Groovy Times

"Groovy Times"
Single by The Clash
from the album The Cost of Living
B-side "Gates of the West"
Released 26 July 1979
Format 7" single
Recorded 1979
Genre Punk rock
Length 3:28
Label Epic AE7 1178
Writer(s) Joe Strummer/Mick Jones
The Clash singles chronology
"I Fought the Law"
(1979)
"Groovy Times"
(1979)
"London Calling"
(1979)
The Cost of Living track listing
Side one
  1. "I Fought the Law"
  2. "Groovy Times"
Side two
  1. "Gates of the West"
  2. "Capital Radio"

"Groovy Times" is a song by The Clash, featured on their The Cost of Living EP, and released as a promotional single in 1979 in Australia by Epic Records (AE7 1178). It was originally recorded as "Groovy Times Are Here Again" during the recording sessions for Give 'Em Enough Rope, however this demo has never been officially released, but can be found on many Clash bootlegs. It was never performed live.

The song's lyrics are filled with images of urban decay and civil unrest and focus on recurring Clash themes of alienation, monotony and oppression. According to their author, Joe Strummer, the lyrics were sparked by his disgust at the erection of fences in Britain's football terraces, built to keep fans apart in response to football hooliganism. Ten years later the Hillsborough Disaster would prove these fences fatal and his concerns irrefutably correct. The 'King of Early Evening ITV' mentioned in the song is confirmed as Bill Grundy, whose career was ruined after his infamous interview with the Sex Pistols and was indeed presenting early evening television on British terrestrial channel ITV. 'I can remember his first appearance now look what's happened to him, so they put him in a dog suit like from 1964' is about singer-songwriter Elvis Costello.

The music, acoustic and guitar based, was predominantly written by Mick Jones and feature harmonica parts by him but credited to 'Bob Jones', a pseudonym that was apparently a reference to singer/songwriter Bob Dylan.

"Groovy Times" has subsequently been re-released on the Clash on Broadway and Singles Box box sets, its single-disc equivalent The Singles and the Super Black Market Clash and The Essential Clash compilations.

Charts

Chart Peak
position
UK Singles Chart 107

Sources