- If I Should Fall from Grace with God (Expanded Edition) · 1987
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (Expanded Version) · 1985
- If I Should Fall from Grace with God (Expanded Edition) · 1988
- The Very Best of The Pogues · 1987
- Pogue Mahone (Remastered) · 1996
- The Very Best of The Pogues · 1985
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (Expanded Version) · 1985
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (Expanded Version) · 1985
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (Expanded Version) · 1985
- Hell's Ditch (Expanded Edition) · 1990
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (Expanded Version) · 1985
- The Very Best of The Pogues · 1984
- Red Roses for Me (Expanded Edition) · 1984
Essential Albums
- To borrow an anachronistic saying, the sun never sets on The Pogues’ third album, If I Should Fall from Grace with God. The group’s music is still firmly set in the Celtic folk-punk of its first two records, which had been produced by a third-generation Irishman named Declan McManus (aka Elvis Costello). But If I Should Fall, released in 1988, sees the members of the London-formed Pogues wandering further into the musical diaspora than ever before. The catalysts for the creative wayfaring found throughout If I Should Fall came from a variety of intermingled sources. “Fiesta” is based around an incessant fairground melody overheard by the bandmates while staying in the south of Spain (the tune turned out to be “Liechtensteiner Polka” by German composers Edmund Kötscher and Rudi Lindt, who’d later demand to be compensated for the unintended nick). “Turkish Song of the Damned,” meanwhile, was inspired by a malapropism in a German magazine, which vocalist Shane MacGowan and Jem Finer used as a jumping-off point for a tale of Aegean pirates swashbuckling to the sound of a faux-Middle Eastern soundtrack. Set even further abroad is “Fairytale of New York,” a Christmas duet with Kirsty MacColl, with lyrics about a disillusioned Irish-American couple in Gotham. The tune opens with a plaintive solo piano and vocal that MacGowan would claim was inspired by Ennio Morricone’s score to Once Upon a Time in America, Sergio Leone’s epic saga of Italian-American immigrants. Far and away the most well-known song in The Pogues’ catalog, the sentimental “Fairytale” was given sweeping orchestration by new producer Steve Lillywhite, whose recording technique opened up The Pogues’ sound, right at the time the band members were broadening their own perspectives. A critically acclaimed work by a band positioned to take on the world, If I Should Fall elevated The Pogues’ blend of folk and punk, celebration and savagery, romanticism and disenchantment to a level the group had never achieved before—and, by some member’s own admission, would not reach again.
- The Pogues present the merging of the irrepressible punk rock spirit with the incorrigible might of the Irish drinking song: Joe Strummer meets Brendan Behan. From the rapid-fire delivery of the album’s opener, “The Sickbed of Cuchulainn,” to the shambling rhythms of “The Gentleman Soldier,” the Pogues’ second album is the blossoming of an awesome, idiosyncratic artistic talent. With Elvis Costello serving as producer and protectorate — ensuring the band’s spirit is captured in its full anarchic glee — the songs burst into Technicolor, adding Uileann pipes and fiddles to the group’s arsenal of banjo, mandolin and accordion. Singer Shane MacGowan’s songwriting was steadily improving (“A Pair of Brown Eyes,” “The Old Main Drag”), effectively evoking the feelings of age-old English, Irish and Australian folk songs. And credible covers of Ewan MacColl’s “Dirty Old Town” and Eric Bogle’s “And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda” proved them a group aware of their roots and history, yet irreverent enough to bring it to new life. This expanded reissue also includes the sublime 1986 EP Poguetry in Motion that features “London Girl” and “Rainy Night in Soho,” two of the group’s finest performances.
Albums
Artist Playlists
- Poguetry in motion.
- Meet the acts who latched on to these brilliant, riotous folk punks.
- The punks and folkies that helped power Shane MacGowan's creativity.
Live Albums
More To Hear
- Honoring the Pogues singer and the people he inspired.
About The Pogues
Celtic-punk band The Pogues rose to prominence in the ’80s on the strength of raucous live shows and the poetic soul of British-born Irish vocalist Shane MacGowan. The latter was a vital vocal interpreter—witness his melancholy turn on Ewan MacColl’s “Dirty Old Town”—and crafted lyrics about deeply flawed characters (the toxic couple of “Fairytale of New York”) and the bittersweet nature of life (the hard-living bar denizens in "Sally MacLennane" and the nostalgic narrators of “A Pair of Brown Eyes,” both found on 1985’s Elvis Costello–produced Rum Sodomy & the Lash). MacGowan never lost sight of the humanity beneath the surface, which gave his music great depth. The Pogues parted ways with him in the early ’90s over his erratic behavior but continued on as a band, earning a modest global hit in 1993 with the jangly “Tuesday Morning.” However, the story had a happy ending: In 2001, MacGowan enjoyed a well-deserved victory lap with The Pogues, touring with them on and off until 2014.
- ORIGIN
- Kings Cross, London, England
- FORMED
- 1982
- GENRE
- Alternative