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''Red Roses for Me'' is the debut studio album by the
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
-based band
the Pogues The Pogues were an English or Anglo-Irish Celtic punk band fronted by Shane MacGowan and others, founded in Kings Cross, London in 1982, as "Pogue Mahone" – the anglicisation of the Irish Gaelic ''póg mo thóin'', meaning "kiss my arse ...
, released on 15 October 1984. It was produced by Stan Brennan, who had managed the Nipple Erectors/ The Nips and Rocks Off Records shop in London.


Overview

''Red Roses for Me'' is filled with traditional Irish music performed with punk influences. ''The Mancunion'' saw the "creativity of
post-punk Post-punk (originally called new musick) is a broad genre of punk music that emerged in the late 1970s as musicians departed from punk's traditional elements and raw simplicity, instead adopting a variety of avant-garde sensibilities and non-r ...
" as being "evident throughout the record", while Muso's Guide described much of ''Red Roses for Me'' as "a whirlwind of revved-up folk punk". The band's approach of mixing traditional songs and ballads with frontman Shane MacGowan's "gutter hymns" about drinking, fighting and sex was innovative at the time. The album reached number 89 in the UK album charts. The front of the album shows the band with the exception of drummer Andrew Ranken (pictured in inset) sitting in front of a picture of US president John F. Kennedy. Accordion player James Fearnley has a bottle sticking out of his coat, while bass player Cait O'Riordan is seen holding a can of beer. The back cover features Shane MacGowan pictured with his foot in a cast.


Critical reception

The UK music press hailed the Pogues' début album as a breath of fresh air, with positive reviews. ''
Melody Maker ''Melody Maker'' was a British weekly music magazine, one of the world's earliest music weeklies; according to its publisher, IPC Media, the earliest. It was founded in 1926, largely as a magazine for dance band musicians, by Leicester-born ...
'' felt that "the quality of their music, even the very nature of it, is strangely irrelevant. What's important is their existence at all. For The Pogues are a gesture – a particularly bloody two-fingered one – aimed at all things considered current and fashionable in 1984... Theirs is a gut reaction to traditional music – and with it comes all the motion, intensity and vigour that has largely been lost to these songs since the early days of the folk revival in the Sixties." '' NME'' stated, "From the strummed banjo and lilting accordion that preface a roaring singalong 'Transmetropolitan' to the final unidentified voice offering an unaccompanied 'diddly I di di' refrain, there exists a wealth of evidence that Shane MacGowan's faith in the power of positive drinking-music has paid premiums. The raucous surge and evocative noise that has filled the capital's pubs and clubs has come through the stark sobriety of the studio set-up to arrive intact in all its sweat-soaked beer-stained glory... If you think they've rehabilitated a music that's been asleep for a while you're dead wrong – on both counts. The music has never been away, and The Pogues in all their irreverent 'seriousness' have taken it out on a limb, where it all started, where it belongs." Awarding the album 3¾ stars out of five, '' Sounds'' said, "''Red Roses for Me'' is a satisfyingly impure, purposefully imperfect and totally irresistible collection of lasting resentment, rebellious roars, watery-eyed romance and uproarious jigs... Surprisingly, this record works. It manages to convey the sullied, brazen and raucous spirit of their live set very effectively."
Robert Christgau Robert Thomas Christgau ( ; born April 18, 1942) is an American music journalist and essayist. Among the most well-known and influential music critics, he began his career in the late 1960s as one of the earliest professional rock critics and ...
gave the album a B+ and proclaimed "tepid it ain't".


