ARTIST: Joe Strummer TITLE: Walker LABEL: Astralwerks GENRE: Soundtrack BITRATE: 199kbps avg PLAYTIME: 0h 57min total RELEASE DATE: 2005-07-26 RIP DATE: 2005-07-25 Track List ---------- 01. Filibustero 3:59 02. Omotepe 3:48 03. Sandstorm 1:57 04. Machete 3:06 05. Viperland 2:42 06. Nica Libre 3:18 07. Latin Romance 3:54 08. The Unknown Immortal 3:47 09. Musket Waltz 2:40 10. The Brooding Side Of Madness 3:04 11. Tennessee Rain 2:55 12. Smash Everything 3:21 13. Tropic Of No Return 3:07 14. Tropic Of Pico 4:29 15. Straight Shooter (Bonus Track) 1:45 16. Brooding Six (Bonus Track) 5:17 17. Filibustero (Freestyle Mix) 4:43 (Bonus Track) Release Notes: During the long career nap between the Clash and the Mescaleros, Joe Strummer recorded an awful lot of substantial, exciting music-- but because most of it was on soundtrack albums for flop indie films, even many Strummer fans have never heard it. Astralwerks will take a step to amend that with the July 26 reissue of Strummer's soundtrack to Alex Cox's little-seen 1987 film Walker. The album was Strummer's first post-Clash full-length work, following on his contribution of a few tracks to Cox's Sid & Nancy. To properly set the mood for the tale of William Walker (a despotic, pro-slavery American mercenary who conquered Nicaragua with a private army in the 1850s), Strummer uses largely rustic Latin motifs, along with the odd big-band mambo or Appalachian country tune. Only three cuts on the original album feature vocals, both by Strummer ("Tropic of No Return", "Tennessee Rain", and "The Unknown Immortal"). Everything is executed with surprising skill and imagination for somebody only two years removed from "We Are the Clash". While a definitive tracklist is not yet available, Astralwerks says the reissue will add three new tracks to the original's 14: "Straight Shooter" (B-side to the "Filibustero" single), and "Filibustero (Freestyle Mix)" and "Brooding Six" (from a limited-edition 12"). So should Walker be considered Strummer's debut solo album, as Astralwerks claims? This writer feels that 1989's Earthquake Weather still holds spiritual claim to that title-- Strummer sings on every song, and it wasn't recorded as an adjunct to another creative work-- but Astralwerks can toot whatever horn they like, as long as they keep the Strummer reissues coming. To the lasting dismay of the Clash army, Strummer's more guitar rock-oriented soundtrack work from Permanent Record remains out of print-- and don't even get us started on mythic lost soundtracks like When Pigs Fly or I Hired A Contract Killer. We're sure it'll all add up to a killer box set someday, but Christ-- couldn't he have recorded for Scorsese or Spielberg, so the rest of us might've had a chance to hear it?