Katana VentraIP

Police and Thieves

"Police and Thieves" (a.k.a. "Police and Thief") is a reggae song first recorded by the falsetto singer Junior Murvin in 1976. It was covered by the punk band The Clash and included on their self-titled debut album released in 1977.

This article is about the song. For the album, see Police and Thieves (album).

"Police and Thieves"

"Grumbling Dub"

May 1976 (JA)/July 1976 (UK)

May 1976, Black Ark Studio, Kingston, Jamaica

4:04

Wild Flower/Island WIP 6316

Junior Murvin version[edit]

The song was originally written by Junior Murvin.[1] Murvin approached Lee "Scratch" Perry in May 1976 and auditioned the song at Perry's Black Ark studio; Perry decided to record the song the same afternoon, and decided to alter the lyric slightly. Players on the track included Boris Gardiner (bass), Ernest Ranglin (guitar), Sly Dunbar (drums), Keith Sterling (keyboards), and Joe Cooper (organ), with backing vocals provided by Barry Llewellyn and Earl Morgan of The Heptones.[1]


The next day dub versions were mixed and versions with different lyrics recorded. The song, about gang war and police brutality, was out on the street in a couple of days, backed by The Upsetters' dub version "Grumbling Dub", and became a big hit in Jamaica. Released in Jamaica on Federal Records' Wild Flower subsidiary label (as "Police and Thief") it was issued in the UK by Island Records in July, and proved to be a bigger sales and club hit in England than in Murvin's and Perry's native Jamaica.[1][2] It was also successful in the US, where it was issued on the Mango label.[1] Island also issued a 12-inch version with Jah Lion's deejay version "Soldier and Police War", and Glen DaCosta's saxophone version "Magic Touch" added. The song was included as the title track on Murvin's 1977 album.[1]


The song became an anthem in the UK in 1976 as the Notting Hill Carnival erupted into a riot.[1][3] Joe Strummer and Paul Simonon of the Clash were involved in the rioting, which inspired them to cover the song on their debut album, in a style that they called "'punk reggae', not 'white reggae'".[4]


It appeared in Ted Bafaloukos' 1978 film Rockers, and also in Guy Ritchie's 1998 film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. The song has since been re-recorded by Murvin several times; A digital version appeared on a 1987 single produced by Prince Jammy, an acoustic version was included on the 2007 album Inna de Yard, and a new version was released in 2008 on a Ralston Brown-produced single. In 2019, French label Broken Stick Records released a 12" with a new vocal version by Murvin himself (recorded in 2006), a brand new deejay cut by U Roy, a melodica version and a dub version.[5]

Reception[edit]

Murvin's version became a Top 30 UK hit in 1980, peaking at no. 23.[6] It was named 'Reggae Single of the Year' by Black Echoes, and placed sixth in the NME's end of year singles chart.[1]


In 2022, Pitchfork named it the 188th best song of the 1970s, saying "Falsetto is frequently used in reggae, but not often is there a track as gently piercing. There’s that perfect amount of echo, carrying Murvin's vocal improvisations and the humming chorus along, making them bounce off the walls and charge ever forward."[7]

"Police & Thieves"

8 April 1977 (1977-04-08)

March, 1977

6:04

Micky Foote

Other versions[edit]

The Clash's version appears on the soundtrack for the Wes Anderson film, The Royal Tenenbaums. The song also appears in the Reno 911!: Miami movie where it is performed by Dave Grohl, who is listed in the credits under the pseudonym "Sprechen Sie Deutsch".


Several other versions have been recorded, including several on tribute albums to the Clash. Jazz musician Billy Iuso covered it on his 2015 album Overstanding.[11]