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INCREDIBLE SHANE |
Special thanks to reporters and the best regards to all Shane's fans all over the world |
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This section contains the latest rumours, news, gossip, reviews I find rummaging about Pogues/Popes/music sites/messageboards/guestbooks and is dedicated to |
HOW I CAME TO LOVE THEM fans' love stories |
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ROCKIN BOPPIN LUNATIC |
ARCHIVES |
FANDOM |
FRIENDS OF SHANE mailing list |
JOEY CASHMAN fan page |
FANFICS |
All FANFICS on one page (26 for the moment) |
MARCH 2006 - APRIL 2006 (USA TOUR) |
"Shane and The Dubliners are to play Fitzpatrick's Irish Bar in Aberdeen on 7th March - is this true? This is like reading intercepted underhand talks. I was following the thriller for days and finally caught meself starting to share worries – “will he make it or not” It’s hilarious, and the author of this fraud has a business streak and an imagination… The drama rages on... Once a joke, it has now made it to a serious official level with big guns (in the persons of the involved parties' representatives) firing off:. eveningexpress.co.uk contactmusic.com dailyrecord.co.uk A sad outcome of an abortive re-launch gig - a just re-opened pub is shut down, its owner is charged with an alleged fraud.. Will it teach them to think harder before making ass of others reputation?.. A short passage from Mighty Stef's lengthy interview (regarding his work with Shane): ...The circumstances could hardly be more appropriate. The Mighty Stef is speaking from an old-fashioned coin-operated phone booth in Barcelona airport on the Monday morning following his stag weekend. There’s always a story with Stefan Murphy, whose second album 100 Midnights is a rough-edged but hugely impressive panorama of songwriting styles and sounds, from the bolshy, Brechtian title tune to the poolroom blues of the closing ‘A Pretend Sailors Goodbye’; from No Wave Spector (‘Downtown’) to shlockabilly country death dirges (‘Golden Gloves’). If the songs frequently invoke Tom Waits’s description of The Pogues as sounding like sailors on shore leave, that’s no accident: both Cait O’Riordain and Shane MacGowan make cameos on the record (Stef is handled by ex Pogues manager Frank Murray), the former on the mother-son duet ‘Safe At Home’, the latter on a cover of Townes Van Zandt’s classic ‘Waitin’ Round To Die’. “Shane came in armed with another verse for the song,” Stefan recalls, “he thought that this verse he had concocted in his brain was very apt: “A friend, he said he knew how some good money could be made/We found a rich boy walking all alone/I got me a razor blade/And I took him in the shade/And I started me a graveyard of my own.” Holy shit – that’s some verse. “He thought that he’d ripped it off Hank Williams, but I searched for those lyrics and I couldn’t find them anywhere, so it was just a little bit of Shane magic that we were privy to at the time. I’ve been asked a series of times by people doing press stuff and friends and family, ‘What was it like meeting Shane MacGowan?’ Well, first of all he was an absolute gentleman and a really good, spirited person to be in the company of. And yeah, when we were finished, we got drunk, we had a great time, we sat around listening to music and playing pool and drinking whiskey and gin and everything else. For somebody of the pedigree of Shane to be contributing to my work was a real thrill – I still don’t understand the full weight of that.” The rest is in Hot Press. 30.03.2009 Meeting Shane (a first hand story of an encounter) "Back in 1986 Bastardette was still working at the Ohio State University Theatre. One of her colleagues was actress, director, and OSU Theatre Associate Professor Joy Reilly. Her cousin was the legendary--even then--Shane MacGowan. While still a boy soprano, Shane had sung at Joy's first wedding, and she recalled him as a "sweet boy," who despite his later claims, came from an accomplished and intellectual family and had not been to Borstal. Well, that was a long time ago. Even then. Before he filed down his teeth." MORE >>> “Fortune prevaling across the western ocean…” (an Ode to the Pogues) "With their drinking songs, tin-whistle ditties, and rousing odes to old-school Irishness, the Pogues are the sons of a more squalid age. Shane McGowan, their lead singer and most prolific lyricist, has long exemplified the beer-blasted Irishman: