Continuum's "33 1 / 3" series of books takes a seminal album and breaks it down in startling minutiae. The series is freewheeling and eclectic, ranging from minute rock-geek analysis to idiosyncratic personal celebration.
Continuum's "33 1 / 3" series of books takes a seminal album and breaks it down in startling minutiae. The series is freewheeling and eclectic, ranging from minute rock-geek analysis to idiosyncratic personal celebration.
Continuum's "33 1 / 3" series of books takes a seminal album and breaks it down in startling minutiae. The series is freewheeling and eclectic, ranging from minute rock-geek analysis to idiosyncratic personal celebration.
Continuum's "33 1 / 3" series of books takes a seminal album and breaks it down in startling minutiae. The series is freewheeling and eclectic, ranging from minute rock-geek analysis to idiosyncratic personal celebration.
It was only a matter of time before a clever publisher realized that there is an audience for whom Exile on Main Street or Electric Ladyland are as significant and worthy of study as The Catcher in the Rye or Middlemarch. The series is freewheeling and eclectic, ranging from minute rock-geek analysis to idiosyncratic personal celebrationThe New York Times Book Review Ideal for the rock geek who thinks liner notes just arent enoughRolling Stone One of the coolest publishing imprints on the planetBookslut These are for the insane collectors out there who appreciate fantastic design, well-executed thinking, and things that make your house look cool. Each volume in this series takes a seminal album and breaks it down in startling minutiae. We love these. We are huge nerdsVice A brilliant series each one a work of real loveNME (UK) Passionate, obsessive, and smartNylon Religious tracts for the rock n roll faithfulBoldtype 2 [A] consistently excellent seriesUncut (UK) We arent naive enough to think that were your only source for reading about music (but if we had our way watch out). For those of you who really like to know everything there is to know about an album, youd do well to check out Continuums 33 1/3 series of booksPitchfork For reviews of individual titles in the series, please visit our website at www.continuumbooks.com and 33third.blogspot.com 3 Also available in the series: Dusty in Memphis by Warren Zanes Forever Changes by Andrew Hultkrans Harvest by Sam Inglis The Kinks Are The Village Green Preservation Society by Andy Miller Meat Is Murder by Joe Pernice The Piper at the Gates of Dawn by John Cavanagh Abba Gold by Elisabeth Vincentelli Electric Ladyland by John Perry Unknown Pleasures by Chris Ott Sign O the Times by Michaelangelo Matos The Velvet Underground and Nico by Joe Harvard Let It Be by Steve Matteo Live at the Apollo by Douglas Wolk Aqualung by Allan Moore OK Computer by Dai Griffiths 4 Let It Be by Colin Meloy Led Zeppelin IV by Erik Davis Armed Forces by Franklin Bruno Exile on Main Street by Bill Janovitz Grace by Daphne Brooks Murmur by J. Niimi Pet Sounds by Jim Fusilli Ramones by Nicholas Rombes Endtroducing by Eliot Wilder Kick Out the Jams by Don McLeese Low by Hugo Wilcken In the Aeroplane Over the Sea by Kim Cooper Music from Big Pink by John Niven Pauls Boutique by Dan LeRoy Doolittle by Ben Sisario Theres a Riot Goin On by Miles Marshall Lewis Stone Roses by Alex Green 5 Bee Thousand by Marc Woodworth The Who Sell Out by John Dougan Highway 61 Revisited by Mark Polizzotti Loveless by Mike McGonigal The Notorious Byrd Brothers by Ric Menck Court and Spark by Sean Nelson 69 Love Songs by LD Beghtol Songs in the Key of Life by Zeth Lundy Use Your illusion I and II by Eric Weisbard Daydream Nation by Matthew Stearns Trout Mask Replica by Kevin Courrier Double Nickels on the Dime by Michael T. Fournier Peoples Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm by Shawn Taylor Aja by Don Breithaupt Rid of Me by Kate Schatz Achtung Baby by Stephen Catanzarite If Youre Feeling Sinister by Scott Plagenhoef 6 Lets Talk About Love by Carl Wilson Swordfishtrombones by David Smay 20 Jazz Funk Greats by Drew Daniel Horses by Philip Shaw Master of Reality by John Darnielle Gentlemen by Bob Gendron 7 Rum, Sodomy & the Lash Jeffrey T. Roesgen 8 2008 The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc 80 Maiden Lane, New York, NY 10038 The Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX www.continuumbooks.com 33third.blogspot.com Copyright 2008 by Jeffrey T. Roesgen All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the publishers or their agents. Printed in Canada on 100% postconsumer waste recycled paper Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Roesgen, Jeffrey T. Rum, sodomy, and the lash / by Jeffrey T. Roesgen. p. cm. -- (33 1/3) Includes bibliographical references. eISBN-13: 978-1-4411-0570-7 1. Pogues (Musical group). Rum, sodomy & the lash. I. Tide. II. Title: Rum, sodomy & the lash. 9 ML421.P645R67 2008 782.421660922--dc22 2008028710 10 To the ones left holding the rope 11 The Bank of the Thames, 1985 A life at sea had transformed the man who stood on the dark riverbank. It had withered his face, thickened his hands; it had offered him both freedom and tragedy. It had delivered him to places so far and beautiful that he wept at the sound of the waves. In the scent of the ocean he recalled old friends, just whispers now, with whom hed drunk, fought, and held under every imaginable circumstance. Now, this man was old; his legs unsteady, his fingers nubs, no longer suited for ropes. At night, he wandered the riverbanks, looking to the great moored vessels that floated, impotent now, on crests of water illuminated by the city lights. He recited their histories as he watched them; he whispered the names of their crews, long committed to memory. Communing with the ships this way soothed him, like a family, an experience embraced. One particular night, he watched commotion about one of the ships. There was musicfamiliar to the old man yet in some other way, damaged. There were drunken hollers from the deck that resounded over the water. At the railing of the ship he saw a man writhing with laughter, waving a bottle, spewing silver facets of rum into the air. Another group of men hoisted him onto their shoulders and cast him into the river. When the music ended, the old man watched as the ships passengers descended onto feeder boats that ferried them to the banks where he stood. In tight clusters they stumbled out over the docks and dissolved beyond into the dark streets. The last boat to depart the ship approached slowly. Its inhabitants, 12 engaged in full-throated song, came out of the darkness like specters of Admiral Nelsons Navy, clad in blue and gold. There was a notion of wear in their faces, that they were merry though in some other way betrayed. As they rose from the boat, they lugged laundry bags and cases filled with accordions, guitars, drums, and rum. Passing the old man, one of them turned. He offered a grin that was both menacing and solemn. He reached into the pocket of his coat and tossed a volume of papers out onto the bank. Then he continued on with the rest of the group toward the ramshackle buildings that stood across the road. The band heaped their cases and bags into the corner of a small tavern and came to rest around a table. Some of them continued to sing, while others put their brows to the table and slept. After some time Cait, the sole woman in the band, rose and nodded to her group. She collected a bag and a bass and left with a man in glasses and a black hat whod been standing along the wall. Voice by voice, the bands songs diluted into the commotion of the tavern room. Soon, thered be more songs to sing, but for now thered be rest; the kind that all trodden men must indulge. Outside, the old man wandered over to the volume of papers. He lifted and shifted them under the moonlight. He fingered at pages that were damp and eaten and held the slightest trace of rum. To himself, he read out the title of the volume that was still legible in curling, black ink: Rum, Sodomy & the Lash. 13 Rochefort, France, June 15, 1816 The sea lapped at the edge of the ferry and Philips hand fell from under his chin, slapping against the harbor. It woke him with a shiver that sent his metal cup out of his coat pocket and into the water. Both of us watched it hover, its cavity filling and then fading beneath the surface. I looked around to the rest of our group, Cait, Shane, James, Andrew, and Spider arrayed about, unconscious. Philip twisted his head at the sky, squinted, and then returned to sleep. I licked a sour film of brandy from my lips. Id been awake for two days playing to a festival crowd, then to a squad of soldiers, and was now joining a convoy in Rochefort where we were to board a ship for Senegal. Why we decided to make a voyage to Africa was unclear then and still eludes me even now. It was a faint consensus, one that arrived without any particular deliberation or thought, just a simple shrug of shoulders, a spit on the ground, and a collection of indifferent, though resolute, nods. A French officer had invited us to join the convoy the prior week. Hed mumbled to us over the rim of his cup that France, now united after an inconvenient bout with Napoleon, was ready to extend herself back into Senegal where, for a century, her ships had havens at the Port of St. Louis. This officer fingered at his mouth and then hedged that a group of English and Irish would be welcome to go, especially after the aid that our countrymen gave against Napoleon. In the intervening week wed forgotten the invitation, played five gigs, lost Shane for two days in the countryside, and each night slept outdoors: time and place became a gentle continuum, where there came no distinction between the morning and darkness or Paris or 14 Rochefort or Africa. A sea voyage became another course in our groups fraying sense of reality: the kind that comes when youve been away from home for too long. It was late in the morning and already the day was hot, without any breeze to stir the water. Each of our ferrys oarsmen had removed their tunics and their callused brands shone white in the sun. I stared at the them: raised fluer-de-lis, pointed and curved like claws. An oarsman watched me as he ladled at the water. Frances rejects, he called and the others laughed along. I watched as our ferry took us to the four ships anchored at the far side of the harbor. There were streams of activity about them. Crews ran the decks while hoists pulled up slabs of cargo from flat barges. The creaking was deafening: crates, planks, ropes. The Medusa sat clean on the water, its precise hull cutting lines that crested up to the mass of the ship that was sailed and battled. When we came below it, I looked up to her guns, watching out to the open ocean. Our ferry shuddered and the oarsmen began to shout up to the crew of the Medusa. A pair of ropes were cast down and a ladder extended. The ferry shuddered again and I watched Shanes eyelids break. With his hand he collected a phase of spittle on his cheek and then pounded the arm of Spider whod rolled onto his thigh. Spider covered his eyes and turned onto Caits lap. James woke, rose, and lifted a bag onto his shoulders. Andrew reached into the harbor and rinsed his face. Bastard, said Cait a moment before Spiders head made a dull crack against the floor. 