Joe Strummer’s Widow Lucinda Tait on The Clash’s Near Reunion and the Punk Icon’s “Love of Humanity”

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The post Joe Strummer’s Widow Lucinda Tait on The Clash’s Near Reunion and the Punk Icon’s “Love of Humanity” appeared first on Consequence.

Twenty years ago today (December 22nd), the music world lost one of its greatest artists, legendary Clash singer-guitarist Joe Strummer.

The punk icon’s passing in 2002 at the age of 50 was unexpected, as he suffered a heart attack caused by an undiagnosed congenital heart defect. Several weeks prior to his death, it was announced that The Clash would be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2003.

And just a week after the Rock Hall announcement, fans at a London benefit for firefighters were pleasantly surprised when Clash bandmate Mick Jones jumped onstage to join Strummer for three songs to end the show — “Bankrobber,” “White Riot” and “London’s Burning.” It marked the first time the two performed together since Jones’ last Clash show in 1983.

Consequence recently caught up with Strummer’s widow, Lucinda Tait, who discussed that surprise performance at the benefit concert. “Mick came to the show, but it was not planned that he was going to get up at all,” recalled Tait. “He came to the show, and he literally said, ‘Hold my coat, I’m going up.’ And nobody was expecting it.”

As for the prospects of a Clash reunion at the 2003 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony had Strummer not passed away a few months prior, Tait said, “Joe definitely wanted The Clash to play at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. But I think he said it was all dependent on everybody wanting to do it, as well. And that was not a given. So I think he would have liked it. Yes, I think he would have liked The Clash to have played at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.”

She continued, “But at the same time, he was very proud of [his then-current band] the Mescaleros. And he was really on a roll with his writing and his creativity with the Mescaleros. And I don’t think that, necessarily, it was in on his mind to get The Clash back together [long term], if you feel what I mean. I know he definitely wanted to do it for the Hall of Fame, though. He was so honored. It meant the world to him.”

To mark the occasion of the 20th anniversary of Strummer’s passing, we also asked Tait if there was anything about the punk legend she wanted his fans to know that may not have been reflected in his public persona.

“[I’d like people to know] that he was incredibly kind and thoughtful and that he believed in the good of everybody and that he had time for everybody and that he genuinely liked people,” remarked Tait. “I mean, his love of humanity was extraordinary. I think that he was very kind. He was the kind of guy that you go to a festival and you fall asleep by the fire and you wake up and you’ve got his rolled up T-shirt under your head and a blanket over your body. He was always looking out for other people.”

She added, “He was just a very compassionate and very thoughtful man who cared deeply about humanity. And I think often with the lyrics in The Clash, it’s portrayed as an angry young man. But he did mature, and he was still angry and still fighting for people’s rights, and everything good always. He was a wonderful family man, he really was. And he was a wonderful friend.”

A comprehensive box set of Strummer’s material with the Mescaleros, titled Joe Strummer 002: The Mescaleros Years, was released in September. In a previous feature, Tait told Consequence about the process of putting the set together, while also reflecting on his years in the Mescaleros.

Watch footage of Joe Strummer and Mick Jones reuniting onstage in 2002 below.

Joe Strummer’s Widow Lucinda Tait on The Clash’s Near Reunion and the Punk Icon’s “Love of Humanity”
Spencer Kaufman

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