comes up with an adlibbed section “Gonna sing this song, but it won’t take long, about Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, about how they got together to? let me tell the children?” 

“Hungry darkness of living who has been in the pit” almost whispers Joe before Topper and Paul come in at the start of an extended Ghetto Defendant, (another new song in development with a number of lyric differences to its recorded incarnation). Joe is in great form singing his new urban lament with some different lyrics  “…without ever once tasting that pie in the sky” A pause in the song, the audience cheer thinking it’s the end but the band continue almost instrumentally with Joe screaming  “welcome to the city.. tear gas, dream ends as it starts” and then as the music drops to a hush whispering his lyrics at the end just as at the start. 

Joe in his best French introduces Futura 2000 who has been painting the backdrop as the band play, ”Maintenant pour le premier fois en temps nous presentment graffiti de New York Monsieur Futura 2000!”  Mick plays some great guitar over Futura 2000 rap vocals on his Escapades of Futura 2000 but the song drags on somewhat but is then followed by a fresh and spirited sounding Should I Stay or Should I Go. “Lets sing a song for Texas,” shouts Joe and Topper’s drums thunder into a blistering I Fought The Law.

“Now we switch on the atomic power” and the energy levels continue to peak on a fired up Clampdown. Joe adlibs a plenty “Atomique, Shanghai , just waiting to be melted down, have you seen a burning human?  Switch on the microwave!”

The terrific ending to the main set continues as Mick picks out the intro to a passionate Somebody Got Murdered. The band really responding to the energy of the audience who on London Calling sing along seeming to know every word! Mick and Joe sound really fired up and the main set ends on a high. 

The audience roar for more and there is an edit, which goes into the first encore with the start of a lengthy intro to an 8 minute Police and Thieves. The audience clap along and roar as the band go into the familiar start of the song. Joe adlibs  “down the Champs Ellyssee, I see the flic, (Police)” and then Joe shouts “Rrrrrrrrroger!” and Ranking Roger from support band The Beat comes to the microphone and toasts on Police and Thieves for the first time. The audience sing along in time to the rhythm “Oh- oh – ooh- AAAAH!” Finally Topper’s drum rolls bring the song to a conclusion.

An edit then restarts into the start of Safe European Home (which may have lost a song(s)?)“Par avion!” shouts Joe as the audience provide the backing vocals! A young voice is heard over the ending talking in French, presumably the singer from Zero de Conduite. The youngest Clash guest vocalist remains at the microphone on a terrific Jimmy Jazz. Joe adlibs “So I said je ne sais quoi, who is this man? Where does he come from? Do you have a photo? And the Policeman he says don’t you give me any of that kind of lip or I’ll put you so far back inside that they won’t find the keys, as I’ve got to find this man the public enemy No1. Does he have long black hair, does he have a black moustache above his eyes or is he walking around with an Arab head dress on somewhere down in Piccadilly! Now how is this word spelt, drummer take it down J-A-Z-Z” Mick plays some great guitar lines. The band then blast into Janie Jones and leave the stage. 

The audience roar for more and get their reward after an edit. “You tell me what night is it tonight?” says Joe and Topper beats out the intro to White Riot which features by then a rare full and committed participation of Mick Jones who sings along whole heartedly. As a memorable performance ends the audience are still cheering for more as the young voice still at the microphone says “C'est fini!”

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26

Broadway
One More Time
This is Radio Clash
Know Your Rights
The Guns Of Brixton
Charlie Dont Surf
Magnificent 7
Train In Vain
Ivan Meets GI Joe
Clash City Rockers
Koka Kola
Bankrobber
The Leader
Washington Bullets
Ghetto Defendent
Grafitti Rap
Should I Stay
I Fought the Law
Clampdown
Somebody Got Murdered
London Calling
Police and Thieves
Safe European Home
Jimmy Jazz
Janie Jones
White Riot

Charlie Dont Surf

Any further info / reviews
appreciated


Rock & Folk 10.81 [French]
Mogador Tickets Go on Sale

Best 160 Magazine Nov 81
...Cover ... Intro ...pg 1-2 ...pg 3-4
contains (in french) full gig review of each night of the Mogador residency.

Paris preview and Strummer Interview
*** Incomplete scan ***
"I don't want to know what the rich are doing/I dont want to go to where the Rich are going ... Garageland 1977" Toight like most nights, the rich are going to Privilage, the chicest of chic Paris night clubs. In the alleyway opposite ar ethree tramps...

Photo's from Mogador
courtesy of Seb/Bazarboy

Best Magazine (french)
courtesy of Seb/Bazarboy

Unknown clipping
photo Joe & Rankin Roger

ZigZag N119 Nov 81
1 2 3 4 5

Clash Credibility Rule!
Paul Rambali, NME, 10 October 1981
YES, IT'S TIME ONCE AGAIN TO REACH INSIDE THE NME CLOSET, BLOW THE DUST OFF THE OLD CLASH RULER, AND SEE HOW THE LADS ARE MEASURING UP TO THE

Antennae 2 with Freddy Hauser
Safe European Home &
Interview

InaMedia Catalogue details
No. of documentary note CAB8101379401
Credits Journalist, Hausser, Freddy
InaMedia keywords Rock and roll ; CLASH
First broadcast date 04/10/1981
Running-time 00H 02MIN 46SEC
Summary English group "clash" in Paris for week. Music hard rock-public stirring - int. Musicians. The group on stage.
Category information
Link to original programme CAB00022195
Production information: Producers (name, logo, location, year, role) Producer or Co-producer, PARIS : ANTENNE 2 (A2), 1981
Type of production Production propre
Broadcasting information; First broadcast date 04/10/1981
Time 12H 54MIN 00SEC
TV company France 2


Sep 23 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
French TV filmed one of the nights produced by Freddy Hausser for Midday News. It features Safte European Home and a short interview by Marc Zermati, a friend of the Clash and the promoter of the Les Nuites Punk in April 77 and the Monte De MArsen Festival that year as well.
Sep 24 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Sep 25 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Sep 26 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Sep 28 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Sep 29 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Sep 30 Theatre Mogador, Paris, France
Oct 2 Wiener Stadthalle (Vienna State Hall)
Oct 3 Vienna State Hall (Vienna State Hall) CANCELLED
Zig Zag November 81 carries a full review of Paris and Vienna gigs - see also "Essential Clash" book.
i saw them 24 years ago (around) october 1981 in vienna - was looking forward to this gig for months! it must have been one of their worst gigs ever. very disappointing. main reason was the bad pa (their own got stuck at customs), the one they used was absolutely powerless and that in a hall packed with 10 000! bad vibes in the audience. my then girlfriend collapsed due to the shoving and bad air, so during "safe european home" i had to sit on the floor beside her and care for her...still that wasn't able to diminish my enthusiasm for them a bit. but of course it is a little bitter having seen your heroes at a low point. tele