Global Agogo

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (104 ratings)
Global Agogo album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 73:22

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Goodbye to Joe....Gone but Truly not Forgotten

MickMaag

The First Song, Johnny Appleseed- Utilized in the not long lasting tv series- John from Cincinnati, is reason enough to download this cd. Not a huge fan of Joe or the Clash previously.. When I first saw the TV series, I hungered for opportunity to find this album and particularly the song. I didn’t even realize it was Joe…After hearing the song, I also searched high and low for more on Joe.. This guy was a classic entertainer. Joe pours his heart and soul into everything he does. Joe's voice may not be classicaly trained but it has a gruff and sense that pulls you in. The punk scene, like all music genres, has its stars and Joe is one of them... Keep on shining you crazy diamond.....Thanks to e-music for assisting in keeping both Joe's music flowing but also allowing us Music buffs to find many a lost song and Album.

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Love The Album But..

motobecane

11 Tracks for 12 credits? No.

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They Say All Music Guide

In many ways, it’s easiest to appreciate Joe Strummer’s album Global a Go-Go if you forget that it was made by Joe Strummer. This isn’t meant to insult the music in question, which is often engaging and always passionate, or suggest that it doesn’t bear any significant signs of Strummer’s personality; if you loved the syllable-drenched wordplay of songs like “The Magnificent Seven,” “Lightning Strikes,” or “Car Jamming,” you’re in for a treat, because here you get nearly a whole album of it. But if you’re expecting the former leader of the Clash to be backed by two guitars, bass, and drums and playing something easily recognizable as rock & roll — not a difficult assumption to make — then you’re flat out of luck. Best described as eccentric internationalist folk-rock, Global a Go-Go is dominated by acoustic instruments (Tymon Dogg, the fiddler from the Clash’s “Loose This Skin,” is all over this album like a pillowcase) and a wild gumbo of flavors from Africa, Latin America, and the West Indies, and while a few tunes have a prominent electric guitar (particularly “Cool ‘n’ Out”), most do not. And if you’re hoping for lots of punk-wise sloganeering from the usually provocative Mr. Strummer, there isn’t a great deal of that, either, though it’s obvious from the Dylanesque density of his wordplay that Strummer’s got a lot on his mind, and the one-world perspective that shines throughout is food for thought in itself, especially on the tasty “Bhindi Bhagee” and the globetrotting title cut. And while the epic instrumental “Minstrel Boy” wouldn’t lead you to imagine it’s the work of one of the great icons of punk rock, it at least proves Strummer is willing to mess with his audience’s expectations, which is a very punk rock thing to do. Global a Go-Go is an intelligent and uniquely absorbing record, but listening to it is like eating sushi or escargot for the first time — knowing what it is might shape your expectations in the wrong direction. – Mark Deming

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