The Pogues' concert in Dublin to mark the 40th anniversary of Red Roses For Me included an emotional speech from Victoria Mary Clarke The Pogues and friends on stage at 3Arena for the ...
Thanks to the enduring allure of “Fairytale of New York,” the spirit of the Pogues’ Shane MacGowan is in the air once more. But MacGowan’s impact and legacy were also heard onstage in ...
But in his memoir, accordion player James Fearnley recalled that in the mid 1980s, the band's manager Frank Murray had suggested The Pogues cover the Band's 1977 song Christmas Must be Tonight. ' ...
When asked how the band reflect on the album and its recording, accordion player James Fearnley said: "We look back on it fondly, it was nice to do Red Roses For Me, and then go back to the same ...
Pogues accordion-player James Fearnley previously said Murray suggest they cover they cover the Band's 1977 song Christmas Must be Tonight prompted the group to think: "It was an awful song.
It was the final track on the Pogues' second album Rum, Sodomy & the Lash. James Fearnley’s accordion provides the ironic, music hall nostalgia beneath McGowan’s hopeless and bitter story of a ...
When asked how the band look back on the album and its recording, accordion player James Fearnley said: “We look back on it fondly, it was nice to do Red Roses For Me, and then go back to the ...
The three original Pogues – Stacy on vocals and tin whistle, Jem Finer on banjo and James Fearnley who thrashed his accordion about like it was made of toilet paper – were joined at various points by, ...
POGUES hero James Fearnley has opened up about his complicated relationship with Shane MacGowan and admitted: “Maybe I hated ...
Pogues founding members Jem Finer and James Fearnley, along with band mate Spider Stacy, make up the current line up of The Pogues and they looked thrilled to have Grian on stage with them.