UNCUT

Michael Bonner, Editor.

Follow me on Twitter @michaelbon­ner

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WITH the passing of Shane Macgowan in December, we lost of one of the most significan­t lyricists of the modern age – a vivid, poetic writer who respected cultural traditions but simultaneo­usly made fresh currency out of them. Graeme Thomson has spoken to Pogues co-founders Spider Stacy, Jem Finer and James Fearnley for a warm and revealing tribute to Macgowan that does much to shine a fresh light on the man and his remarkable songwritin­g processes. “Shane wrote many beautiful and fantastic songs,” says Stacy, “but I think ‘The Broad Majestic Shannon’ towers above them all. That line – ‘Heard the men coming home from the fair at Shinrone/their hearts in Tipperary wherever they go’ – is the perfect distillati­on of everything he was trying to say.”

Elsewhere, there’s songcraft in a variety of different stripes – from Hurray For The Riff Raff’s evocative memorials to fallen friends and family, the obsessive dream-chasing of The La’s, the rich and unusual methods deployed by Kali Malone, and Martin Carthy’s canny reinterpre­tations of traditiona­l works. Our cover story finds

Neil, meanwhile, in the Ditch and working through all manner of trauma – both personal and political – to come up with On The Beach, a masterpiec­e by any standards. Peter Watts does a great job digging into the sessions for the album – honey slides! – while assorted fans, heads and acolytes go deep on their favourite songs and the album’s strange, elusive afterlife – a record even Young seemed to disown for many years. This is one of my favourite observatio­ns, from the ever-wise Chris Forsyth: “The relative unavailabi­lity of On The Beach for so long and the consequent sense of Neil having disowned it definitely built up a mystique. Like, what could be more Ditch than Neil himself not even liking it?”

Anyway, that’s us for the first issue of 2024.

See you next month…

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