15 There was such banter as we ascended the nimble ladder to the ship that it twisted and sent Spider crashing back into the ferry. Shane looked down from the deck of the Medusa and jibbed at him as he tucked a whistle back into his pocket and climbed again. When he reached the deck, Spider smoothed his hand along his hair and then tackled his old friend, musing that they were reunited brothers. An officer rushed over to our group. He stood before Spider, rigid and ornate, and nodded to the bags and cases at our feet. Musicians, said Spider, releasing Shane. The officer winced and brought up a collection of papers hed rolled behind his back. He squinted at it. Your name? Pogue Mahone. The officer made his eyes slender. Pogue Mahone? He fiddled with the sparse whiskers on his chin. A Gaelic expression. Gaelic? Kiss my arse. Spider shot back. The officer widened his eyes and poised his head above the group. We were quiet, looking to our feet. The officer shifted himself rigid. He looked to Spider. Aboard this ship you will be 16 Pogues. He peered up to the quarterdeck, swallowing hard. Then he hollered to a sailor whod been loading barrels into the hold. These are gundeck passengers. The sailor limped to us: short footsteps for his body, giving the effect of flotation. He led us to a staircase that went into the belly of the ship. He turned every few steps as if to say something, but each time turned away. Above the staircase, on the quarterdeck, stood a collection of officers speaking low to one another and nodding to two men, one in a glamorous Captains uniform and the other in a suit decorated in gold chains and buttons. The sailor released a heap of air and whispered, The Captain and the Governor. Governor? Of Senegal. An officer came up the stairs and the sailor quieted. He motioned downward, Youll stay on the first deck. Musk and hollers channeled up the stairs. Angling with our bags, we came down into the gundeck. The wooden beams of the deck curved low and each of us craned to enter. There were crowds already inside, crouched against the guns and arrayed along barrels of wine and brandy in the far corner. There were songs and shouts trapped in the long room. Men sat in tight circles with the fragile rattle of dice between them. Soldiers and sailors raced into the deck, taking long slurps from the barrels and then running back to their posts. Thered been no bunks constructed on the gundeck, rather, there were perimeters of luggage that marked sleeping spaces. Andrew and Shane set two drum cases in the corner of the room and sat against them and slept. James heaped off a laundry bag 17 from his back. I shrugged off my bag and case next to him and extracted my cup. With my head bowed I forded the crowds, some dressed in fine clothes, others in filthy tunics. At the wine barrels there was a line. Two officers scurried past, both cursing the Captain of the ship. I watched as they broke line to take a drink. The revolution continues, a voice, thick with rhythm, said from the next line. I looked over at the man, who twisted his eyes at the officers. It wont be pleasant. It will be a two week journey, nothing more, a Frenchman next to him said. Listen to who curses, said the man. How could you know the minds of Bonapartists? The Isles know the issues of the French. The mans eyes turned to me, Do we not? We filled our cups and crouched in the center of the deck. The man wore a gaming jacket from which hed purposely flashed a pocket watch. At his hip was an empty holster. When he sipped from his cup, he moved his eyes around the deck. His name was Jock Stewart and he spoke at length about the command of the Medusa. The Captain, he explained, had never before commanded a ship, let alone a convoy. Hed been in the Kings navy serving against the Bonapartists during the revolution. There, hed not reached higher than a customs officer. And yet after Waterloo and Napoleons final exile, hed been given, in reward for his loyalty, command of this entire convoy. Many would have made more suitable 18 commanders, but theyd been Bonapartists. These men now sat under the Captains command and they anticipated, even wished for, his incompetence. And the Governor? I asked. He twisted his eyes, smirked, and said nothing. Philip walked over, reaching for my cup. We passed it between us while Stewart continued on about the pockets of animosity against the Captain, all the while his eyes shifting about the deck. In that short time, he revealed a talent for allowing us to glimpse his secrets, knowing well that his demeanor caused us to summon even more. He told us how his pistol had been taken when hed boarded the ship but that hed stashed two others in his case. I patrol the situation, he said, and then sipped and walked away up the stairs. While the rest of our group slept and Cait thwarted the pleasantries of various men, Philip and I sat beside one of the guns with our instruments, a guitar and banjo, and worked songs. We sounded out a melody that we found could be merry or melancholy depending on how deliberately we played the notes. We found an intricate melody, then a soaring progression: a prolific session. Philip would close his eyes and conjure some secret notion when we played something to his liking: the ghosts still haunt the waves, the sirens sing no lullaby were things he uttered. What bards are these? A voice called from the gun on the opposite side of the floor. An immense man chuckled and crawled through the crowds to us. He removed his canvas pack and reclined against our gun. He held a round iron shot 19 in his hand that he released and rolled on the floor between his knees. His name was Bogle, a traveler whod been through the Mediterranean, working barges. When he leaned close, his voice was soft, Will you play for the deck? Philip motioned to the corner where Andrew slept. Next to him was James with his chin at Andrews feet. Shane was against the wall, his breaths inflating the loose scarf around his neck. Ah, later perhaps, Bogle said while he chuckled and rolled the shot. He asked about our music and even knew some Irish lyrics. He sang something of his own but resembling The Old Claddaugh Ring. Later, he took up the guitar while Philip slept. Upon the expanse of his chest, the instrument was a toy. He trapped the shot between his thighs and with the thickness of his fingers fumbled at the strings. I took a final sip and then leaned back into the gun. And despite the laughter, the shouts, the brooding for Napoleon, I fell away from the room. Rochefort, June 16, 1816 A rush of water pounded at the walls and the ship lifted. Bogles iron shot rolled from his legs, slamming into the ankle of a man who stumbled and spilled his cup. When he came to his feet, the man stammered through a crowd, slurring, yelling for the man whod tripped him. Bogle rose to his feet, bending at the waist to keep from extending through the ceiling. The man chuckled. An accident. Unsteady and free from the anchors hold, the Medusa floated idle, shifting in the water. Sea legs, sea legs, now, men hollered. For two days our convoy sat this way without the wind to push us from the harbor. Heat drove us up to the main 20 deck at intervals. There we met Corrard, an engineer, who spoke of his task to survey and build Senegals railroads. He moved his head over to a collection of twenty foreign men who sat among slabs of cargo staring back at us. My navvys, he called them, navigators to build for me. Even on the gundeck, the navvys remained silent and together. Corrard was a loyal host to them, protecting their meals and keeping them from fights. In the afternoon I stood on the main deck, looking back at the coal buildings of Rochefort, and at the other three ships of the convoy. Like our Medusa, each of them held sailors arrayed around the decks, poised for the breeze. To my shoulder came Jock Stewart, who motioned to the quarterdeck with his head. Upon it, the Governor paced between the rails thrusting his finger to the sails, to the sky, to the horizon. He shouted at the Captain, who stood with his hands at his back. Stewart cursed both of them. Haste will mean catastrophe. Then he walked over to a young sailor and the two whispered, each taking glances at the quarterdeck. We returned to the gundeck and marveled at the stock of wine barrels. Every half day a new one would roll in and was tapped. There were pans of biscuits brought in throughout the day and in the galley there were pots of soup made from the uneaten meat and vegetables of the elite passengers. Shane, whod been missing since last evening, came onto the gundeck with his arm around the neck of Frank Ryan. They laughed and stumbled together, Ryans long, rigid trunk keeping them both on their feet. He drank cup after cup in our company, saying that the Governor would make a restless voyager, that hed push us for speed, that the officers would overthrow him, that the African coast was treacherous. Shane 21 nudged a finger at Ryan, He stirs the officers. And Ryan nodded to one passing for a cap of brandy. Shane said to us, Ask him why he goes to Africa? Ryan lifted his finger to the side of his nose and Shane released an unfolding cackle that peeled at the roof of his mouth. Then he and Ryan went away to the barrels. Philip turned to me, questioning if I recognized his unspoken concern: Revolt? Mutiny? I looked back at my friend and handed my cup to him. The anchors had lifted and we waited only for the grace of the wind. Nothing could be done. An officer and a soldier entered the deck, the first ones not soliciting a drink. The officer was tall with curling hair the color of wheat. Id seen him with the Captain poring over charts and orders, one of his aides. He held an ornate, curved blade in his belt and moved with deliberation among the crowds. At last he reached the corner where he, James, and Andrew surveyed the room. We migrated toward them with Cait. The officer explained that the absence of wind had made the Governor, his family, and his staff restless. Music would do good for the stalled expedition. The officer looked to each of us. The Governor requests you to play on the main deck. We hunted among the crowds and found Shane and Spider with Ryan making merry with the navvys. We collected our instruments. Bogle hooted and slapped the floor. He and a crowd followed us up the slender staircase. 22 On the main deck, a ring of passengers had already formed and it politely parted for us to fill the center. All the faces, adorned with cheerful eyes, were those of the wealthy: King Louiss passengers. There were women before us with children at their thighs and men posed proudly above them. Behind them, droves of soldiers, sailors, and gundeck passengers approached. Above us on the quarterdeck sat a collection of the ships elite: the Captain, the Governor, his wife and daughter, each seated in armchairs. We tussled with our instruments: Spider, some flutters of whistle; Philip, tuning; James, pulling air into his accordion. Then we looked to Shane. Wild Cats of Kilkenny! he proclaimed, following with a shriek that resounded over the harbor. Cait started with a violent rumble from her bass, then Andrew with a turbulent rhythm, then Philip and I picking quickly. Shane shrieked again and the tempo gained. Soon James and Spider joined with merry melodies above it all. The children whod been attempting to dance and the men and women whod followed with their heads began to look to each other. Was this Isle music? Without cue we halted. Shane released another shriek, and Cait alone began with her bass rumble again. Then another shriek. The Governor turned to his wife and sent her away. The fine men and women found channels through the crowds and backed out, bringing the hands of their children with them. The soldiers and sailors came to the front, stomping and dancing and pawing at Cait. There was lurching in the air and shoving in the collection of men. The navvys joined and we launched again, Wild Cats of Kilkenny! There was a short bout of mayhem on the deck, with arms and feet pounding, men bounding. Above the 23 music, no one heard the shouts of the sailor whod been cast into the harbor. For some moments every fiber of the ship resonated with the melee that was rough and merry at the same time. Like most of our audiences, our music embraced something primary in them, like a kinship understood. It fostered merry aggression, as if everyone had simultaneously purged something. Just as this banging and clapping and hollering reached a wonderful, aural height, a collection of shouts rose and the officers brought their men to attention. Shouts rose up for us to stop, and the music rang for one last measure and then died. The masses on the deck quieted. The Captain and his staff looked down to us from the quarterdeck. The Governor and his armchairs were gone. We collected our instruments and left the main deck. We were not to play there again. In the night, the wind began to stir and the Medusa, at last, crept ahead and out of the harbor. The Wild Cats of Kilkenny The title of Rum, Sodomy & the Lashs sole instrumental composition may evoke the limerick: There once were two cats of Kilkenny, Each thought there was one cat too many So they fought and they fit And they scratched and they bit Till instead of two cats there werent any. 24 The wildcats of Kilkenny claw themselves to pieces til theres nothing left, says Spider Stacey in the biography of the band, Pogue Mahone. Title aside, the music also supports this notion with its two contrary themes: the first a primal bass and drum rhythm and the second a jovial accordion and whistle melody. Despite their contrast, the compositions two themes meld for a time before dueling and coming apart; all amid a series of feline-esque shrieks. Id written the second half, the bit where Spider [whistle] and James [accordion] come in and Shane had written the first half, Jem Finer told me in our conversation. Thats how a lot of things happened; like disparate things being put together. Thats a good way of describing the band as a whole. Andrew, James, and Philip had played music since they were young, including jazz, rhythm and blues, and show music. Jem didnt take up an instrument until 1978, when he learned the guitar and then the banjo. Jem explored bluegrass pickings a lot, and diligently, remembers James Fearnley, who himself adapted his piano playing to the accordion. Prior to an ultimatum that would put him out of the band if he didnt learn the tin whistle, Spider was a vocalist. And prior to becoming a Pogue, Cait owned a bass that hadnt yet emerged from under her bed. Shane played the guitar, though time would prove that the verses and melodies that he conjured and held in his mind would be his most effective instruments. The band found empowerment in the punk scene and vitality from folk music. There was the Operation, Andrews Cajun band that he was reticent to leave in the early days. There was the Irish music that Shane had known all of his life and that had more recently captivated Jem and Spider. There were the Millwall Chainsaws, there was the jerky pop of the Nips, 25 Philips Radiators from Space, the New Bastards, the New Republicans, and the Mixers, all outlets for the individuals whod one day find themselves