Legacy

For the 1994 reissue of the album '' Q'' observed that the album "rushes along at an unholy amphetamine gallop... they sound utterly intoxicated both with their own enthusiasm and the spirit of the jig and the reel". In a retrospective review for
AllMusic AllMusic (previously known as All-Music Guide and AMG) is an American online music database. It catalogs more than three million album entries and 30 million tracks, as well as information on musicians and bands. Initiated in 1991, the dat ...
, Mark Deming calls the album "good and rowdy fun", but feels that "on '' Rum Sodomy & the Lash'' and ''
If I Should Fall from Grace with God ''If I Should Fall from Grace with God'' is the third studio album by Irish folk-punk band the Pogues, released on 18 January 1988. Released in the wake of their biggest hit single, "Fairytale of New York", ''If I Should Fall from Grace with God ...
'', the Pogues would prove that they were capable of a lot more than that".


Track listing


Standard edition

#"Transmetropolitan" ( Shane MacGowan) – 4:15 #"The Battle of Brisbane" (instrumental) (MacGowan) – 1:49 #" The Auld Triangle" ( Brendan Behan) – 4:20 #" Waxie's Dargle" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) – 1:53 #"Boys from the County Hell" (MacGowan) – 2:56 #"Sea Shanty" (MacGowan) – 2:24 #" Dark Streets of London" (MacGowan) – 3:33 #"Streams of Whiskey" (MacGowan) – 2:32 #" Poor Paddy" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) – 3:09 #"Dingle Regatta" (instrumental) (Traditional; arranged by Jem Finer) – 2:52 #"
Greenland Whale Fisheries "Greenland Whale Fisheries" is a traditional sea song. In most of the versions collected from oral sources, the song opens up giving a date for the events that it describes (usually between 1823 and 1853). However, the song is actually older than ...
" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) – 2:36 #"Down in the Ground Where the Dead Men Go" (MacGowan) – 3:30 #"Kitty" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) – 4:23


Bonus tracks (2004 reissue)

The first CD issue of the album had a total of 14 tracks, adding "Whiskey You're the Devil" as track 8. In 2004, a remastered CD was issued adding a total of 6 bonus tracks to the original UK album listing. "Repeal of the Licensing Laws" was the B-side of "The Boys from the County Hell" their second single. "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" was the B-side of their first single, "Dark Streets of London". "Whiskey You're the Devil" and "Mursheen Durkin" were the B-sides of their third single, "A Pair of Brown Eyes". "The Wild Rover" and "The Leaving of Liverpool" were the B-sides of their fourth single, "Sally Maclennane". #
  • " The Leaving of Liverpool" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) produced by Elvis Costello # " Muirshin Durkin" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) produced by Philip Chevron # "Repeal of the Licensing Laws" (instrumental) (Spider Stacy) produced by Stan Brennan # " And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda" (
    Eric Bogle Eric Bogle (born 23 September 1944) is a Scottish-born Australian folk singer-songwriter. Born and raised in Scotland, he emigrated to Australia at the age of 25, to settle near Adelaide, South Australia. Bogle's songs have covered a variety of ...
    ) produced by Stan Brennan # "Whiskey You're the Devil" (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) produced by Philip Chevron # "
    The Wild Rover "The Wild Rover" ( Roud 1173) is a very popular and well-travelled folk song. Many territories have laid claim to have the original version. History In 2015 the English Folk Song and Dance periodical "Folk Music Journal" vol 10 No 5 had an artic ...
    " (Traditional; arranged by The Pogues) produced by Elvis Costello


    Charts


    Certifications


    Personnel

    The Pogues * Shane MacGowan * Country Jem Finer * Spider Stacy * Maestro Jimmy Fearnley * Rocky O'Riordan * Andy "The Clobberer" Ranken Additional personnel on bonus tracks *
    Phil Chevron Philip Ryan (17 June 1957 – 8 October 2013), professionally known as Philip Chevron, was an Irish singer-songwriter and guitarist and record producer. He was best known as the lead guitarist for the celtic punk band The Pogues and as the front ...
    Technical *Stan Brennan – producer *Nick Robbins – engineer *Craig Thompson – engineer *Steve Tynan – photography


    References

    {{Authority control 1984 debut albums The Pogues albums Stiff Records albums