profane, incoherent, staggering, sad, by turns violent and wistful, poetic and crass. By mumbling through lines like “Jimmy played harmonica in the pub where I was born,” McGowan reinforced the image of a culture of cackling, chaotic brawlers whose sole goal in drinking themselves to death was to get in on the first round in Hell. So yes, the Pogues have cultivated a cartoonish image, but they deserve credit for a more profound accomplishment: they were the unlikely vanguard of Irish internationalism before all that “Celtic Tiger” hype took hold. You can see it in their lyrics, which include references not only to Cuchullain and Cromwell but also to Rhineland mythology, the works of Jean Genet, and, in a funny folk cover, Jesse James. Sure, the Pogues eulogize Irish novelist Christy Brown as “a man of renown from Dingle to Down,” but they also sing about Gallipoli, they invoke Gericault’s “Raft of the Medusa,” and they even flirt with Coleridge. " MORE >>> Stream of Brilliance: Shane MacGowan (an Ode to Shane) Posted by jeffc Friday, March 20, 2009 3:22 PM "Singer/Songwriter Robyn Hitchcock recalled: "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." MORE >>> The Pogues' East Coast Tour House Of Bluse, Boston, USA, 20 & 21 Mar 2009 Pogues at House of Blues by Jim Worcesterite March 22, 2009 - 1:05am "So the Pogues finished their American tour at the House of Blues tonight. A few points . . . 1) They went deeper into the catalogue than I have ever seen/heard. Highlights included "Kitty," "Greenland Whale Fisheries," "Lullaby of London," "The Body of An American," and "Cotton Fields." Some really interesting choices. 2) Musicianship mostly great, although there were rough spots here and there. " MORE >>> Questionable Parental Influence? Pogue Mahone! By Jack Calabrese Jackieism Sunday, March 22, 2009 "I was away a good part of this week and Deb has been immersed in her schoolwork so we were both feeling the need to spend some quality time with the kids. We decided a little field trip would do the trick and allow us to reconnect. A trip to a museum probably would have been nice or maybe a nature walk would put things back in perspective. No, neither of these would suit our needs. What did we do instead? We took them to see the Pogues at the House of Blues in Boston. What better way to bond with Zach and Vanessa than to bring them to a loud crowded concert filled with Boston's Irish drinking and fighting elite." MORE >>> Red Roses For Me: The Pogues At The Boston House Of Blues March 20 2009 By chicafrom3 Mar. 23rd, 2009 at 4:28 PM "We got to the club around six and the doors weren't open yet so we hit the HoB restaurant. Well, the bar. My dad got a couple beers, and I got felt up by a pretty Irish lady. Okay, it was an accident, but still. Pretty Irish lady! As soon as we realized they were letting people in, we beat it inside. Early enough to stake out prime rail position, just barely to the left of center. " MORE >>> The Pogues close out St. Patrick's Day tour in Boston A review of The Pogues at the House of Blues on March 20 By Jon Kiparsky, Staff Writer Boston Music Spotlight 24 March, 2009 "Shane McGowan of The Pogues (BMS photo by Rory Flynn) When a punk band performs its old material to an audience consisting largely of people who were still in diapers or not yet born when that material was recorded, one must immediately suspect that nostalgia is at play. In the case of the Pogues, however, I suspect something else might be going on. The Pogues’ period as a really vital punk-folk band is a very small part of their overall history as a band. " MORE >>> Photos: Prefix Mag by Tim Bugbee Baumann at Flickr The Pogues' East Coast Tour 9:30 Club, Washington DC, USA, 16 - 18 Mar 2009 The Pogues/Marseille Figs - 9:30 Club - March 16 2009 by David Hintz DC Rock Live Tuesday, March 17, 2009 Marseille Figs - A three piece with singer/guitarist and two guys that switched around from various keyed instruments or brass. A twisted folk-blues Americana sound pretty much was the main course. A couple of songs, Caesar's Revenge and Jumbo were intense standouts. Some of the material was a bit duller, but still a good opening set. The musicians helped out on brass for a few Pogues songs, too, which was a nice complement. MORE >>> Pogue Mahone (i.e. kiss my arse) Burned Fingers 19 March 2009 "What better way to experience your first Pogues show than on St. Patrick’s Day? Sure, if it occured in Ireland it would be even cooler, but this was