as Pogues. Yet in spite of the crooked paths they took, the Pogues, starting with their debut Red Roses for Me, displayed focus and democracy. In Pogue Mahone, Spider says: The Pogues sense of community was a very important thing about the band. It contributed to our longevity and the atmosphere around us, because it was really an easy one. And in my conversation with Jem he emphasized, At the end of the day we were all people with wide-ranging interests. The Rum, Sodomy & the Lash period had its own dynamics: the bands manager, Frank Murray, had them touring constantly, slipping in recording dates at Elephant Studios whenever there was the slightest break, in not only their schedules, but also in that of the records busy producer, Elvis Costello. Theyd integrated a new member, Philip Chevron, first as a temporary live replacement for Jem on banjo, then as a permanent guitarist. Their rising popularity left the Irishness of their music open to scrutiny. These disparate issues, however, wouldnt outwardly affect the Pogues, nor would they betray the remarkable flow and depth that the finished record maintains. The culmination of the Pogues frantic touring and piecemeal recording of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash came at the records release party on July 30, 1985. Still billed as legendary, the party was held aboard the HMS Belfast, a World War II cruiser moored in the Thames. The affair, arranged by the late Stiff Records public relations man Philip Hall, featured an abbreviated set from the Pogues, clad in gold-buttoned replicas of Admiral Nelsons navy uniform. It was a 26 rollicking time of rum, merry-making, and even a journalist cast overboard. In the twenty-three years since its release, the record has been lauded by the mainstream music media, revered by punk zines, and praised by fans. In my recent interview with James, he said of it, With the vaudeville of The Gentleman Soldier and contemplation of hopelessness of The Old Main Drag, the implied threat of Im a Man You Dont Meet Every Day, Im very fond of it, the breadth of influences, the scope of attention. And in Pogue Mahone Jem says, I think its a really brilliant album. And its pretty good after all these years to still think so. The Bay of Biscay, June 23, 1816 A man raced into the gundeck and made for the corner where wed stowed our instruments. His long tan coat fluttered at his back while both of his arms held something large in toward his abdomen. He sank flat to the floor behind Andrews drum cases and rolled there for a moment. Then he rose, without his coat and with his hands slipped coolly into his pockets. With meandering footsteps he moved away from the corner, just as an officer and a pair of soldiers lurched through the door. The coatless man perched his chin to the floor and dissolved into the crowds. A mans gone off with the Governors rum, called the officer. Has he come this way? It was silent. The officer looked about the room. He recognized Frank Ryan and asked him again. Ryan stood with his shoulders lifted. The officer prowled for another moment 27 before motioning for the soldiers to follow him away. When sufficient time had passed, the coatless man walked back out from the crowds. He peered through the doorway and then ran into the corner. He tore up his coat and extended up two jugs of rum into the low ceiling. The Medusa swung with the roar of the men on the gundeck. Songs broke loose from Frenchmen and English; even the navvys had a song. You must play! voices rang up. Play! In a moment, Andrew, standing behind his drums, counted off and we began, as fast as we could play, filling the bowels of the ship with sound. Shane pulled a folded page from his jacket, opened it, and shouted its text in time with the music. His voice was deep, commanding, and scattered as he sang of the misdeeds of a soldier. Hed reach a chorus, And the drums agoing a rat-ta-tat-tat and Andrew would pound along at the snare. Spider hauled up a biscuit tray, crashing it against his brow in time with Andrew, creating a great clash. The gundeck crowds clapped along, stomping, some jaunting up into the low, wooden beams of the deck and then collapsing to the floor, clutching at their skulls and laughing. The coatless man fought through the merry melee with one of the jugs. He thrust it before me washing a warm wave of rum onto my sleeve. The man had placid blue eyes and a nose that angled upward like a snail. I ceased with my banjo and lifted the jug of spice to my lips and then passed it along to Philip. Then the man paraded up with the band, stomping and jigging along. Men would reach from the crowd to touch his shoulder and rub his hair. Instantly he was a hero, the first of the Medusa, spiriting the Frenchmen. Hed cast a first strike against the Royalists on the ship: the Governor, the Captain, and their elite entourage. Spider leaned to the man 28 and asked his name. Then he called it out, Jesse James and another roar rose. Spider extended out his arms and the music diluted away. He began to play a tiny whistle tune that mounted at each measure until men began to clap and stomp along. We started to play again. I picked quickly at my banjo: a long mountain tune. Spider, in his rusted holler, sang an ode to James, the new hero. The gundeck shuddered with the surge of the crowds. When there were tilts of the ship from the swelling sea outside, the crowds would lose balance and heap onto each other. When they rose to stomp again, the mens lips were rich with delight. As we played, I watched their faces. Something beyond Jesse James and our music stirred them. They had streams of sweat riding over the brands on their chests: a revolution transformed. With Spider singing, Shane and Frank Ryan jigged among the band. Ryan hadnt expected Jamess theft and his canonization, but it played into his plan for revolt. And he danced. Together the two men gulped from the jug, embracing amid the music. JesseJames, the crowds called over and over, diluting even the music we played. The spectacle was damning for James. On the order of the Captain, a Lieutenant came into the gundeck to settle the noise. A collection of soldiers stood behind him. When they came through the crowds they found Jesse James dancing before the band, passing around the Governors rum. The Lieutenant thrust his finger at James and the soldiers toggled for a moment, looking to each other. The Lieutenant drew out his pistol and ordered the soldiers again. One soldier moved ahead and a branded man from the crowd charged out and pulled him down. The soldiers put the branded man down with the slap of their rifle butts. The music ended. Shouts 29 came from the crowd. The Lieutenant held out his pistol. Another squad of soldiers came into the gundeck. There were volleys of curses and the threat of a massive brawl. I could see the tendons of hands, rigid and taut, clutching at shirt sleeves, and mists of spit bursting from the mouths of the men. Finally, under the watch of many guns, Jesse James was released from the crowds and seized by the soldiers. To the hold with him! ordered the Lieutenant. Another officer leaned ahead and whispered to him. The Lieutenant slapped his pistol against his side and lifted his shoulders. He looked to the floor and thought for a moment. Then he spoke, Place a guard at the door and check him when we reach St. Louis. The soldiers pulled James away to the hold while the crowds cheered and banged their cups to the walls. Ryan stepped before the crowds. Remember this, he shouted and then raised his arms, urging Spider to play again. Outside, the Medusa led the convoy out of the Bay of Biscay. Later wed learn the source of the Lieutenants hesitation to lock Jesse James away in the hold: that in the dark, among the stores of flour and wine, there were three barrels of gold, 90,000 francs altogether, property of the King of France. Jesse James Two decades after the conclusion of the American Civil War, Jesse James continued to fight. With his gangs he raided farms, trains, and Federal banks, taking his spoils in the name 30 of the Confederate cause. Hes purported to have killed multiple men during his heists. His misdeeds aside, the traditional The Ballad of Jesse James focuses on the betrayal involved in Jesses death. By the 1880s James, whod assumed the name Thomas Howard, faced a mounting manhunt. His brother and partner, Frank, had escaped east and the members of his gangs had been either killed, captured, or frightened away. Desperate for companionship and protection, James turned to Charley and Bob Ford. Charley had been a raider with James, but little was known of Bob. One hot afternoon at his home in St. Joseph, Missouri, James, in an uncharacteristic turn, unbuckled his guns from his waist and climbed onto a chair to attend to a picture on the wall. Recognizing the rare vulnerability, Bob entered the room and put a bullet into the back of Jamess head. In the aftermath of the murder, investigators determined that Bob, whod received a pardon for the crime, had secretly conspired with Thomas T. Crittenden, the Governor of Missouri. Bob Fords legendary act of cowardice and betrayalto shoot an unarmed man in the back, to infiltrate Jamess home and friendshipis the subject of the song. It also laments the wife and children he left behind. The Ballad of Jesse James, extracted from the American folk tradition (and purportedly written by traveler Billy Gashade), has seen interpretation by Frank C. Jackson, Woody Guthrie, and the Clancy Brothers, among others. In our conversation, Spider told me that it was Ry Cooders version, however, arranged on his soundtrack for the 1980 western The Long Riders, that provided the inspiration for the Pogues 31 selection and performance of it. Similarities are apparent between the two renditions; namely in their whistle intros and full band treatments. That said, not even Cooder captures Jesse Jamess rowdy, unrelenting spirit like the Pogues. Theirs is a visceral rendition, from Spiders flailing vocal performance (of the slightly modified lyrics) that evoke the Confederate Hellion, to the samples of The Long Riders bullets ricocheting through the speakers. The music deviates from folk versions, too, with its unhinging bluegrass. James Fearnley recalls recording the song, We ripped into it, as we liked very much to do, and which we became very good at. The transformation of Jesse James from a reverent folk ode to a galvanizing scorcher illuminates the role that punk played with the Pogues. Carol Clerk reflects on Shanes first encounters with the genre, The [Sex] Pistols changed his life instantly and forever. He was riveted by their amateurish, anarchic musical attack, by Johnny Rottens vocal mannerisms and confrontational posturing, and particularly by the fact that this group was brazenly flouting the accepted rules of rock etiquette he enjoyed its controversy and danger, but most of all he loved the fact that it championed the individual. In my interview with Andrew Ranken, he told me, True to the spirit of punk, another great love and influence, we managed to make a rare old din, without any expensive musical equipment or sophisticated studio trickery. In so doing, Rum, Sodomy & the Lash demonstrated that punk, formally articulated as a cultural phenomenon in the mid to late 1970s, had emotive roots that extended through history. Its one of the many triumphs of the album: to give ode to the heritage and struggle inherent in all things, ancient or contemporary. Music aside, Jesse James, as one of Rum, Sodomy & the Lashs many characters, had 32 irrevocably punk qualities. He died a nonconformist, unwilling to compromise to what society asked of him. He had mobs sent from high levels of government to assassinate him. He stole from the rich and gave to the poor, He had a hand and a heart and a brain. Jesse James, a rebel, a son, a father, a husband, a punk. Passing Cape Finisterre, June 24, 1816 At night, those who didnt collapse would burrow into their blankets in no particular place: masses of bodies aggregated for warmth, heaving and snoring. A few would savor the tranquility and ascend to the main deck to peer from the rail into the flutters of darkness. In these moments, should there not be any texture upon the water, it would seem that the Medusa crested along in a deep vacuum, without barrier between sky and water. I stood alone on the main deck. There was minimal conversation from the crew and only the slightest lap of water at the hull of the ship. From the rail, I could look out beyond the stern to the tiny lights from the other ships of the convoy. I looked up to the sails that the wind held in large crescents, pushing us along, due south. Beyond the sails were stars unmolested by clouds. They beamed like punctured holes in a deep blue shroud, letting in the light of elsewhere. Stars: tools of navigation, hatching patterns of travel across the sea. In my mind I connected stars with lines, with arcs, drawing them down to some point where I presumed the horizon would 33 bea distilling exercise that brought vitality to my thoughts. Voices came from the quarterdeck in the night and I looked up into the torchlight to find the Captain toiling over charts with another elegant man in fine civilian clothes. They dealt with each other gently, ignoring the counsel of the officers and aides behind them. While I watched, Jock Stewart wandered past with a sailor who seemed both irritated and frail. Stewarts eyes followed mine to the quarterdeck. They plot for the quickest route, he whispered. For the better. Theres revolt. Stewart looked to the sailor and motioned for him to stand beneath the quarterdeck and listen. The sailor resisted. Stewart reached into his coat and took out a pair of coins. He slipped them to the sailor and brushed him away. Then he sniffed the air like a predator. The quick route leads us through somewhere more perilous than revolt, he said. Where? The Arguin Bank. He told me that the Bank was an expanse of sand splaying out into the sea from the deserts of western Africa. Its submerged mounds and seacliffs were unknown to navigation charts. The ministers at Rochefort had warned the Captain of this and charted a route for him that went deep into the Atlantic, beyond the borders of the Bank. Their course would turn toward Africa only once we were due west of the Port of St. Louis, where the rivers cut deep, safe gullies in the seafloor. 