- Police and Thieves
Infobox Single
Name =Police and Thieves
Cover size =
Border =
Caption =
Artist =Junior Murvin
Album =Police and Thieves
B-side ="Grumblin Dub"
Released =1976
Format =7", 45rpm
Recorded =
Genre =Reggae
Length =
Label =Island Records
Writer =Junior Murvin ,Lee "Scratch" Perry
Producer =Lee "Scratch" Perry
Audio sample? =
Certification =
Last single =
This single ="Police and Thieves" (1976)
Next single =
Misc = Song infobox
Name = Police and Thieves
Artist =The Clash
Album = The Clash
Released = Start date|1977|4|8
track_no = 9
Recorded = March, 1977
Genre =Reggae /Punk
Length = 6:04
Writer =Junior Murvin ,Lee "Scratch" Perry
Label =CBS
Producer = Mikey Foote
Misc =Extra musicsample
filename = Clash-Police & Thieves.ogg
title = The Clash - Police & Thieves
format =Ogg
Type = single "Police & Thieves" is a well knownreggae song first recorded in the Jamaican reggae version with the falsetto singerJunior Murvin from 1976 (Island WIP 6316) and one year later in the punk-reggae version withThe Clash .The song is written by Murvin and the man who originally produced the song,
Lee "Scratch" Perry . The studio band was jamming and Murvin was playing with words at Perry's "Black Ark Studio" when suddenly sound, rhythm, melody and lyrics appeared in a structured form and Perry decided to record the song the same afternoon. The next day dub-versions and versions with different lyrics were recorded. The song, about gang war and police brutality, was out on the street in a couple of days and became a big hit in Jamaica. Later on, the song proved to be a bigger sales and club hit inEngland than in Murvin's and Perry's nativeJamaica . [Steve Barrow (1994), "Interview with Max Romeo in June 1994 as a part of the Reggae Archive Object". Lee Scratch Perry Arkology. Kingston: Island Jamaica for Island Records Ltd.]Junior Murvin 's original version can be found on several Lee Perry compilations released or licensed byIsland Records , including albums "This Is Reggae Music, vol 3" (together with "War Ina Babylon" by Max Romeo), "Reggae Greats" and "Lee Scratch Perry Arkology".The English
punk rock band Clash's punk/reggae version appeared on their eponymous debut album. The Clash's version, which is six minutes in length, is an example of arock band incorporatingreggae into their repertoire. [Don Letts (2000) The Clash: Westway to the World. Music documentary. New York: Sony Music Entertainment; Dorismo; Uptown Films.]The song had been a rehearsal room favourite of the band. It had not originally been planned for inclusion on "The Clash", but an impromptu version the band started playing during a break in a recording session, spurred the decision to finalize their own arrangement, record it, and include the finished article on their album.
In the beginning of the song,
Joe Strummer reinterprets the line "They're going through a tight wind" as a tribute toThe Ramones , already an established Americanpunk band and an influence on The Clash. The lyric line appears in the Ramones' "Blitzkrieg Bop ".Murvin's version appeared in the 1998 movie "
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels " byGuy Ritchie . It was also covered by the group Dubversive in 1997 as adrum and bass song and as a reggae version the following year.The Clash version of the song also appears on the soundtrack for the
Wes Anderson film, "The Royal Tenenbaums ", and in the "" movie where it is performed byDave Grohl , who is listed in the credits under thepseudonym "Sprechen Sie Deutsch".The song is also the basis for the name of the socio-political band, Police and Thieves. ["Police and Thieves Official Website". (http://www.myspace.com/policethieves)]
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