London Calling
The title track alludes to the BBC World Service's station identification, starting "This is London calling" that was used during World War II.
The cover features a picture of Paul Simonon[?] smashing his bass guitar, surrounded by typography that imitates Elvis Presley's debut album. The picture was later voted the best rock and roll photograph of all time by Q magazine.
The title track was inculded in the new James Bond flim Die Another Day in one segment of the flim.
London Calling, a double album released by The Clash in December 1979, marked the band's critical and commercial breakthrough. Besides straightforward punk, it featured a much wider array of styles than the Clash's earlier albums, including American-style rockabilly and reggae works that resonated with the Ska movement in Britain (see 1979 in music). The album is considered a landmark by some, and tracks such as "Train in Vain", "Clampdown", and "London Calling" show up with regularity on rock stations to this day.

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Personnel
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London calling at the top of the dial
After all this, won't you give me a smile?