34 The Captain had promised the ministers to keep to this route, to keep the convoy together, to rely on his officers who had decades more experience at sea. Hed promised to extinguish the animosity that he held for the Bonapartists. Hed offer a refreshed spirit of French unity back to Senegal. But all of these plans and vows had been scrapped even before the ship left Rochefort. The new Governor of Senegal pushed for speed, and the Captain had neither the strength nor the competence to oppose him; the speed would take us over the hidden treachery of the Bank. Then Jock Stewart walked further down the deck, sliding into a shadow and disappearing from my awareness. Bogle and James came up the stairs, engaged in a conversation about the Madeira Islands. The sailors and officers had for days been discussing how wed anchor there and restock. Well reach it in three days, said Bogle. James proposed that we play at the port of Funchal. Well bring back our own rum, baked chickens, cheese, bread. Shouts came from the quarterdeck. A group of officers had massed around the Captain and the elegant man that stood with him. An officer lurched his finger at the Captain and cursed him. A group of Royalist officers charged from the other side of the deck. Soon, the altercation consumed everyone on the quarterdeck. Absorbing curses and accusations from every angle, the Captain stood with his arms about his back, deferring to the elegant man who spoke in uncompromising lines: The Governor must arrive in one 35 week, I know Africa like France, Well inform ourselves of our depths at every stage, Ill safely bear you through the Bank. Soon the group of officers retreated down the stairs from the quarterdeck. Stewarts sailor rushed from his position below them and hid in the shadows. We will wreck. Why does he appoint a civilian? Well signal the other ships. Rally who we can. The deck was empty. The officers glanced over to James and me standing there with Bogle, whose shoulders cast round cliffs of shadow onto the deck. Small dark swells began to roll the ship. The Navigator of the Medusa was an elegant man, the president of a philanthropic organization that claimed to have done great expeditions into Africa. Like the Captain and the Governor, he represented the notable ranks of French society and had never been a seaman. Sometimes, when he spoke, his eyes would channel off elsewhere, disassociated from his words. It was said that his face held this exact attitude when he first discussed the depths of the Arguin Bank. So when resistance mounted from the officers that the Bank should be avoided at all costs, the Captain and the Governor looked to him, the man most qualified to execute their will. I use King Louis to demand that you obey our Navigator, the Captain told his crew. 36 In an attempt to cushion the decision, the Captain would allow a days leave at Madeira when we arrived. In the night, Frank Ryan came up the stairs and trotted to the officers whod grouped near us. They whispered, at times slicing the air with curses. Ryan raised his hands as he approached them. He entered the center of their group and whispered to them. As dawn came, a sailor skipped past, waking Bogle and James, who slept against the rail. The officers and Ryan had plotted through the night, scheming for revolt, right under the nose of the quarterdeck. Stewarts spy also had been prowling, drawing close to the plotting men and then darting off into the shadows. Two days to Madeira, the sailor said. I brushed him off, uncertain of what to wish for. With Philip and Andrew I proposed that we leave the Medusa at the port of Funchal, where a supply ship would return us to Portugal or Spain. They didnt answer at that moment and instead strained their eyes as ripples of sunlight slithered from the horizon. A pair of children emerged from the stairs and ran between the quarterdeck and the central mast, chuckling to each other. A holler came from the rigging, Overboard! Starboard, overboard! Sailors massed to the rail of the ship. We leaned out and could see the arms of a sailor writhing up from the sea. He fell behind the ship at a great rate, the first reference wed had for our speed. I narrowed my eyes to the victim and recognized him: the frail sailor, Stewarts spy. 37 Another sailor raced up to the quarterdeck and informed the commanders. The Captain held stiff at the news; with only his torso he looked out beyond the stern of the Medusa. An officer urged, We must turn for him. The Captain took in a heap of air and looked over to the Governor, who sat regal with his wife in their armchairs. We cannot turn. A volley of shouts descended from the officers. The Navigator approached the Captains ear. While he whispered, the Captain stiffened even more and said at last, Well drop sails long enough to send a boat. The Governor twisted in his chair, a rare compromise between his will and that of the officers. His wife took his hand and rubbed at his knuckles. The Captain lapped at his lips during the entire search. When the single boat returned without the fallen sailor, he turned to his crew, The rest of the convoy will be along to find him. At this, sailors shouted from all points of the ship. Raise sails and make for Madeira, the Captain hollered above them. And the mention of the islands name dissolved the protests until they turned to a few isolated pools of tears. The Medusa set off again. A few sailors migrated to the rail of the deck. They each pulled a button from their sleeve and cast it into the sea. They whispered a eulogy and then returned to their posts. Away, down the rail, stood Jock Stewart in the approximate place where the sailor must have fallen, shifting his hands in his pockets, lifting his nose into the breeze. 38 Im a Man You Dont Meet Every Day I wanted to make pure music that could be from any time, to make time irrelevant to make decades and generations seem irrelevantShane MacGowan, A Drink with Shane MacGowan On their first two full-length releases, the Pogues immersed themselves so completely into folk musics temporal continuum that its difficult to determine where traditional songs ended and the Pogues began. This notion was so honed, in fact, that these records seamlessly bound between decades and centuries. On Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, the Pogues demonstrate that as humankinds struggles change in context, their soul persists; whether its in the age of sail, on the cliffs at Gallipoli, in a working mans pub in Dagenham, or an alley in Piccadilly. In our conversation, Jem spoke to this point: The common mans struggle against the system has always permeated folk music by its very nature people are singing about their lot. DzM, site creator and administrator of the Pogues.com fan website observes, One aspect I really love about [Rum, Sodomy & the Lash] is that it generally feels to be looking to the previous century for inspiration. And in the liner notes for the Pogues Waiting for Herb LP reissue, Bob Geldof writes, The Pogues made great records and played great gigs but the glory are the songs. This is what will last. Old ones lovingly restored to their pristine attitudes, correctly interpreted to the now and originals as timeless as if written in some smoky corner 300 years ago or a piss-stinking bus shelter in London last week. 39 Amid this sense of retrospect, Im a Man You Dont Meet Every Day takes us deeper in time than any other song on the record. The question, for example, of whether the songs protagonist was real or fictitious will, in all likelihood, never be determined, for even the songs origins are unclear. The curve of the tunes first strain with its leap of a 6th, suggests a general relationship with many [Scottish] highland and Irish melodic models, write folk historians James Porter and Hershel Gower. The song has been associated with Scots travelers in recent times but Irish influence is apparent. The song, more commonly known as Jock Stewart, is a sketch of a man who with each verse becomes more confounding. We learn that hes a rich landowner, a good shot, a traveler, perhaps a war veteran, and a man quick to temper. He gives threatening pretext to his generosity: So come fill up your glasses with brandy and wine, Whatever it costs I will pay, So be easy and free when youre drinking with me, Im a man you dont meet every day. Then theres the issue of Stewart shooting his dog. Some renditions of the song have the dog simply accompanying Stewart on a hunt. While the Pogues werent the first to present the former, more brutal version of the lyric, it does add a complexity to the character of Jock Stewart thats consistent with the other novel and interpreted ones on Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, like a drunken, syphilis-chancred, freedom fighter (The Sickbed of Cuchulainn), a shattered dreamer (The Old Main Drag), a hell-raising family man 40 (Jesse James), and a brawling peacekeeper (Billys Bones). Did Stewart become enraged with the dog? Was it sick? Was Stewart himself sick? Whatever the case, the Pogues interpretation demonstrates the vitality of folk music and its proclivity toward revision. Further abstracting the character of Jock Stewart is that, in its most famous version, the songs first-person narrative is sung by Jeannie Robertson, a woman. Upon first listening to Rum, Sodomy & the Lash too, its unhinging to come upon, Im a Man You Dont Meet Every Day. Its here, four songs into the record, that we discover the haunting sweetness of Cait ORiordan. Atlantic Ocean, June 28, 1816 For all of the cheer surrounding our call at Madeira, when we woke, the islands were nowhere in sight. Bogle raised the stalk of his finger: It should be there. Spider, Shane, and Ryan were awake early and with us on the deck this morning. They laughed and pawed at each other while we watched the chains of command stumble upon the quarterdeck. By now the Governor had complete control of the ship. Through each day, he sat in an armchair that required the work of two sailors to pilot up the stairs from his cabin. When he did so much as flex his throat, the Captain scurried to him. The ships order that had seemed so keen a week ago had decayed into impulsive uncertainty. This morning the Governor sat reclined with his wife, eating breakfast and barking orders at anyone in his proximity. We could see his arms sweeping out to the water ahead. The 41 Navigator stood away from the Governor at the corner of the quarterdeck. Stoic, he watched at the horizon, expectant to find the green mounds of Madeira at any moment. Below the central mast, on the main deck, an independent effort ensued. A collection of officers, the same ones whod been plotting with Frank Ryan in the night, knelt over a column of charts. They breathed heaps of smoke into the air and looked up for intermittent reference points with the low orange sun. Soon a fever of laughter erupted and a Lieutenant took up the charts and ran to the quarterdeck, past a pair of children who played in a quiet shadow. The Lieutenant first went to the Navigator, who stood unmoved. Then he went to the Captain, who examined the chart and, with a flash of horror, looked to the west. The Captain called to his aide and whispered an order to him. We watched as it fanned out from one officer to two, to four sailors, and then the entire crew. They moved quickly with the new orders, yanking at rigging, pulling at ropes, twisting at the helm, and we changed course. The ship crashed against a series of sea bulges, sending it rocking with violent tips. The Lieutenant stumbled past us and Ryan asked for the news. The Lieutenant toggled between terror and absurdity, Ninety miles off track. The Navigator didnt move at the error or at the efforts to correct it. Over the next day, the fury and uneasiness of his miscalculation began to infect not only the officers, but most of the crew. Catastrophe, wreck, fish food, we could extract from the French conversations around us. 42 Andrew came beside me nodding his head. It was consensus now: wed leave the ship at Madeira. We convinced Bogle to do the same. The engineer Corrard came to our group with a cluster of the navvys behind him. He