more than enough. I can’t imagine how chaotic a Pogues show in their homeland would be but, on this night, I had never seen such a gleefully violent crowd at the 9:30 Club. Although I was right at the front, protected by a gigantic hockey player, I would glance back and gaze in awe at the raging sea of bodies leaping through the air. This is why I arrived at the club hours in advance of the doors opening; all I wanted was to be as close as I could to the band, to watch all of their movements and mannerisms and appreciate their performance, without being obstructed by angry/happy drunks or a dozen cell phones taking pictures of the group. " MORE >>> The Pogues @ the 930 Club, Wednesday Night Posted by Annie Galvin Black Plastic Bag Mar. 19, 2009, at 5:46 pm "Given Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan's storied relationship with booze and drugs (a relationship which has sidelined him on occasion during his own band's performances), the moment when he emerged onstage at the 930 Club Wednesday night for the last of three D.C. shows came as something of a pleasant shock. Throughout the Pogues' long and tumultuous lifespan, MacGowan's onstage antics have grown into the stuff of legend. Whether it be "that time Shane traded shirts with a random audience member" or "that time Shane booted on a crowd in Dublin", MacGowan-related lore has staked out a precious place in Irish rock history. " MORE >>> D.C. trip: Pogues, Newseum, Top Chef, tolls By ANDY GRAY TribToday POSTED: March 19, 2009 "the night before was spent in the perfect place to celebrate the holiday - standing less than 10 feet from Shane MacGowan and the rest of The Pogues as the band ripped through more than 20 songs at D.C.'s 9:30 Club. If anything, the show was better than the one I saw in 2006, which was the band's first on these shores in 17 years. MacGowan isn't the picture of health (check out my blog on the Tribune Chronicle's Web site for evidence of that), but he can still sing those punkish Irish reels he wrote 25 years ago. And except for one shaky ballad, he can sing them on key too. I even understood a few of the words he said between songs this time. " MORE >>> The Pogues 3-18-2009, 9:30 Club, Washington DC BY EVAN HAGA Blurt Online 25 March, 2009 "Who knew being an enabler could be so much fun? That's now a sort of standard line on 51-year-old Shane MacGowan, thrown around by anyone lucky enough to catch the Pogues each year when they capitalize on St. Paddy's fervor in the States. You want more? How about something comparing MacGowan to Keith Richards? On this night, the last of three dates the band played at Washington, D.C.'s 9:30 Club, the more appropriate analogy might have been a recent Bob Dylan tour. To be kind to MacGowan and cruel to Dylan, the correlations were there: an expert band fronted by a charismatic marble-mouthed poet who, never being a conventionally great singer to begin with, now delivers his ageless lyrics in an incomprehensible warble; the crowd a mix of diehards who hold the gig with spiritual reverence and newcomers who think it a fine place to get wasted. " MORE >>> Photos: Photo Vida bSmithPhotoBlogDotOrg Flickr fizzgigVA 17/03/2009 Flickr fizzgigVA 16/03/2009 Flickr The Pogues' East Coast Tour Roseland, New York, USA, 13 & 14 Mar 2009 The Pogues Live at Roseland By: Mishka-Shubaly New York Press (Blog) 16 March "On a rainless night in Midtown, the sidewalk had been commandeered by drunken hordes of yahoos from Pennsylvania in huge plush green top hats and glittering green beads, all of them Americans about as Irish as the purple horseshoe marshmallows in a box of Lucky Charms. But neither them nor the openly hostile door staff at Roseland Ballroom could dampen our spirits. With nips of whiskey clanking and grinding uncomfortably in our shorts, we gingerly made our way upstairs to nab a good spot to witness the guaranteed debacle of Celtic punk’s visionary waster, Shane McGowan, reunited with the original lineup of The Pogues. " MORE >>> Pogues concert at the Roseland Ballroom Wine by Colour Monday, March 16, 2009 "Sometime within the last year, while reading about the wonderful Irish band the Pogues, I thought I read somewhere that their infamous lead singer, Shane MacGowan, was finally off the sauce. Erroneous. Erroneous!! Well, either that report was incorrect or he has since fallen off the wagon. And gotten run over by it. Don't get me wrong, Friday's Pogues concert at the Roseland Ballroom was great. Fantastic. But