Stand up for your rights. The same simple message from BMW to The Clash to Primal Scream. There's something really interesting here about how this intensely political, relentlessly campaigning band, with its voice and rhythm and lyrics, has been commodified for a white, western audience into some kind of party trick. Perhaps that's why songs like I Shot the Sheriff end up being bigger hits for racist clowns like Eric Clapton than they were for the original group.

Watching White Riot, the documentary about the Rock Against Racism movement, was an eye opener for me, not because I didn't know the broad details - National Front, skinheads, rehashing the Enoch Powell dogma - but more for the little details. The fact that people could get organised, pull together, present a united front. The Clash and Dennis Bovell, from different worlds, uniting in common cause. And the casual racism that you forget used to be part of the wallpaper.

Definite echoes of the more soulful early Wailers vibe on this one. Pass It On is a definite stand out in this regard - written by Jean Watt, the wife of Bunny Wailer.