Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Hard-drinking singer and poet hit creative highs in The Pogues

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FOLLOWING in the wayward footsteps of James Mangan, Brendan Behan and Luke Kelly, Shane MacGowan first inherited and then took ownership of the concept of the raucous Irish poet/singer.

The songwriter, who found fame as the lead singer of London Irish punk/folk band The Pogues, has died aged 65.

While many knew MacGowan, pictured, primarily for his Christmas ballad Fairytale Of New York and his famously rotten teeth, he was in fact a deep thinker who drew on various elements of Ireland’s literary traditions to create an unorthodox musical alchemy which blended the traditiona­l and modern to create something which was original, fearless and often exhilarati­ng.

Born on Christmas Day in Pembury, Kent, in 1957 to Irish parents (his father worked in retail and his mother was an Irish dancer), he soon moved to rural Tipperary where he was immersed in an Irish culture of ceilidh bands and showbands.

The family moved back to England and MacGowan earned a literature scholarshi­p to the prestigiou­s Westminste­r School in London but was expelled in his second year when he was caught in possession of drugs.

MacGowan became involved with the burgeoning punk movement in 1970s England. He formed his own punk band before a revival in ethnic musical influences led him to form The Pogues in 1982.

The band played traditiona­l Irish and rebel songs given new life by an injection of the energy, anger and anarchy of punk.

Dismissed by many initially as an embarrassi­ng slice of Paddywhack­ery, the Pogues survived and then thrived due to the unexpected quality and depth of MacGowan’s songwritin­g.

The band reached their critical peak with the 1985 album Rum, Sodomy and the Lash, and their commercial peak with 1988’s If I Should Fall from Grace with God.

The latter provided the band with their biggest hit, MacGowan duetting with Kirsty MacColl on Fairytale of New York. Although it was kept off the coveted festive number one spot by The Pet Shop Boys, Fairytale regularly tops polls for the best Christmas song.

However, MacGowan’s erratic lifestyle and prodigious drinking began to dim his creative output and limited his ability to fulfil live commitment­s and promotiona­l activities.

Eventually, The Pogues sacked him in 1991 for his increasing­ly unreliable behaviour. He later claimed he had not been sober a single day in his life since he was 14.

MacGowan formed his own band The Popes and toured extensivel­y. In 2001, Sinead O’Connor reported him to the police for drug possession in what she said was an attempt to discourage him from using heroin.

MacGowan began performing with The Pogues again in 2001 and continued to tour with the band for several years, although no new music was recorded.

In 2009 he appeared in his own reality TV show on RTE with longtime girlfriend Victoria Mary Clarke which featured their attempts to grow their own food. A later documentar­y followed a nine-hour medical procedure in which he had 28 new dentures fitted.

In his later years MacGowan was plagued by ill-health linked to his years of alcohol and substance abuse. In 2015 he fell when leaving a Dublin studio and broke his pelvis, which led to him subsequent­ly having to use a wheelchair.

One of his last public appearance­s was in 2018 at a special 60th birthday celebratio­n at the National Concert Hall in Dublin.

Celebritie­s such as Johnny Depp, Bono, Sinead O’Connor and Cerys Matthews performed his songs while President Michael D Higgins presented him with a Lifetime Achievemen­t Award.

In late November the same year, amid growing fears of MacGowan’s failing health, he and Clarke married in a quiet ceremony watched by guests including close friend Johnny Depp.

They tied the knot in Copenhagen, Denmark, after 32 years together, while Depp sang and plucked a guitar.

But despite the ongoing concerns over his health, MacGowan, who by now had all but cemented himself as Ireland’s most unlikely national treasure, was not finished just yet.

In 2019 he returned to the stage, appearing at the RDS Arena in Dublin as a guest for Chrissie Hynde and the Pretenders, though it was clear that his best performanc­e days were some way behind him.

In September 2020 a new documentar­y, Crock of Gold: A Few Rounds with Shane MacGowan, was released. Directed by Julien Temple and produced by Johnny Depp, it featured unseen archival footage from the band and MacGowan’s family, as well as animation from illustrato­r Ralph Steadman.

In 2021 it was revealed by Mick Cronin of Irish rock indie band Cronin that MacGowan had recorded with them in May.

“Once he’s in the studio, he’s all guns blazing,” the drummer told the New York Times.

In November 2022 MacGowan released his first art book. The book, titled The Eternal Buzz and the Crock of Gold, included never-before-seen artwork, handwritte­n lyrics and school essays.

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