everything I have read about MacGowan's legendary drinking seems to be spot on..." MORE >>> The Pogues By khorosanluna 17 March 2009 "What compels someone to pay exorbitant sums to see the same band year in and year out, a band formed more than twenty five years ago, but who hasn’t released a new album in more than fifteen of those years? Why do the Pogues sell out several nights in a row, and how on Earth does Shane MacGowan remain alive? I can only answer the first question with any certainty. The Pogues draw because Shane MacGowan’s song-writing prowess meets its match in the robust performance of his fellow musicians. " MORE >>> The Pogues Tear Up Manhattan By Don't call Me Ishmael Thursday, March 19, 2009 "A few minutes before the Pogues took to the Roseland Ballroom stage, an old colleague from Columbus told me he heard a rumor that Shane MacGowan stopped drinking. MacGowan staggered out behind the band members, clutching the wine bottle and squelching all those rumors. Rumors that he finally excised those rotten stumps from his mouth in exchange for dentures also proved false. Staring too long at his toothless grin was the Irish equivalent of staring into the Ark of the Covenant. " MORE >>> Photos: Zimbio Pictures (super) Brooklynvegan (Lucero & Pogues) Bryan Kremkau (SkaPunk..) & his Flickr set Kyra Kverno Flickr Hardcore Shutterburg Flickr Konstantin Sergeyev Flickr (backstage) The Pogues' East Coast Tour Tabernacle, Atlanta, Georgia, USA, 9 Mar 2009 A new purpose in life 10 March 2009 in BDay's Bubble "I once knew a girl whose life goal was to play the accordion. I hope Marguerite achieved that. I may change my own musical aspiration from wanting to grow up to be Michael Lachowski to wanting to play the accordion. Mexican polka, klezmer, European polkas, cowboy tunes, Brave combo, more polkas . . . What could be more satisfying than being able to play that one-(wo)man instrument? I’ll tell you what: playing it in an Irish slampunk band with a banjo and tin whistle. Transcendent. Iridescent! as Shane McGowan called Spider Stacey’s whistle tonight at the Pogues show at the Tabernacle. (I believe the direct quote was “all iridescent-like.” Or was it “incandescent”?) Anyway, that combination and their poetry is truly some of my favorite music on the planet. " MORE >>> Their Hearts in Tipperary Wherever They Go - The POGUES in Atlanta by Sara Ashes Ashes and Glass 11 March 2009 "I never dreamed it would really happen. I've been told by countless boys over the many years who tried to convince me the they were bigger fans, far more knowledgeable than I, that it would never happen. I had missed my chance; I would never see The Pogues in all their glory- meaning with Shane MacGowan in the front. Well boys, you were wrong. Never underestimate my unrelenting loyalty to the bands that are my soulmates. Not that my steadfastness brought about this strange, five-city US tour that paused in none other than my Atlanta, Georgia, but I'm still claiming it as my own. And my own doesn't begin to express what we were a part of at Monday night's show. I could almost cry. " MORE >>> Luck of the Irish By Scott The Goo Goo Muck 10 March 2009 "Why was I going out of town? Well, Santa had the foresight to get me a ticket to see The Pogues on Monday night in Atlanta. He really does see all. I was told by friends who had seen them previously to be prepared for a fun, if shambolic, event. I was told the band would be tight, but Shane MacGowan would pretty much just slur a bunch of garbled nonsense over it, relying on the crowd to, you know, actually remember the words. But holy crap were they awesome last night. " MORE >>> A Pogues hangover By Karen G. Paint Splatter and Kudzu Mar. 10th, 2009 at 12:30 PM "I actually don't think I'm hung over because I sweat out anything I've had to drink over the last few days at the show last night.Plus, I didn't have the Irish car bomb, Amanda did. Wooo, skippy. We WERE a drunken boat of fans at the Tabernacle. Imagine a theater with balconies, chandeliers and old wood floor turned gigantic Irish pub with a mosh pit, crowd surfers and many drunken men showing their love for each other in sway. My sides hurt.My face even hurts because I can't get rid of the grin. I saw Shane MacGowan, "a man of many words and few teeth," live.ALIVE. " MORE >>> Whirlwind Atlanta Trip With the Pogues The Hangover Journals Wednesday, March 11, 2009 "Well, I did it. I went, I saw, I listened, I had a blast, I drank a lot