In 1980, The Clash released their fifth album, "Sandinista!", a triple album whose cover perfectly reflects the image of its four members with their backs to a wall, as if about to be executed an image that perfectly captures the last vestiges of punk. When it was released, this overwhelming collection of songs surprised no one. A year earlier, they had already done something similar with the double album "London Calling", a work brimming with rock 'n' roll anthems, as evidenced even by its iconic cover, a clear nod to Elvis Presley's famous first album. "Sandinista!" consists of 36 songs, not all of them of exceptional quality, but as is to be expected with such a large number of compositions. Ironically, despite being a deeply anti-American album, "Sandinista!" was a huge commercial success in the United States, thanks in part to the diverse styles and sounds it encompasses, from rap and blues to dub and rock. Stylish tracks as disparate as the rockabilly of "The Leader", the epic ballads of "The Magnificent Seven", and the reggae of "Junco Partner" alternate with truly surprising and high-quality compositions such as "Somebody Got Murdered", "The Call Up", "Washington Bullets", "Police on My Back", and "Rebel Waltz". Even with such a profusion of songs, "Sandinista" is not an easy album; its development is quite erratic and its repertoire is excessively disconcerting and disordered, something very common in the punk philosophy, and this album in particular would stage the biography of an entire generation on the threshold of a new decade and the subsequent decline and fall of a genre that almost at the same time as Macío was devoured by its own image.

