Written By:
mickysavage - Date published:
9:21 am, December 25th, 2024 - 11 comments
Categories: art, Deep stuff, human rights, music, Politics -
Tags:
Reprinted from last year.
It is Christmas time and the eternal debate about who wrote the best Christmas song ever is being debated yet again.
For me there is only one possible contender.
I have always been a fan of the Pogues. They were an interesting combination of traditional Irish music but with an extra level of punk rock era energy.
Their concerts and lead singer Shane MacGowan’s affliction for alcohol and drugs were legendary.
He died a year ago and his funeral was exceptional.
A highlight was when the remaining band members played Fairytale of New York and people danced next to his coffin.
Another highlight was the speech from former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams. MacGowan was a staunch Republican and his family wanted this to be acknowledged. Gerry’s words are as poetic as anything Shane ever produced.
[Shane’s former partner] Victoria asked me to say a few wordsThat is what Shane wanted
…
My words are words of gratitude
Gratitude for Shane’s genius, for his songs, for his creativity
For his attitude
Gratitude for his humour and his intelligence and his compassion
Grateful for his vulnerabilities, his knowledge, and his modesty
Gratitude for his celebration of the marginalised, the poor, our anxieties and the under dogs
Grateful for the Pogues and for all our music makers and all our makers of dreams
And thankful for Shane’s currs
Proud of our Shane’s deep and dark sense of Irishness and our humanity
Grateful for his rejection of the revisionism of pen serving bumblers and greedy
Glad that he stood by the people of the North in war and in peace
And that he was proud of Tipperary’s fight for Irish freedom and his family’s role in this
Thankful for his Poet’s eye for the words of love and betrayal, justice and injustice, rejection and redemption
Grateful that Shane lifted us out of ourselves and that he never gave up
Glad that he empowered us to dance, and to sing and to make fun and to shout and to yell and to laugh and to cry
And to love and to be free
…
Your music will live forever
You are the measurer of our dreams
Here is the video.
Shane was not only a great singer but an exceptional poet.
As a measure of how simple and how powerful Shane’s words were these lyrics from the song the Birmingham Six show how simple yet powerful his use of the English language was.
There were six men in Birmingham, in Guildford, there’s four
That were picked up and tortured and framed by the law
And the filth get promotion, but they’re still doing time
For being Irish in the wrong place and at the wrong timeIn Ireland, they’ll put you away in the Maze
In England, they’ll keep you for seven long days
God help you if ever you’re caught on these shores
The coppers need someone and they walk through that doorYou’ll be counting years, first five, then ten
Growing old in a lonely hell
‘Round the yard and the stinking cell
From wall to wall and back againA curse on the judges, the coppers, and screws
Who tortured the innocent, wrongly accused
For the price of promotion and justice to sell
May the judged be their judges when they rot down in hell
The song was very brave. It was banned by the BBC on the basis it was alleged to incite violence. But the message was sound. It was written at the time when scientific commentary emerged that evidence of traces of of explosives that had been found on the hands of the accused was wrong and that handling cigarette papers or playing cards could have left the same residue.
If you want to get a measure of the deep sense of unfairness surrounding this incident here is Gerry Conlon speaking outside the Court immediately after being released.
As perhaps the best measure of MacGowan’s power as a poet and his personal demons and his celebration of ordinary people the lyrics to Fairytale of New York are exemplary.
It was Christmas Eve, babe, in the drunk tank
An old man said to me, “Won’t see another one”
And then he sang a song, ‘The Rare Old Mountain Dew’
I turned my face away and dreamed about youGot on a lucky one, came in eighteen-to-one
I’ve got a feeling this year’s for me and you
So, Happy Christmas, I love you, baby
I can see a better time when all our dreams come trueThey’ve got cars big as bars, they’ve got rivers of gold
But the wind goes right through you, it’s no place for the old
When you first took my hand on a cold Christmas Eve
You promised me Broadway was waiting for meYou were handsome, you were pretty, queen of New York City
When the band finished playing, they howled out for more
Sinatra was swinging, all the drunks, they were singing
We kissed on a corner, then danced through the night…
“I could have been someone” Well, so could anyone
You took my dreams from me when I first found you
I kept them with me, babe, I put them with my own
Can’t make it all alone, I’ve built my dreams around youThe boys of the NYPD choir, still singing, “Galway Bay”
And the bells are ringing out for Christmas Day
Whichever deity you do or do not follow and whatever seasonal festivity you celebrate have a good one.
Our Christmas albums we play are The Very Special Christmas ones – sadly only the first one on vinyl.
Volume 2 has a sublime version of Dylan's I Believe In You by Sinead O'Connor.
Sadly gone but not forgotten in this house at least. Faith and Courage one of my favorite albums.
All in all “Fairytale” takes the honours with its deep humanity.
In comparison most Christmas songs are lame, shallow, annoying! or occasionally rock’n and fun.
Concur with The Progues, but Snoopy's Christmas will always be second on my list. Please don't judge me!
Merry Christmas 🎅
Rumour is Chris McLuxon's writing a sequel called "Fairytale in New Zealand" as Nationals campaign song for 2026.
Only the last verse was found on a torn scrap of paper, blowing around the wealthier part of Botany…
"I scrapped what Labour had done
Well so could anyone.
I pissed on treaty rights
For people brown and white.
I did what you told me, Dave
We made the country moan
They'll need to survive on their own
To the bottom 90% we say "Screw You".
The boys of the Elim food bank choir
Are singing "We're all so wealthy"
And my family are so sorted out
For Christmas Day"
Brought a tear to my eye. 🙏
I love the Pogues. I love the song 'Fairytale of New York'. It was wonderful seeing it performed at Shane MacGowan's funeral and all the dancing!
Here is the song sung by Shane and with Kirsty MacColl
To me this speaks of all the Christmases had by the Irish all over the world, members of the great Irish diaspora that worked for some and perhaps not for others, or worked later not immediately. It speaks of the ability of the Irish to find sadness in joy and joy in sadness as well as the usual sadness in sadness etc.
Best wishes to all where ever we whakapapa too.
On my playlist is Tim Minchin 'White Wine in the Sun'
To him, and to all gone but with us now around the table at lunch.
Yes ! But I was very taken with this Bing Crosby and David Bowie duet of Little Drummer Boy – Peace on Earth – Can it Be?
Christmas Day tradition here even if the Irishness is 4 generations gone, it’s still there in the dancing and off tune singing when the kids, oh my good God ..combined age of 91, can I still dance ,? Of course, it’s the fookin’ Pogues man!
All the best, May your God bless you.. See you next year if She’s willing.
https://archive.li/DhVBB#selection-2551.0-2551.344