The notorious British band the Sex Pistols has reformed, and
fashion trends are beginning to cannibalize the late 1970s, so the
moment seems ripe to look back at the fertile time that gave birth to
the punk era. As we learn from this exhaustive group biography, the
London-based Clash, the other major band besides the Sex Pistols to
emerge from the punk movement, enjoyed a potent and reasonably enduring
musical career. But British rock writer Gray's (It Crawled from the
South) chronicle may not provide the last word. As he relates the
history of the band, he fails to elucidate the Clash's importance or to
bring to life the energetic nihilism of its ethos. He has researched his
subject thoroughly, however, albeit mostly from secondary sources, and
he spares few details in this lengthy study. We learn much of leader
Mick Jones's early life, of the group's formative stages and of how it
frequently had to fend off accusations that its political stances were
nothing but theatrics. But at times the minutiae overwhelm the
spectacle, dulling the impact of an otherwise diligent report on the
vital milieu that, for a while, clad youth and underground culture in
black leather and silver studs. Photos. Rights (other than first
serial): Fourth Estate.