It is possible that Shane MacGowan, who passed away at the age of 65, appeared to be the most improbable candidate for the role of frontman for a pop group due to his damaged teeth and enormous ears. However, the Pogues never intended to become popular among young people. They added a punk sound and attitude to the rowdy end of Irish folk music, which was exemplified by their idols the Dubliners. Shane, in particular, was responsible for giving the band a reputation for being inebriated.
In the same way that the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem transformed Irish folk music from the distance of the New York diaspora, the Pogues were born out of the first-generation Irish population that was located in London. In point of fact, MacGowan made the insightful observation that the band definitely could not have originated in Ireland. It was MacGowan’s songwriting that was the driving force behind the success of the Pogues. He contributed to masterpieces like “Streams of Whisky” and “A Rainy Night in Soho,” but the song “Fairytale of New York,” on which he collaborated with Kirsty MacColl, was the most important.
When it was first released in 1987, the song hit number two on the charts, and it quickly became a highlight of the band’s Christmas shows.
After MacColl’s death in a speedboat accident in the year 2000, rereleased recordings became even more devastating. After that, Fairytale of New York has had numerous appearances on the charts, and it is consistently ranked as one of the most popular Christmas songs in the United Kingdom on numerous occasions.
Pembury, Kent was the location where MacGowan was born on Christmas Day. His parents were there to visit relatives at the time. He spent his childhood in Tunbridge Wells, but he frequently travelled to County Tipperary to see his relatives. His mother, Therese (née Cahill), was an Irish dancer and vocalist who won awards and was also a former model.
His father, Maurice MacGowan, was an executive at the C&A retail company and had a passion for literature and poetry. Shane was a voracious reader; he went to the Holmewood House prep school, which was located close to Tunbridge Wells and required students to pay tuition. It was then that his creative writing abilities were initially recognised. At the age of 14, he was awarded a scholarship to attend Westminster school in London; however, a year later, it was discovered that he was in possession of drugs, and he was ejected from the school.