Even in 1979, musicians were bemoaning the increased commercialization and information overload that was pervading society. That's apparent on this song. Joe Strummer of The Clash wrote the lyrics and Mick Jones sang lead. In the DVD Making of 'London Calling': The Last Testament, which came with the 25th anniversary edition of the album, Strummer said he wrote the lyrics imagining Jones' life growing up in a basement with his mother and grandmother. Interestingly, it also includes personal references to his own life growing up in a heavily suburban middle-class family ("We had a hedge back home in the suburbs, over which I never could see").
The Afghan Wings covered the song for the Burning London tribute compilation in 1999; this version includes singer Greg Dulli ad-libbing lyrics from other songs over the outro, including another Clash song "Train in Vain (Stand By Me)" and Ben E. King's "Stand By Me". Ben Folds also recorded a cover for the movie Over The Hedge.
"Lost In The Supermarket" was first conceived and written in an actual supermarket under the block of flats Joe Strummer was living in at the time with his girlfriend Gaby Salter. While it was too small for Strummer to literally get "lost in the supermarket," he did note in a 1999 interview that the song "occurred to me as I stumbled around dazed by the color and the lights." This would certainly explain the heavy themes of commercialism in the lyrics ("I'm all tuned in, I see all the programs, I save coupons from packets of tea").
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