of beer, I smoked cigarettes (yeah, I know, I have no willpower and Atlanta has less stringent smoking rules than Asheville) I traded hilarious stories with people I hadn't seen for almost 30 years and by god I saw the Pogues again for the first time since 1989 and they still rocked to the nth degree. They were awesome. The place they played - the Tabernacle - was awesome (except or even the way the 2nd floor shook and the bouncers started thinning the crowd way out before it collapsed or something so, um, note that if you're going there, stay off the 2nd floor if it's crowded) Atlanta was awesome and in general, awesome, though an overused word, fits the whole trip pretty well. Super fantabulous. Extra specially nifty. You know. All good, my brothers and sisters, all good. " MORE >>> The Pogues-The Tabernacle (Monday, March 9, 2009) JerusrockBlog Thursday, March 12, 2009 "The first Pogues show in Atlanta with troubled frontman Shane MacGowan since 1989 was of course a drunken, raucous party. It was not all that important how their performance was. People were just excited about them being there. I heard complaints that their timing was off, but who really cared? The Pogues are not a band you go to for technical proficiency. I was just hapy that Shane was there and sounded like Shane. I couldn't understand a word he said when he spoke, but his voice sounded fine when he sang. He looked like a shell of his former self, and kept mysteriously retreating to a little black tent side stage every few songs. Probably best we don't know what he was doing in there. No "Rain Street." No "Summer In Siam." No "Fairytale Of New York" (who would sing the Kirsty MacColl parts, anyway?). But the setlist was all-in-all pretty strong." Some photos-reviews: Resisttemptation Journal April Ingram Photography (almost the same as previous set) Photognome Journal (a great picture of Shane!) Nickmickolas Flickr (with a tent video) Barue2u Flickr Kingtide Flickr The Pogues' East Coast Tour Pompano Beach Amphitheatre, Florida, USA, 7 Mar 2009 The Pogues in Florida by Marty After Hours music blog 9 Mar 2009 "With The Pogues, who gave their only Florida performance Saturday night at the Pompano Beach Amphitheater, there is always a bit a magic to be found amidst the spilled beer and cigarette butts. In years past, that magic grew out of the boisterous and intoxicating mix of Irish folk music and beer-spitting punk. More often than not, that allure comes from the misty brilliance of the Pogues' frontman, Shane McGowan. " MORE >>> The Pogues in south Florida by Mark Scroggins Culture Industrie blog 8 March 2009 "You needn't have known me long to find out that I'm something of a rabid Pogues fan, have been for the past 20-odd years or so. Strangely enough, I've never seen the band in concert, tho I did catch singer Shane MacGowan on his tour for The Snake back in 1997 or so – a disspiriting show, in which John Doe of X opened to a frankly uninterested crowd & Shane himself delivered a 45-minute, slurred & disoriented set. The Pogues, who've been performing "reunion" tours with their classic 8-member lineup over the past 9 years or so, were scheduled to play at this weekend's Langerado Festival in Miami; I wanted to go, but didn't want to pony up the massive ticket price, so it was almost a relief when the entire festival was cancelled. Not good for the Florida music scene, certainly, but it relieved me of a big financial dilemma ($150 for one band). Shane & the boys, however, seem to have already booked their tickets & shipped their gear, for about two weeks ago I discovered they had rescheduled to the Pompano Beach Amphitheatre (dig ye olde Englishe spelling, typical around here), where we saw them last night in all their aged glory. " MORE >>> The Pogues in Pompano: Cheers, Louisiana! (with a pic of Shane) Posted by Jose Lambiet 11 March 2009 6:37 am Better be water in that cup, Shane MacGowan. From what someone in the first row of The Pogues’ concert at the Pompano Amphitheatre tells me, it wasn’t. With the smell of whiskey floating in the air, the oft-rehabbed raspy-voiced frontman stumbled on stage, wondering out loud if The Pogues had just landed in Louisiana. One bandmate set MacGowan straight, so MacGowan saluted the audience with: “Hola!” MacGowan took frequent drink breaks as the band played for nearly two hours. Photos: Pogue Mahone Flickr -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- All "official" inter- / pre- / re- views of The East