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Crock of Gold: A Few Rounds with Shane MacGowan (2020) – J. Temple
It doesn’t take much to pull me backwards into the
ocean of nostalgia, letting its waves wash over me as I escape the present. Better still, when I’m able to update the
past and situate it in the here and now (or at least more recently than then),
as you can with a good music doco. But it’s
a guilty pleasure, since I feel internal pressure to live in the present, aware
of current culture (or at least those culture-makers of my own generation).
With regard to Shane MacGowan, singer-songwriter of The Pogues, who it turns
out was 10 years older than me (he died in November 2023 and Nick Cave sang at
his funeral), I first came across him more or less contemporaneously in the
1980s. I bought the band’s 2nd
LP, “Rum, Sodomy, and the Lash” (1985) around that time and then quickly caught
up by purchasing their first, “Red Roses for Me” (1984). Having some Irish heritage (through my
mother) didn’t hurt the attraction to this punk version of traditional music
from the Emerald Isle -- and MacGowan’s blend of poetry, history, and
confrontation was simpatico with the English Literature, Philosophy, and Psychology
classes I was taking then. In 1988, my sister and I saw The Pogues in Boston
for the “If I Should Fall from Grace with God” (3rd LP) tour – it was
the summer, hot in the nosebleed seats of the Orpheum Theatre, and the show was
shaggy, replete with a cover of “Honky Tonk Women” featuring Joe Strummer on
guitar. Little did I know (until I
watched this film) that this was part of the year-long worldwide tour that
broke MacGowan. Indeed, the film is (not
unexpectedly) a cautionary tale, charting MacGowan’s downward trajectory (a
result of alcohol, drugs, and hard touring) to the point where he is captured
in the film’s many on camera interviews and conversations (with various friends
such as Sinn Féin’s Gerry Adams and movie star Johnny Depp) in a very sorry
state, full of bile and slurred bitterness (but also fond longing and some
misguided hope for the future). Personally, after the 1988 show, I began to
lose interest – the band’s next album did not seem as good and I eventually
sold all of their records when I moved abroad. Little did I know then that
MacGowan had lost his mojo. Director Julien Temple, with many music videos and
docos under his belt, uses a variety of styles and techniques (including new animation,
repurposed footage from old movies, video of The Pogues, interview in pubs,
etc.) to tell MacGowan’s story from childhood to the pre-Pandemic present, with
most of the runtime focused on the late ‘70s to early ‘90s. Pivotal moments include: MacGowan’s early
childhood in Tipperary before moving to London at age 6; his engagement with
the punk scene after seeing the Sex Pistols and forming his own band, the
Nipple Erectors; his light-bulb moment when he fused Irish tradition with punk
rock; and then the 1988 tour that extinguished his flame or so the story goes. There are a few decades after that but
MacGowan, although heralded by his contemporaries and followers, seems burnt
out, a shell of a man, an ex-junky soon confined to a wheelchair, and now dead.
After the film, I listened to some of his best songs, many of them sentimental
but poetic ballads (“A Pair of Brown Eyes”, “Dirty Old Town”, “A Rainy Night in
Soho”, “Fairytale of New York”, “And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda”) and I
fell briefly into a reverie.






