1979Released
3:18

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Spanish Bombs - Remastered. By Songfacts®.

The song was inspired by a conversation singer Joe Strummer was having with his then-girlfriend Gaby Salter on the way home from the studio one night about the Basque separatists who at the time were engaged in a bombing campaign against various holiday resorts on the Costa Del Sol. "There should be a song called 'Spanish Bombs' about it," noted Strummer. So he wrote one. Interestingly, this is very similar to how "London Calling" first came about. This song deals with that uprising and parallels it with the Spanish Civil War, which devastated Spain from 1936-1939 and resulted in a dictatorship led by the Nationalist General Francisco Franco. Clash roadie Johnny Green was fascinated with that era of history and loaned Strummer numerous books on the subject, including George Orwell's Homage To Catalonia. Some of the references in the song: Andalucia was one of the first regions of Spain to be overtaken by the fascists in 1936 ("Spanish songs in Andalucia"). Federico Lorca was a Republican poet from Andalucia who was killed during the rebellion ("Fredrico Lorca is dead and gone"). The Guardia Civil (or "Civil Guard") is a military police force under the control of both the Ministry of Interior and the Ministry of Defense of Spain ("The black cars of the Guardia Civil"). More contemporary references include DC-10 passenger aircraft ("I'm flying in a DC 10 tonight"), and disco casinos and hotels ("Spanish weeks in my disco casino, the freedom fighters died upon the hill") which help to tie the dual themes together. Evidence that Strummer is drawing parallels with past and present is demonstrated in the lines "The hillsides ring with 'Free the people,' Or can I hear the echo from the days of '39?"

The Mexican band Tijuana No has covered this song.

Regarding the lyrics: "They sang 'the red flag', they wore the black one," "The Red Flag" is a famous socialist anthem. "the black (flag)" refers to the chosen color of the anarchist movement. The lines "Back home the buses went up in flashes / The Irish tomb was drenched in blood" probably refer to the conflict with the IRA.

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Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Spanish Bombs - Remastered.
BKey
MinorMode
4/4Time Signature
149BPM

Album

The album Spanish Bombs - Remastered is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Spanish Bombs - Remastered.
Sony Music UK
(P) 2013 Sony Music Entertainment UK Limited

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