Coast 2009 tour are stored at Medusa 05.03.2009 "Inspirations" - gig for Barretstown: "This really was one amazing gig! 10 acts in 4 hours - great music, superb DJ to keep us all entertained while they swapped mikes etc... And OK, Shane MacGowan was completely hammered before he got on stage and only managed one song its sort of what we've some to expect. But Sinead - what a voice! And the Beatles cover... I was not expecting that. All the acts were amazing and that finale!!!!! Best of all.... 30,000 Euro raised for Barretstown and no more worthwhile cause!" -- Duke Special Forum "It was a fantastic gig! Great entertainment....i don't think Shane's mic was even turned on!" -- Duke Special Forum Barretstown Inspirations Benefit Concert - 27 Feb 2009, The Academy, Dublin Barretstown Inspirations Benefit Concert - 27 Feb 2009, The Academy, Dublin - Flickr A lunch with Shane 13.02.2009 Shane and Camille join Sharon Shannon for April gigs Shane MacGowan & Camille O'Sullivan will be joining the Sharon Shannon Big Band for an April 2009 tour, it has been announced. By staff reporter The Irish World 13/02/09 In November 08, The Sharon Shannon Big Band blazed its way across England and Scotland playing for an exhausting two and a half hours each night and selling out eight venues from Glasgow, Manchester, Birmingham, Newcastle, Inverness, Ullapool and London. Riding high with the Galway Girl sound-tracking a Magners Irish Cider TV advert the Big Band featured other Celtic luminairies such as Mundy and Damien Dempsey. Indeed the original version of Galway Girl, as it appears in the Magners ad, was recorded with country rock bad boy Steve Earle and it was Mundy who stood in on vocals for what was the triumphant encore every night. This April sees the return of the Big Band but, with Damien and Mundy on sabbatical, guests on this Mean Fiddler tour will be main Pogue and Celtic punk Shane MacGowan & Edinburgh Fringe success story Camille O'Sullivan. For a man that is famed as much for self destruction as infusing punk rock with his Irish heritage, Shane MacGowan brings a wilder edge to the proceedings. Since her appearance at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2007, Camille O'Sullivan has taken the live circuit by storm achieving rave reviews for her glamorous burlesque act & exceptional voice. With such a melting pot of raw talent, fans will not want to miss this opportunity to see three of Ireland's great performers all under one roof. 05.02.2009 The Mighty Stef’s upcoming sophomore full-length release “100 Midnights” is due out February 6th and promises to please die-hard fans and lure in new. These thirteen tracks feature an eclectic mixture of genres and sounds that will keep the listener on their toes. Fans will be treated to collaborations with Cait O’Riordan and Shane McGowan, the later who lends his vocals to haunting Townes Van Zandt cover “Waitin’ Around To Die”. The first single from “100 Midnights” is “Downtown”. World renowned accordionist SHARON SHANNON is set to receive the “Lifetime Achievement Award” at this years Meteor Ireland Music Awards, in recognition of her outstanding contribution to the Irish Music Industry over the past 22 years, the youngest ever recipient of this highly acclaimed award. The awards which take place on St Patrick’s Day 17th March at the RDS will feature Sharon Shannon performing her number one hit Galway Girl. A prolific composer, Sharon is currently writing an album of traditional tunes for full Concert Orchestra arrangement. And she has also been busy in the studio compiling material for her new album Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, which sees her joining forces with Irish stars like Camille O'Sullivan and Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan and is to be released in the Autumn of 2009. Sinead & Shane confirmed for Barretstown gig Hot Press 19 Jan 2009 There’s a cracking line-up on February 27 as the Dublin Academy plays host to a fundraiser for Barretstown House, the activity centre for kids with life-threatening illnesses founded by the late Paul Newman as part of his Hole In The Wall initiative. Appearing under the ‘Inspirations’ banner, Sin?ad O’Connor, Shane MacGowan, Republic Of Loose, Fun Lovin Criminals, The Blizzards, The Walls, Engine Alley and many more will perform songs by their musical heroes (the Stones, Bowie and Dylan are all on the list we hear). Tickets priced ˆ28 go on sale shortly. |
FEBRUARY 2009 - MARCH 2009 |