Straight to Hell (song)

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"Straight to Hell"
"Straight to Hell" cover
Single by The Clash
from the album Combat Rock
Released September 17, 1982
Format 7" single, cassette tape, 12" single
Genre Punk rock
Length 5:30
6:50 (Unedited Version)
Label CBS Records
Writer(s) Joe Strummer, Mick Jones
Producer(s) The Clash
Chart positions
  • #17 (UK) (1982)
The Clash singles chronology
"Rock The Casbah"
(1982)
"Should I Stay Or Should I Go" / "Straight to Hell"
(1982)
"This Is England"
(1985)

Straight to Hell is a song by The Clash, from their album Combat Rock. It was released as a double 'A' side with "Should I Stay Or Should I Go" in September 1982.

The song's lyrics refer heavily to what is labeled the "Amerasian Blues;" that is, the abandonment of children fathered by American soldiers stationed in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. For example, some of the lyrics are taken to be the words of one such child presenting an absent American father with a photograph of him with "Momma-Momma-Momma-san." Due to this difficult subject material, as well as the slow, aching beat, the song is one of the most downbeat tracks in the Clash's history.

The song, whose full version lasted 7 minutes (which can be found solely on the Clash on Broadway box set), had a lingering violin background that distinguished it from most other Clash songs.

When Strummer sings "Volatile Molotov", it is a reference to the molotov cocktail which was used in the war.

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