twisted his lips before he spoke, A mistake off of Africa will not be correctable. We told him of our plan to depart. Ive promised railroads to the ministers. And for them, Corrard eyed back to the navvys, theyll be paid triple. The track due west to Maderia brought us through a storm. The clouds grew blue-gray with whirls of haze descending out of them. A stream of heavy bulges pounded the ship sending it creaking into deep valleys of water. Crests of froth washed onto the main deck leaving behind a dark patina. Sailors, harnessed to the masts, pulled at the rigging while the Captain, Governor, and Navigator took shelter from the quarterdeck. I stayed alone on the main deck through the storm. I slumped down against the railing. While the ocean shifted, I shut my eyes. And I was a gardener. It was morning and Id been squaring an evergreen hedge with shears. Sharp fingers of pine fell around me as I cut through them, free of resistance. I trimmed until my shears bit into something thick and I jerked. A shock ran up my arms and into my spine. I looked down into the grass and-kicked aside a pile of clippings to find a black snake, writhing on the ground in perfect halves. It blew phases of blood from itself, lathering my boots. My instinct was to bend 43 down and meld the two halves, though instead I watched its agony, trying to determine head from tail. When I looked up from the snake I saw my boyhood home over the hedges: so slouched and familiar. I split through the hedge and walked into the yard where Id played as a boy. I crept up the brick stairs and knocked at the door. Dirty Old Town For every person who wants to return home, theres another who wants to escape it. And then there are those who want to destroy it. Ewan MacColls Dirty Old Town is an expression of this last notion. Written by the celebrated British musician, actor, and writer in 1950 as a theme for his television program, The Manchester Ramblers, its inspired by his birthplace and childhood home in Salford, Lancashire. In the song, MacColl describes the towns industrial din: a chainlinked tapestry with which he falls in love. Whether hes too saddened by what his beloved home has become or hes simply been too affected by its pollution and manufactured ungainliness, his hatred of it pervades even his most enchanting thoughts. Despite MacColls dank and lonely lyrical descriptions, his most popular rendition of the song proceeds merrily with a bounding clarinet and a vocal accompaniment from his wife, Peggy Seeger. This juxtaposition between lyric and music is interesting; its as if MacColl is conflicted in his true feelings toward his town, that he may love Salford as much as he hates it. In a 2007 article in the Salford Star magazine, Peggy Seeger says of her late husbands song, I dont think Dirty Old Town is necessarily negativeits the same feeling that Ewan had 44 towards Salford all his life, love and hate, that it was a place which was living and breathing, it had a pulse. The Pogues, in contrast, offer no such contemplation. Their approach is pure feeling. In an interview with Melody Maker, Shane discussed this notion, We still play more to the human emotions than the intellectual side of things. We still try to hit people straight between the eyes. Despite their differing approaches, Shane held an admiration and perhaps even an identity with MacColl, whose life draws certain parallels with such luminaries as Brendan Behan, Frank Ryan, and Richard Tauber. Writer Stephen Kingston remarks, Ewan was beaten up by police on the hunger marches of the 1930s, trailed by MI5 for having communist beliefs and banned from performing subversive plays. In the liner notes of MacColls compilation Black and White, Colin Irwin writes, [Ewan MacColl] was the only singer Shane MacGowan of the Pogues ever went to see in a folk club. The Pogues version of Dirty Old Town begins with the humble charm of Andrew Rankens harmonica, evoking a sense of familiarity, perhaps inviting the listener home. James Fearnely sheds his accordion in favor of the mandolin. In what is perhaps the most richly arranged song on the album, we find uileann pipes joining after the first verse, followed later by a fiddle. Shanes vocal performance, however, is what transforms the song. His deliberate diction tortures every word of the lyric (a device that also surfaces on the records closing track, And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda). Philip remarks on the song, Dirty Old Town is a tough sing mainly because of the long, high E in the second line of each verse Dreamed a dream by the old canal. It is not for the fainthearted. In the closing verses this emphasis is on steel, 45 Im going to make me a good, sharp axe, Shining steel tempered in the fire, Will chop you down like an old dead tree. Peggy Seeger asserts that when he wrote these lines, MacColl was perhaps speaking of improving Salford for its native inhabitants rather than simply destroying it. In the Pogues performance, however, the town feels removed from Salford, like it could be anyplace where souls are held captive. And in the end we have little trouble seeing Shane, with spite seething from his lips, wielding his axe like a banshee, hacking his dismal town to splinters. Madeira, In the Afternoon, June 28, 1816 When we werent playing, Cait could scarcely be found. Apart from being the sole woman, she was also the youngest of us. Whether it was this or something innate in her, she resisted most of our attempts to be protective. Likewise, she resisted her own grace. If Shane sneered, shed sneer higher. If Spider held a drink, shed drink two. She wore her hair tossed high above her brow, sweeping up from her neck. She wore scales of bravado. She jawed at cat calls from the crowds. She had every bit the rowdy countenance that would characterize many of us in the band, but there was also mystery to her; a quiet depth that we had yet to fathom. Since wed left Rochefort, if she spoke at all, it would be to a stranger who wore robust glasses and a black hat. He stayed in a private cabin, but would ascend to the gundeck when we played. There, hed lean against the wall, away from the 46 crowds, and listen, expressionless behind his glasses. When wed finish playing, Cait would lay her bass on the floor and step over to him. Shed feather her eyes at her feet, emitting tiny grins, lifting her shoulders gently. Hes Uncle Brian, she said to James when he asked. Uncle? After a childrens character. Minute, uninhabited island-plots of Madeira reached up from the ocean. We rode swiftly along them as they proliferated west into greater and greater hills. Soon the rich slopes of the main island appeared before the bow. Calls rose from the rigging and passengers ran across the deck to the rails. There were celebrations, unveiling teeth and songs. It was the first land wed encountered in ten days. On the quarterdeck, the Navigator stood with the Captain, smiling and rubbing at his back. The Governor and his wife embraced. The officers formed a small ring, their backs away from the approaching island. A barrel of brandy was brought to the deck and tapped. The sun too seemed favorable for the occasion, peaking pale yellow and orange between the illuminated clouds. We descended to the gundeck with Bogle to collect our things. You cannot go, a soldier pleaded while he placed a hand on Philips and then Andrews back. Philip latched his guitar case and took a drink from the soldiers cup. He patted the soldiers shoulder and walked away. Shane would be sorry to leave Ryan. Spider bid goodbye to the navvys, whose language hed learned to circumvent with 47 the wide kindness in his eyes. Triumphantly they hugged him, asking him to play a last whistle tune. Bogle cast his canvas pack onto his back. He crouched low and disappeared out of the gundeck, his immense boots clomping up the stairs. To Spiders fragile, parting tune, we each followed, leaving behind an empty crowdempty with no music. Theres a distinction made for good audiences; ones that offer as much as theyre given. Theyre the audiences that can relate so wholly to the music that they become it. The defeated soldiers, sailors, navvys, and peasants each held the stories in our songs. As they obeyed their commanders, sheltered by their unguided will, any of them could slip into the waves and, in an instant, be forgotten. Songs endure though, the songs that we play, the songs that relay their stories, the songs that the greatest audiences know. Cait hadnt collected her things. She stood at the rail, some distance away from the crowds. Amid the celebration and farewells, she watched Madeira sweeping past. She followed the white and orange ranches that spotted the hills. She craned her neck up to the chestnut rock of Pico Ruivo, the serrated horns of its upper ridge cutting into the sky. Uncle Brian walked to her, but she brushed him away. He opened his arms, pleading with her, and she turned away, looking back at the island. The foliage was clear now, rising out of the ocean and arching around the structures of Funchal. Uncle Brian stomped away and descended the stairs. The wind pushed strands of Caits hair while she watched the expanse of the island come into complete view. 48 The Gentleman Soldier The Gentleman Soldier is a piece of slapstick ham, though it also contains a serious message. When the lyric states that drums go rat a ta tat, I felt I didnt have much option but to do that as loud as possible. I dont like music to overstate the obvious as a rule, but in the realm of comedy I think its a bit different.Andrew Ranken There were other songs that Shane had written but never had a chance to show us, so we just learned them in the studio. The Gentleman Soldier [a traditional song] we might have just done for a laugh there and then.Jem Finer, Pogue Mahone Elvis Costello told me to go home and come up with something [for The Gentleman Soldier]. The something was a distortion of the Russian national anthem, and a figure that went satisfactorily with the chorus.James Fearnley The Pogues never defferred to Costellos seniority as a rock star. If he had a controversial or unpopular idea, he had to defend it just like everyone else did, or else watch it get shot down in flames.Philip Chevron Wapping lies east of the City of London on the River Thames. Among its gaggle of centuries-old docks and stone staircases, sat two notable places for the Pogues: the Prospect of Whitby and Elephant Studios. The Prospect of Whitby, a renowned riverside pub, is still there, while the studios have been converted to a carpark. In his days before joining the Pogues, Philip Chevron spent considerable time at the studios as both a musician and a producer. He remembered Elephant: It had 49 the right combination of reasonable rates, smart engineers, friendly environment, subterranean atmosphere, and proximity to a great watering holethe Prospect of Whitby. There was always at least one studio cat in situ, sometimes two. It was also at Elephant that the Pogues became acquainted with Chevrons musical and production abilities when he produced Muirshin Durkin and Whiskey Youre the Devil, both B-sides for Rum, Sodomy & the Lashs first single, A Pair of Brown Eyes. I played piano on Whiskey Youre the Devil, so my role with the Pogues was already more sketched than defined, Philip told me. Elephant also served as the recording site for the bands debut LP, Red Roses for Me, as well as its penultimate studio LP, Waiting for Herb. Also accompanying the Pogues into Elephant Studios for the dispersed recording sessions was producer Elvis Costello (who the band would come to call Uncle Brian). Andrew remembers now, twenty-three years later, To get Elvis Costello on board was quite a coup at the time. Costello, whom the Pogues had supported on his tour of the United Kingdom and Ireland in the autumn of 1984, was already an iconic musical figure. Hed released a string of acclaimed and varied records under his own name and with the band the Attractions. Hed also produced the Specials self-titled debut record in 1979. In its simplest sense, the Specials shared an ideological kinship with the Pogues, with their fusion of disparate musical styles (reggae, ska, rock steady, and punk) and their portrayal of the dirty belly of urban life. Based on the success of the initial recording sessions that bore A Pair of Brown Eyes, Costello and the Pogues agreed to partner for the entire album. 