Album: The Cost of Living EP, Super Black Market Clash, The Singles Boxset Length: 3:20 Vocals: Joe Strummer, Mick Jones,
* A re-recorded version of the original song Capital Radio One, released as the original Capital Radio EP was by now extremely rare and expensive.
* As well as less tinny production, the re-recording deals with (as does the The Cost of Living EP itself) the commercialisation of music. As well as a joke acoustic intro, the song has a new coda where Joe unveils a parodic masterplan to get the band's music played on the radio, which culminates with the band apeing a quasi-disco sound and Joe spouting hip catchphrases such as "I'm the one that I want!", an allusion to the song 'You're the One That I want' on the then recently released Grease film soundtrack.
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| - Album: The Cost of Living EP, Super Black Market Clash, The Singles Boxset Length: 3:20 Vocals: Joe Strummer, Mick Jones,
* A re-recorded version of the original song Capital Radio One, released as the original Capital Radio EP was by now extremely rare and expensive.
* As well as less tinny production, the re-recording deals with (as does the The Cost of Living EP itself) the commercialisation of music. As well as a joke acoustic intro, the song has a new coda where Joe unveils a parodic masterplan to get the band's music played on the radio, which culminates with the band apeing a quasi-disco sound and Joe spouting hip catchphrases such as "I'm the one that I want!", an allusion to the song 'You're the One That I want' on the then recently released Grease film soundtrack.
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abstract
| - Album: The Cost of Living EP, Super Black Market Clash, The Singles Boxset Length: 3:20 Vocals: Joe Strummer, Mick Jones,
* A re-recorded version of the original song Capital Radio One, released as the original Capital Radio EP was by now extremely rare and expensive.
* As well as less tinny production, the re-recording deals with (as does the The Cost of Living EP itself) the commercialisation of music. As well as a joke acoustic intro, the song has a new coda where Joe unveils a parodic masterplan to get the band's music played on the radio, which culminates with the band apeing a quasi-disco sound and Joe spouting hip catchphrases such as "I'm the one that I want!", an allusion to the song 'You're the One That I want' on the then recently released Grease film soundtrack.
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