Big Audio Dynamite: This Is Big Audio Dynamite (1985)

The Clash were one of my favorite bands in high school and college (and London Calling remains my all-time favorite album to this day), so I took it pretty hard when Joe Strummer and Mick Jones decided to go their separate ways.  But I was pleasantly surprised when Jones' new project, Big Audio Dynamite, came out of the gate with a wholly unexpected blast of fresh-sounding music (in contrast to Strummer, whose final album under the Clash moniker, Cut the Crap, was mostly an unmitigated disaster).  Far from a weak afterthought, I'd gladly posit This Is B.A.D. as on par with Sandinista and Combat Rock.

The B.A.D. debut retained the poppier flourishes Jones had brought to the Clash, infusing the tracks with electronic dance music.  And while Strummer got to keep the name, Jones took with him the Clash's videographer, Don Letts, clearly getting the better deal -- Letts filled the songs with samples (and has a co-writing credit with Jones on most tracks), making it one of the first albums by a white post-punk act to incorporate hip-hop musical stylings.

The stand-out number is "The Bottom Line," a relentlessly infectious tune that highlights the amusing integration of Jones' organic guitar-rock sensibilities and casual vocals with electronic beats and found-sound samples.  Nearly as great are the endlessly amusing "Medicine Show," a cinematic Wild West narrative buoyed by Spaghetti Western dialogue; "E=MC2," a catchy mid-tempo pop tune; and the silly fun of the bubbly "Sony" and the slowly shuffling rap workout "Bad," nifty dance-friendly pop songs energized with surprisingly effective programmed drums and samples.  Throughout, Jones' ability to craft anthemic sing-along hooks remains impressive (particularly in contrast to the forced, cringe-inducing faux anthems throughout Cut the Crap).

While the debut gets most of the attention (not to mention receiving an excellent deluxe edition reissue), I find the next couple BAD albums nearly as entertaining, if not more so, as Jones brings increasing melodicism to the songs, the hooks a bit less overshadowed by Letts' high-tech playfulness.  Certainly the second album, No. 10 Upping Street, which saw a brief Jones/Strummer reconciliation as Strummer co-wrote a few tracks and produced (while clearly remaining a Jones/Letts-fronted project), deserves a similar reissue treatment.

Here's the video for "The Bottom Line":
...and "Medicine Show":
...and "E=MC2":
And here's a fantastic live take on "Bad":

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