50 The union of Costello and the Pogues for Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, as well as for the rousing follow-up EP, Poguetry in Motion, was, aside from some disagreements over arrangements and overdubs, happy. Elvis is a consummate artist in the studio, as elsewhere, always creating, always seeking a new angle. Yet he understood perfectly that at this stage of their career, the Pogues needed, more than anything, to be not so much produced as facilitated, Philip recalls. In this context, what he did with the Poguesrecording the band as live as possible but with a great deal of natural acoustic presence in the individual instrumentswas quite a revolutionary thing to do in 1985. Costello has said that his aim as producer for the Pogues was to capture them in their dilapidated glory. At the Entrance of the Port of Funchal, June 29, 1816 The Medusa stirred uncertain in the water before Funchal. The crew rushed along the main deck, yanking at the rigging to change track, contrary to the wind that swept us west. All of the celebrations had ceased, as the ship made abrupt tilts in its attempt to call the harbor. The Governor in his armchair began to lean forward and holler at the Captain. His wife and daughter sat in their own chairs on either side of him, caressing his forearms. They wore their fine clothing, prepared to tour Funchal and then spend the night as guests at the Princes Villa. The Captain called orders to every position on the Medusa while it steered and shifted in the winds that channeled around the mountains. But whatever action the crew took, 51 Funchals harbor continued to elude us, until at last, all efforts ceased and the harbor trailed away. The crew stood drawing in breaths, collecting themselves. The passengers were quiet. There was one voice barking from the quarterdeck. Its precise words scattered in the wind, though everyone could clearly see the Governor standing at the Captains nose. In what had become a common gesture, the Captain motioned around to the air, lifting his shoulders, bowing his head like a boy absorbing reprimand. The Navigator stood away at the corner of the deck, not flinching at the words. Bogle twisted his arms out of his pack and dropped it at his feet. Ryan congregated with his collection of officers. Shane wandered over to him and the two men chuckled above the silence. Other passengers watched as the western slopes of Madeira diluted into the haze. James extracted a cup from his bag and went to the brandy barrel that sat alone beneath the central mast. For some time it seemed that we might continue on this course west into open ocean and away from the hazards of the Arguin Bank. Bogle muttered, Perhaps it was fortune. We sat on the deck among our bags and cases, finishing the brandy after the crowds had gone. The Governor, the Captain, and the Navigator held a conference. When it was over, new orders cascaded from the quarterdeck and the Medusa twisted south. Ba, Bogle said. We make for the Canaries. Shane, Spider, and Ryan came over to us. Well call at St. Croix, Ryan said. 52 Well embark from there. No. Theyll send in a single boat for supplies. We are supplied now. Ryan nodded up to the quarterdeck, With cheese, wine, oranges, lemons. The Canary Islands, June 29, 1816 Our failure to call at Madeira and the news that we wouldnt be let into St. Croix extinguished every sentiment of good will. Now, we heard rancorous things: shooting the Governor, kidnapping and having our way with his daughter, setting fire and abandoning ship at St. Croix, purging the ships food. There were curses and shoving. Bogle pulled apart a pair of soldiers. They spat at each other across Bogles chest as he clasped the bellies of their coats. The officers were no more pleasant, plotting for violence. Frank Ryan roused them, shouting until his head shone dull red, stalks of veins rising from his neck and temples. He struck his finger into the air and the officers hollered along with him. Cait reunited with Uncle Brian. He shoved at the soldiers who pawed at her. Finally, he led her away up the stairs. In the center of the gundeck a man crashed down, rattling the wooden floor. It was one of Corrards navvys, a Sudanese. A soldier stood over him, shouting and spitting. Two columns of confrontation formed on either side of the fallen man: soldiers and navvys. Corrard rushed in to lift his man from the floor. He rubbed at the navvys jaw and then rose to the layer of 53 soldiers who called Corrards men pigs, cursing their religion, their language, their skins. But theyll build railroads for France, Corrard pleaded. Pigs who know no better. There were curses cast at the navvys, whose numbers were too small to challenge the building crowd against them. The fallen navvy rose and spit at the feet of the soldiers. He smeared his forehead with his palm, whipping a film of blood at them. Pigpig Corrard braced his navvy, casting him behind him into the crowd. Pig. Then, a blaze of cloth and hair sliced between the two columns of men, heaving fists, stabbing kicks, moving back ranks of soldiers. It was Frank Ryan, who smacked one of the soldiers on the chin. A collection of teeth spewed from the soldiers mouth and rattled against the wall. Another soldier went to maul Ryan from behind, but he bent forward, seizing the soldier and pounding him upon the deck. With his hands, he challenged the next solider to come. But they only cursed and wavered, standing entirely still. Instead, Ryan met the ends of four pistols. He crouched, poised to charge these royalist officers when Bogle harnessed his arms, whispering to Ryan until he ceased. He released him and put his open palm to the center of Ryans chest. Ryan became inert, his 54 arms falling limp at his sides. Under the watch of the pistols, he allowed a group of soldiers to seize his arms. To the hold, called the arresting Lieutenant. Lock him with the thief? asked another officer. The group descended into the musk of the ship where they locked Ryan, the second prisoner. In the night we could see, at some distance above the ocean, the molten flame of Pico del Teide: a vital, pulsing glow. It lighted our approach to the Canary Islands: shifting orange, then red, illuminating the crowns of rock puncturing up from the ocean. The Sickbed of Cuchulainn Though he moved to England when he was a boy, Shane MacGowans early years in Ireland made a permanent impact on him. In Pogue Mahone, Carol Clerk describes his childhood home in Nenagh, North Tipperary: Here death was treated with the same practicality of every other fact of life there was in the farmhouse, a dying roomand the history, myths and legends of Ireland were passed down eagerly and in colorful detail from one generation to the next. It was dramatic, sometimes scary stuff to young earsgripping and unforgettable. To be Irish in England in the late 1970s could also be scary. The IRA was engaged in a violent campaign for independence in Northern Ireland. On the streets where Shane 55 spent considerable time composing his tales and attending gigs, the phenomenon of Paddy-bashing wasnt rare. Shanes friend Deirdre OMahony recalls this sociopolitical climate in the documentary If I Should Fall from Grace.You had bombs going off right, left, and center. There was a lot of racism in London at the time and a lot of anti-Irish talk every time there was another bomb. So for [Shane] to turn around and celebrate his Irish culture was a very strange thing. And to give voice to his experience of it that was what was such a huge revelation with the Pogues. Rum, Sodomy & the Lash opens with a tense guitar strum reminiscent of The Auld Triangle, a Brendan Behan interpretation found on the Pogues debut record, Red Roses for Me. Rather than following with the solemn tension of The Auld Triangle, however, The Sickbed of Cuchulainn erupts into a breakneck stomp that recounts the furious life of a dying man. His recollections take him to his drunken days in Germany, ridden with venereal disease, and to a brothel in Madrid where Frank Ryan gifts him with whiskey. The man has wrecked taverns that wouldnt serve him and walked headfirst into certain beatings. He casts irreverence and absurdity at everything that confronts him, even death. Yet in spite of his vices, his compassion is keen: Then you sing a song of liberty for blacks and paks and jocks. The mans rambunctious philanthropy resembles the pursuits and vices of Frank Ryans life. Ryan, known for his involvement in the old IRA, fought for Irish independence and then against the rising tide of European fascism in Ireland (General ODuffys blueshirts) and in Spain (Francos Nacionalistas). In A Drink with Shane MacGowan, Shane 56 says of Ryan, Frank was the laughing cavalier of the old IRA. He was a womanizer, a drinker, a bold figure of a man. And he was passionate, an Irish-speaking Republican Socialist he was a great orator. And he could stir the hearts of men. MacGowans protagonist in The Sickbed of Culcuchainn rejects fascism with the same vitriol: And you decked some fucking blackshirt who was cursing all the yids. In an interview with Melody Makers Barry Mcllheney, Shane says, Lyrically its a form of humanism, expressing the belief in the right of every human being to lead a decent life, without anyone else shitting down on them. And that goes just the same for a protestant Orangeman as it does for a black in Soweto. Andrew Ranken added to this notion in our interview, We were demonstrating that music that had strong roots in the Irish folk tradition need not have only minority appeal, but could preach to a very broad church indeed. Cuchulainn is a chief character in The Ulster Cycle of Celtic mythology: a warrior reputed for his might. In the episode of Fledd Bricrenn, a contest is held to determine the mightiest warrior in Ireland. In the contest, Cuchulainn and two other warriors are each invited to decapitate a giant, under the condition that the same giant may later return and decapitate each of them. The first two warriors acknowledge the absurdity of the pact and decapitate the giant. They recant later, however, when the giant magically returns for their heads. Cuchulainn, in contrast, decapitates the giant and, when it returns, honors his pact and kneels down, offering his head. In an unexpected turn, the giant reels back his axe and softly taps Cuchulainn on the neck. Then, he lifts the warrior 57 to his feet. The giant transforms into the king and declares Cuchulainn champion of Ireland, for his integrity and courage and his loyalty to his word. The Pogues use of the mythical hero in the song contrasts with the gaudy magnificence used by many poets. Here, Cuchulainn isnt deified or romanticized. Rather hes made human, assuming the same misadventures, indulgences, and internal struggles between virtue and vice that consume us. That Cuchulainn retains his integrity and courage in spite of these carnal issues reveals an alternative essence of might. The Sickbed of Cuchulainn introduces us to a host of kindred Irish spirits: the dying protagonist of the song, Frank Ryan, and this incarnation of Cuchulainn, each full of complexity and paradoxirreverent with keen spiritual awareness, drunken with a lucid sense of purpose, relentlessly brawling for human rights. The song mentions other historical figures that also fit with this notion. In the first verse of the lyric: MacCormack and Richard Tauber are singing by the bed Both men were popular singers in the early to mid-twentieth century. Like Frank Ryan, Tauber, an Austrian, also encountered European fascism when Hitler banned his plays and films and later seized his Vienna home. After escaping from Austria, Tauber defiantly said to a London audience, Hitler has stopped me singing in Germany and Austria. He wont stop me here. In A Drink with Shane MacGowan, Shane says of John MacCormack, the sole Irish Papal Count, Thats how John MacCormack learned to sing by being 58 beaten up and going to Church. Classic Irish upbringing. Classic Irish voice. With the characters and events that The Sickbed of Cuchulainn rouses, we find that in the end, its a song of celebration as the (now dead) protagonist burrows out from his grave and calls for another drink. And although its celebration radiates out to all people, its Irish in context. James Fearnley says, [The Sickbed of Cuchulainn] came from somewhere else, being a traditional melody. While the tale is far from romantic and the music is wonderfully rowdy, The Sickbed of Cuchulainn seems foremost to be an ode to Ireland and its heroes. It lauds the aspects of Ireland that perhaps the Pogues admire most: its ability to celebrate the bleak, amuse the melancholy, fight for the downtrodden, and rouse up songs for the dead. Its might. The Coast of Africa, June 30, 1816 The ferry returned to the Medusa from St. Croix brimming with delicacies that the Governor promptly ordered to his cabin. While a collection of sailors lifted the crates to their shoulders, the Governor turned to the Captain: Go now. The rest of the convoy had arrived in the hours that wed been anchored in the harbor. Framed by St. Croixs inlet rocks, the posture of the ships masts bent like eyebrows questioning, Will you sail to open ocean? Bogle reached into his pack and extracted a telescope, its dull brass clicking as he extended it to the ships. They signal us, he mouthed to himself. Turn west, they say. 59 Jock Stewart meandered past, grinning with his hands poised in the pockets of his coat. We wont turn, he whispered into the breeze. There was another conference on the quarterdeck; the largest since wed embarked from Rochefort. It included both factions of officers, and the Captain. Regardless of their affiliation, the officers motioned to the west. These conferences and shouts from the quarterdeck had now gripped everyone aboard. Even the drunks and children recognized the alarmthe crowds with their necks arched while the Captain raced between the Governor and the Navigator, ignoring his officers and the signals of his convoy. With loose fingers the Navigator swatted at the Captain. He lit a pipe and stared forward, his decision unmoving: we would head southeast, the contrary orientation, the contrary seamanship. We were close to the African coast. Its heat seethed everywhere, warming even the water vapor. Land, a call came from the rigging. The conference of officers shattered as they trotted to the rail. We narrowed our eyes from our places below them. Ahead and slightly to the left, there was a radiating arc of platinum. It grew in intensity every moment, up over the water, until a glowing strip of white divided it from the sky. Soon we could discern shadows and contour within it, mounds of desert transforming at every lap of the ocean. Each of the experienced seamenBogle, the sailors, the officersagreed that it was Cape Bojador that we saw: Africa. 