Shane MacGowan
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Shane MacGowan (born Shane Patrick Lysaght MacGowan, 25 December 1957, in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England) is an Irish musician. He is best known as the original singer and songwriter with The Pogues, and is considered one of the most important and poetic songwriters of the last thirty years, often echoing his influences such as Brendan Behan in his writing style.
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[edit] History
MacGowan was born on Christmas Day, 1957 in Tunbridge Wells, Kent while his Irish parents were visiting relatives. His parents were working in England at the time and were unhappy there, so when Shane was three months old, they sent him back to Ireland, where he lived with his mother's family in Puckane, near Nenagh, County Tipperary. While there, he was completely immersed in the traditional music of Irish culture. When he was six, and it was time for him to start school, his parents brought him to London. His mother was a great singer and traditional dancer and had worked as a model in Dublin. His father was very interested in literature and writing. In 1971 he got a musical scholarship and was accepted into Westminster School. Shane was found in possession of drugs and was expelled in his second year. MacGowan got his first taste of fame when in 1976 at a Clash concert his earlobe was bitten off by a girl he had previously been kissing. A photographer snapped a picture of him covered in blood and it made the papers, with the headline "Cannibalism At Clash Gig", turning him into a local punk legend. Shortly after this, he formed his own punk rock band, The Nipple Erectors, later renamed to the "The Nips". He tried busking at Covent Garden but found little success.
[edit] Fame
MacGowan drew on his Irish heritage to create The Pogues, a band that he founded, but was away from during a long hiatus during the 1990s. He has written songs that many consider of astonishing beauty, though their lyricism is sometimes obscured by the quick, rough performance and folk-punk sound of the band, as well as his slurred voice. Many of his songs are influenced by Irish nationalism, Irish history, the experiences of the Irish in London and in London life in general. MacGowan has often cited the 19th century Irish poet, James Clarence Mangan, as well as author/poet/playwright (and IRA member), Brendan Behan, as influences.
Since leaving The Pogues, he formed a new band, Shane MacGowan and The Popes. He no longer plays with them and has recently had numerous successful reunion tours through 2006 with The Pogues.
In 1997, MacGowan appeared on Lou Reed's "Perfect Day", covered by numerous artists in aid of children in need. The single went straight to number one.
The Pogues and MacGowan re-formed for a sold out tour in 2001 and re-formed again in 2004, 2005, 2006 for two further sold out tours, including headline slots at Guilfest (UK) and Azkena Rock Festival (Spain). In 2005, The Pogues re-released "Fairytale of New York," one of their signature songs, to raise funds for the Justice for Kirsty Campaign and Crisis at Christmas. The single was the best selling festive-themed single of 2005, reaching #3 in the UK Singles Charts. The newly reformed Pogues are embarking on their first U.S. tour in over a decade, which has also completely sold out.
In 2006, he was voted 50th in the NME Rock Heroes List.
His sister is Siobhan MacGowan, a songwriter and painter.
[edit] Health and body abuse
MacGowan is an avid proponent of recreational drugs including alcohol but is strongly critical of heroin, which he says is the only drug with which he ever had "a problem". Another Irish singer, Sinéad O'Connor, reported him to the police in London for possession of the drug in an attempt to discourage him from it. He occasionally qualifies his endorsement of over-indulgence by claiming that he "has the constitution for it" where others might not. He was introduced to alcohol at the age of five by his aunt on the promise he would not worship the devil; she also introduced him to cigarettes at the same time. MacGowan first tried whiskey when he was 10 and continued to drink heavily from that point on.
He is widely considered to be severely alcoholic, and has suffered physically from his years of excess; he is notorious for performing while drunk, and for years it was impossible to find an interview with him in which he was not impaired. An example of this was on the BBC TV political magazine programme, This Week. While being interviewed by Janet Street-Porter about the public smoking ban in Ireland, MacGowan gave incoherent and slurred answers to fairly straightforward questions, much to the embarrassment of the politicians present, Diane Abbott and Michael Portillo. He has very few teeth, is bloated and pale, and speaks slowly and indistinctly, though he still demonstrates a sharp, lucid wit from time to time.