60 Since the Captains decision at St. Croix to continue on the direct track to the African coast, Ryans faction of officers took sounding depths every half hour. 100 fathoms, 350 fathoms, 120 fathoms, the reports returned. These depths were satisfactory, but narrow compared to the thousands of fathoms we had during the first ten days of our voyage. We knew too, as Bogle and the officers would both say, that the most perilous depths were precisely ahead of us. In the afternoon, a passenger walked up as Philip, James, Andrew, and I sounded out songs, with Bogle improvising lyrics about our journey. The passenger motioned to the deck and we invited him to sit. He squatted, rolling up his loose, soiled sleeves. The skin from his elbows to his knuckles held a swollen coat of red and tiny vines of white that he scratched until they bled. The ship shifted and a beam of sun fell onto him. He looked up to the mast and scampered slightly to his left under its shadow. Bogle ceased his lyric and motioned to the mans arms. He whispered, I know an herb for this. The man bounced on his squatted knees, moving his eyes around at the sky. His scratching intensified until a film of blood wicked into his fingertips. The man wept I lived in the mountains, in herding villages. In pastures we could look down into the valleys. They sank far beneath. I was afraid, imagining myself a moth on the mountainside flying out from the pasture with nothing but air and a green suggestion of earth below. The altitude, the drop couldnt be fathomed. I imagined this ship that way: sailing as a speck above a 61 shapeless bottom so many expanses below. Sunlight cannot even reach those depths. Did you know? Water, the same as glass, yet such an expanse of it creates darkness. I could not open my eyes at the thought. To feel small again within something as empty as the distance between the surface of the sea and its bottom. I wished for land to come. Now its pleasant, to imagine the sea floor so close. We should wreck soon and Ill be comforted. He wept more. He sat back, clawing violently at his arms, muttering to himself between tears. Finally, Bogle rose and collared the mans wrists. He lifted him from the deck. Surgeon! he called. The surgeon, named Savigny, came forth and, with Bogle, carried the man down the stairs. We came along Cape Bojador with the three other ships of the convoy, each visible at some distance behind us. Through Bogles telescope I could see the bleached white hills of the Cape. I could see the waves cresting and then licking ahead to the hills. The telescope grew hot against my brow and fingers and I looked up to the afternoon sun. It seemed that it was as much a hazard as the sea itself: blazing and inescapable. Its effect was twofold: penetrating, descending beams and then a rising swelter once it radiated against the deck. I imagined it consuming a plank of wood this way, heating it to combustion, flaming away into ash, and dusting away into nothing. I watched as the Cape fell away and we were in open ocean again, sailing due south. There were shouts, though this time they were merry. 62 Wogs, wogs! the sailors called, laughing. As the calls mounted, a group of young sailors, boys, were pushed to a point just below the central mast. An officer ordered them onto their hands and knees. A ring of older sailors and passengers surrounded them and the Captain even descended to join the ring. Wog! Other passengers formed an outer ribbon, observing. An officer called out and the noise hushed while a barrel was delivered next to him. He ordered the young sailors to array themselves into a column on their backs. Then he raised his arms to summon again the chant, Wogs, wogs. The officer and two sailors lifted the barrel and ran along, tipping it onto the column of young men. A cascade of green bread, fruit, and meat, days past ripening, fell onto them. The young sailors writhed in the musk-rotten slush. The officer ordered the men to roll, to lather their faces in it. Cheers and laughter came from everywhere on the deck as the young, rolling sailors looked up for breath wearing beards of rot. James leaned to my ear, Theyve crossed the line of Cancer for the first time. As the ritual proceeded, I watched the old sailorsthe ones whod waged war on the same expanse of ocean that we now sailed. I watched them laugh and kick in at the ribs of the young ones who attempted to rest or escape. When the ritual concluded, they didnt cheer for the new initiatesthey lashed ropes and threw buckets at them. Unamused, Shane sat alone with his back to the rail writing fervently on a square of paper and stroking his fingers in the air, closing his eyes. I asked him later what he wrote about 63 and he just looked up, half asleep, The way young men are, then after considerable thought, the way old men are. A Pair of Brown Eyes Scope differentiates Rum, Sodomy & the Lash from the Pogues next album, 1988s If I Should Fall from Grace with God. This latter record sheds Rums rusted colloquial tales and character sketches in favor of original epics like Shane and Jems Fairytale of New York, Philips Thousands are Sailing, and new addition Terry Woodss Streets of Sorrow/ The Birmingham Six. In the three years between the two releases, the lyrics became more elegant and the music increasingly incorporated new styles including pop, big band, ska, and Middle Eastern. Also, while Rum, Sodomy & the Lash conveyed a sense of timelessness over the course of the entire record, If I Should Fall from Grace with God created the same notion within single songs. That said, A Pair of Brown Eyes distinguishes itself on Rum, Sodomy & the Lash in this latter vain. The song describes a pub encounter between two men, one of them an old war veteran and the other a young man whos just had his heart broken. The old veteran scolds the young man for his self absorption and failure to understand the essence of loss. He describes his own horrific experiences at war: And the arms and legs of other men, were scattered all around And when the old veteran finally returns from war, his lover has gone: But when we got back labeled parts one to three, 64 There was no pair of brown eyes waiting for me. Reluctantly heeding the old veterans tale, the young man is filled with spite, and leaves the pub even more sullen than when he arrived. The lyrics of A Pair of Brown Eyes hold a keen sense of conversation, much like the Pogues best-known song, Fairytale of New York. In a few economical verses, they communicate the angst and tension between two generations, one that had made tangible, carnal sacrifices and another that had the freedom to wage the internal wars of the heart and mind. The lyrics also illuminate a consciousness within the Pogues writing, in their portrayal of generations beyond their own. Given the hedonistic musical climate of the mid-1980s, this was a welcome deviation. I think we were all quite nauseated by a lot of the vacuous, insipid dross that passed for new romantic music at the time, so it felt great to put something out that was bold and beefy and had depth and meaning and morals, Andrew told me. The music in A Pair of Brown Eyes also supports this. With a rolling snare drum, it sweeps along in three-time. Andrew remembers further, On A Pair of Brown Eyes I got to sit down and play a regular kick drum. That was because it freed me up to play the pressed rolls which are a big part of the dynamics in the instrumental and choruses. Despite its unique lyrical characteristics, the song is a variation on an established melody, which allows it to meld with the rest of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash despite its unique lyrics. James says, The accordion figure in [A Pair of Brown Eyes] is loosely based on The Old Claddagh Ring by Dermot OBrien. 65 In the live setting, A Pair of Brown Eyes is a crowd favorite. Its one of those rare songs that entire audiences recite with their eyes closed and drinks raised. In A Drink with Shane MacGowan, Shane notes the unique style of the songs lyrics in contrast to other Pogues originals at the time: They didnt progress from Irish music but they went from being straight headbangers, straight ballads to being sort of mini Irish symphonies. I suppose that the first one like that was A Pair of Brown Eyes. The Coast of Africa, June 1, 1816 A woman gasped along the rail. Shed been standing with her daughter looking out over the sea for Cape Blanco, the Medusas next land fix. Theyd been rehearsing the names of animals, African ones, when the mother jutted her finger out into the east. An officer came up next to her, stepping slowly. Disinterested, he followed her finger to a small blemish upon the water. At first he couldnt discern it from the rising prisms of sea vapor. Then, he fixed his eyes and flashed his hand to the pocket of his coat to his telescope. A shout came from up on the rigging. Passengers again rushed to the rails, looking out into the water. Another shout descended. Philip spotted them, crags of rock puncturing from the oceans surface. Another! a boy yelled. Soon, we found a crescent of such rocks about the ship, blunting the water with the flat of their faces. They are as large Christ, said Bogle, the tide. He motioned down to the water, revealing that it had gained shades of brown. 66 80 fathoms! the sounding report returned. Officers rushed to the quarterdeck, to the Captain who did nothing but defer to the Navigator with a tilt of his head. And the Navigator grinned, raising his chin to the sun. Ive sailed this water, he assured them. He twisted to the Captain with his torso, You should put them at their posts. There came another shout from the rigging, and one of Ryans officers at last ordered an evasive track. Passengers slipped across the deck with the ships gigantic shift. There was a crash of water at the hull that sent passengers and coils of rope into the air. The current held us idle for a few seconds and the Medusa released a bellowing creak. Then the sails reset and there was calm. For the moment we tracked west, along a wall of rock. There came howls from the quarterdeck: first the Navigator at the Captain, then from the Captain to Ryans officer, molecules of spit bursting from his mouth. After some time, the Navigator had the Medusa back to its morning track. And when we looked out behind us there was just one ship remaining: the Echo, the convoys next fastest. While the crowds watched it, away in the distance there was debate as to where the other two ships had gone. Theyve abandoned us, theyve departed west, weve outrun them again, theyve wrecked off Bojador. The Coast of Africa, Sunset, July 1, 1816 Arms of pink and orange stained the ocean currents in slender, flickering sickles of color. The clouds above and 67 beyond the water bloomed with this light, which created ages of depth and shadow. The Medusa moved along this sunset with a gentle rock and without a sound. A ribbon of passengers watched it from the rail. Perhaps every sunset had been this way, so majestic and graceful, but only with this days threatening serenity did we absorb it. By now even the least informed passenger knew that the track ahead of us held danger. For those whod never been to sea, there was a fear of drowning or of maneating sea creatures, and for those who had, the entity that we approached was folly. The hazards of the Arguin Bank had been taught well to each sailor and officer. It had become instinct to keep away from poorly charted shores; sea voyage offered risks in even the best known places of the ocean. The Navigator could feel the heft of the Medusas track and could sense the impact it had on each soul aboard. He seemed to swell at the notion, each hour peering less at his charts and instead allowing the current, the wind, and instinct to guide his orders. That wed escaped the rock crags in the shallows off Bojador wasnt a harbinger for himit bloated his confidence. At twilight, a large collection of men had their meals on the main deck. Their conversations rumbled. The group included Ryans officers and Jock Stewart as well as civilianshusbands and fathers. At times, the Royalist officers would send soldiers down to probe the group, but each time theyd be checked with a sudden hush. There would be spitting and low mumbles while the soldiers patrolled them, creaking past the rancorous faces: slender eyes, stitched lips. Of course, the soldiers absorbed the animosity, and in all likelihood shared it, but duty prevented their rebellion. I 68 wonder if they knew that it was only them, the large cluster of enlisted men with rifles, sabers, and pistols, who kept the Medusa from mutiny. How tragic would it be if we were to wreck because of incompetence and arrogance, and a soldiers misinformed duty to protect it. Spider sat along the rail, teaching a boy the tin whistle. From it, there would come an occasional sweet flutter of sound, followed by atonal emissions of air and spit. Spider put his hand to his own chest. Spider, he said. The boy turned his eyes while ahead he puffed into the whistle. Spider connected his fingertips, walking them upward and then down onto the boys shoulder. Spider, he said again. The boy pulled the piece from his lips questioning with his shoulders. Spider said, My arms and legs were long for my body as a boy. Sitting, he designed his limbs as such, flexing out his toes and fingertips, So a girl called me Spider. The boy winced and laughed. The tone of the deck was otherwise so grave that we, Bogle, Corrard, the navvys, and Uncle Brian proceeded down to the gundeck. Spider rose from the boy, leaving the whistle with him and extracting another from his pocket. Since Ryans arrest, Shane spent most of his time with Spider and the navvys, and they shared songs. It enchanted Shane the way that the navvy songs built and fell, feeling no preoccupation with key and tone. Rather, the songs were each like tiny explorations, searching for notes and structure. There was inherent rhythm in everything the navvys sangin their chants, in the echoes from the walls, in the rasp of their throats, the clap of their hands. It cycled, repeating, their voices calling and summoning. 