[edit] Quotations about Shane MacGowan
"I remember going to the Hope and Anchor [a pub where many folk punk acts played in London]. The Pogues were all on stage and ready, it was a full house, but they hadn't started yet. Then this character shambled in through the door and shambled downstairs. I thought, 'Jesus, you're not letting that guy in are you?'. Then he walked on stage. That guy was Shane MacGowan!" Robyn Hitchcock, speaking on the Folk Britannia television programme, BBC4, first broadcast February 2006
"I don't think anybody has been able to recast a tradition as well as Shane MacGowan did with the Pogues... He took a great Irish tradition and remade it without breaking it." Billy Bragg, ibid.
"He is an angel near the end who needs support, he's too far gone to stop drinking, he has an illness that cannot be cured and as far as I can see the end is near for him." Sinéad O'Connor
[edit] Quotations from Shane MacGowan
"People are talking about immigration, emigration and the rest of the fucking thing. It’s all fucking crap. We’re all human beings, we’re all mammals, we’re all rocks, plants, rivers. Fucking borders are just such a pain in the fucking arse."
"The British press have been giving me six months to live for the past twenty years - they must be getting pissed off interviewing me by now."
"I'm just following the Irish tradition of songwriting, the Irish way of life, the human way of life. Cram as much pleasure into life, and rail against the pain you have to suffer as a result. Or scream and rant with the pain, and wait for it to be taken away with beautiful pleasure."
"The most important thing to remember about drunks is that drunks are far more intelligent than non-drunks. They spend a lot of time talking in pubs, unlike workaholics who concentrate on their careers and ambitions, who never develop their higher spiritual values, who never explore the insides of their head like a drunk does."
[edit] Selected discography
[edit] The Nips/Nipple Erectors
- Bops, Babes, Booze & Bovver (2003 Archived Compilation)
[edit] The Pogues
- The Irish Rover (Featuring The Dubliners) - #8 UK
- Fairytale of New York (Featuring Kirsty MacColl) - #2 UK
- Fiesta - #24 UK
- Fairytale of New York (1991 Reissue) - #36 UK
- Fairytale of New York (2005 Re-Release) - #3 UK
[edit] Solo singles
- What a Wonderful World (With Nick Cave) - #69
- The Church of The Holy Spook (With The Popes) - #74 UK
- That Woman's Got Me Drinking - #34 UK
- Haunted (With Sinéad O'Connor) - #30 UK
- My Way - #29 UK
[edit] Guest appearance
- Perfect Day (Children in Need Single) - #1 UK
- The Wild Rover (with Sinéad O'Connor) - Soldat Louis, album Auprès de ma bande 1993
- Good Rats (with Dropkick Murphys)
- Ride On (with Cruachan)
- God Help Me (with The Jesus and Mary Chain, Stoned & Dethroned, 1994)
- Death Is Not The End (on Nick Cave and The Bad Seed Murder Ballads LP, 1996)
[edit] LPs
- Red Roses for Me (With The Pogues) - October, 1984
- Rum Sodomy & the Lash (With The Pogues) - August, 1985
- If I Should Fall from Grace with God (With The Pogues) - January, 1988
- Peace and Love (With The Pogues) - 1989
- Hell's Ditch (With The Pogues) - 1990
- The Snake (With Shane MacGowan and the Popes) - June, 1995
- The Crock of Gold (With Shane MacGowan and the Popes) - October, 1997
[edit] External links
- Entry on IMDb.com
- Official Shane MacGowan Web Page
- Official Pogues Web Page
- Shane MacGowan Fan Page
- Latest news.tours and photos of Shane MacGowan
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | MacGowan, Shane Patrick Lysaght |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Shane MacGowan |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Irish singer; lead singer of The Pogues |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 1957-12-25 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |
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