69 In the gundeck, Shane sat upon a barrel, hollering a rendition of a navvy song, blending it with Gaelic in his own caramelizing baritone until it was unintelligible. A navvy, the tallest one, with ankles and arms as slender as oar handles, joined him, sitting on the opposite crescent of the barrel. Their voices ran contrary to each other at first, then a melding came that bounded loose over syllables and verse. Philip strummed quiet and tense at it, shifting his fingers to find a key. Soon the three men broke and, after a moments silence, Andrew hollered out a quick count and together we launched into something furious. We tended to each other with no lead, the sound framed precisely as each player wanted. A synchronicity developed. There was James hunched over his accordion, pulling with his shoulders and pumping his fingers across the keys like a row of pecking birds. Spider followed the tune just as quick, with every gust pushing through the whistle. I kept along on the mandolin. Philip crouched and leapt with his guitar like a toad, surging in the air without colliding with the ceiling. Cait leaned back away from her bass while she played it, feeling every quick note as if it were infinite, droning away. Shane and the navvys shouted their mutually unintelligible words, grappling with each other, not quite embracing or brawling. James began a crouched lurch like Philip while he played. They alternated jaunts and then did them together. A thickness of air rose from us; ghosts, dark streets, dead fish swirled about, until, at once, the music broke and the chords of each instrument took a parting hum. With this noise, I began to imagine intersections of sound swirling together, sometimes congruous, sometimes contrary, sounding, unrepeated, propelled by new permutations: a song lasting forever. 70 The navvy gained back his breath while Shane folded himself into the corner, his knees at his chin, drinking a cup of wine. I glanced out from behind the mandolin to an empty deck. Only Uncle Brian was there, who brushed his knees with Caifs while Bogle applauded. We ascended again. Most of the passengers on the main deck either slept or sat awake by the rail. For the first time, there were open expressions of prayer. The quarterdeck was empty now except for the Navigator, who stood like an unmoving wooden fixture of the ship. The nights darkness was so complete that we rode along in hollow black. Andrew, James, Philip, Bogle, and I watched the deck lanterns sway with the ship. I looked out to the spot where the Echo had ridden: a distant fleck of light. I found that it had moved some distance to our left since Id last spotted it and was rapidly gaining on our position. Soon it was close enough for me to discern individual lanterns about its masts. They twinkled and pulsed until I determined a rhythm. I pointed to it. Signals, said Bogle. We watched the lights until they ceased and there came a persistent glow, like the eyes of a fly: empty and watching. There were shifts of the wind that filled and released our sails. Soon the Echo altered its track again. It turned due west and crested along at an enormous rate on a track that came straight to us. An enormous charge blasted up from the Echos deck and into the blank sky, illuminating orange, a long ellipse of air and sea. The ocean trembled, sending tiny oscillations to lick at our hull. As the light faltered I looked to the Navigator, who peered at the signal and grimaced to himself. Then the charges blast absorbed 71 back into the Echo, delivering a darkness that seemed emptier than before. Then, another charge blasted up above the Echos masts: its boom delayed for a second after the explosion. This time the Navigator didnt turn at all. The light created shadows on the terrified, sleeping, arrogant faces of the Medusa. Again the glow dwindled to darkness and the Echos lanterns began to pulse with their signal. It was close now. Bogle could discern the signals without a telescope. Turn west! It came close enough to hear the rush of ocean at its keel. The sound built. Soon, we could discern the Echos sailors hailing us with white cloths. We could hear their shouts as it raced past our bow, not ten lengths away. We watched as its signals fell impotent and it disappeared away into the west. There was no twitch in our course. For speed or ruin we departed all company to head south alone. Sally MacLennane I go, without the heart to go, To kindred that I hardly know. Drink, neighbour, drink a health with me Farewell to barn and stack and tree. Five hours will see me stowed aboard, The gangplank up, the ship unmoored. Christ grant no tempest shakes the sea 72 Farewell to barn and stack and tree. Joseph Campbell, The Emigrant (Inishry 1913 from The Oxford Book of Ireland) Some are convinced the Irish are not serious about anything other than saying goodbye. Death is accepted, so is battle, the loss of spouse, even the dying of children. Tragedy seems indigenous to the land. It was always a puzzle to the English that in the midst of grief, in the midst or carnage, the Irish could leap to his feet and give vent to a full-throated song, or an intricate story, even ones with comic overtones. Malachy McCourt, Danny Boy The Pogues could never have been an Irish band indigenously. Its like theres two Irelands, the people who went away or are second generation and very often that gives a different point of view on the culture on what it is to be Irish.Philip Chevron, If I Should Fall from Grace There has always been a parallel Ireland. A world outside of Ireland that is always Irish. An alternative Ireland. This is a world inhabited by those whom Ireland has failed. Mostly they had no work or they had ambitions beyond those articulated nightly in the rooms of forgetting, the sensation dulling, world erasing bars whose grand dreams evaporated nightly with the clang of the closing time shutters.Bob Geldof, liner notes, Waiting for Herb reissue Songs everywhere. They convey the gamut of human emotion and unify communities, if not nations. Songs have long been a vehicle of communication and celebration for Irish culture, 73 whether its singular unaccompanied Sean Nos or the rhythm and melodies of full ensembles. Of the six original lyrical songs on Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, five of them mention singing: In The Sickbed of Cuchulainn, John MacCormick and Richard Tauber serenade a dying man who later, in a delirious state, hears drunken men singing Billys in the bowl. In A Pair of Brown Eyes Johnny Cashs A Thing Called Love plays on the jukebox and accompanies the lovelorn thoughts of a young man; his thoughts are made even more poignant by Ray and Philomenas songs. Navigator (written for the Pogues by their friend Phil Gaston) mentions the work camp songs of the navvys (rail workers). Billy, of Billys Bones, is singing when hes killed on the Lebanon line. And when Jimmy leaves his home in Sally MacLennane, his family and friends offer songs of farewell to him. Musically, Sally MacLennane presents itself as a pub-room romp: single strike drum rolls, festive accordion, hollers of Far away. With the tin whistle, Spider harmonizes note for note with Shanes vocals (something they also employ to a melancholy effect on A Pair of Brown Eyes, Dirty Old Town, and the second verse of Im a Man You Dont Meet Every Day). Sally MacLennane, the name of a stout, is inspired by Shanes uncle Franks pub. Shane recalls him in A Drink with Shane MacGowan: He was a link with Ireland for me. He ran a great pub in Dagenham for the Irish Ford workers, which is what Sally MacLennane is based on. The song melds Shanes recollections of the pub (like the elephant man, a real bloke) with Jimmy, who has grown tired of his locales tendency toward debauchery and violence. When 74 Jimmy decides to leave his home, his family walks him to his train and, in so doing, touches on another Irish theme: departure. Irish writer James Stephens remarks on this theme, I labor under this disadvantage that never having been out of Ireland I have never been far enough away to get a proper look at it, and consequently, although I have lived all my life in this country, I have never once seen it. But the theme emerges far earlier than that: In order to prove his devotion for his wife-to-be, Emer, Cuchulainn journeys far away from Ireland. Ewan MacColls song The Traveling People, made popular by Luke Kelly and the Dubliners, documents the lives of Irelands tinkersa nomadic people who laud in the liberty of mobility. Songs of departure emerge throughout the Pogues discography from early interpretations of Kitty and The Leaving of Liverpool to the glorious original Thousands are Sailing. In the If I Should Fall from Grace documentary, Philip remarks that departure from Ireland had a critical impact on the creative output of the Pogues: What made [the Pogues] what it was, was that it was an Anglo-Irish band. That combination of English people and people like myself and Terry [Woods] born on the island and people of the Diaspora like Andrew. Something about that chemistry is what made the band very interesting. A major difference between Rum, Sodomy & the Lash and its predecessor, Red Roses for Me, is a greater willingness to deviate from Irish songs and themes. We find interpretations of English, Australian, and American folk songs that also accompany novel expressions of the world outside of Ireland. That said, songs like Sally MacLennane (and The Sickbed of Cuchulainn) remind us of how closely tied to Ireland the album remains, with its adherence to themes of song and 75 departure and its melody, strongly reminiscent of the traditional hornpipe, The Galtee Hunt. In fact, so precisely does the song fit with these notions that James Fearnely told me, For the longest time I thought that Sally MacLennane was a traditional song. The character Jimmy, in the end, drinks himself to death, an ironic turn for someone who escaped his beloved home to avoid that very fate. And yet MacGowans talent for turning irony back on itself emerges: drinking yielding death, another departure, another song. The Coast of Africa, Morning, July 2, 1816 At sunrise, a swell of hot tea filled me and I woke. Andrew, Philip, and James sat beside me, each holding a cup. Bogle held out another for me. Well need our wits today, he said. My stomach was warm with fear and I held the tea in my knees. 100 fathoms, the sounding report returned. For the entire morning, there was at least that depth beneath us. Ryans officers, whod been persistently calculating our track since wed departed the Canaries, came away from their charts with their heads bowed. Were on the very edge of the Bank, one of them muttered to Bogle. A crowd of sailors brought up rods and fished from the deck. They immediately reeled up stocks of fish, which they clubbed and opened and took to the kitchen. Through the morning, plates of cod came up in thin slices coated with flour. The Governor refused it but the Navigator and the Captain are like the rest of us. Then sailors brought up a 76 barrel of wine and people danced rigidly as Philip and I strummed. None of it lasted. Down the deck, a sailor reeled up a heap of river grasses. Another sailor looked to the water and shouted that, once again, it had browned. The Navigator laughed at the news. From the river deltas, not far, he boasted. I have twice explored those. 70 fathoms, the sounding report returned. The shallowest, Philip said. Men and women moaned at the news. There was no more dancing. We are safe! the Captain called out. The breeze mounted, carrying us faster. Many remarked that the water had begun to reflect textures like tree bark: brown and wrinkled. Soon, every head hung out over the rail, looking down into the water. A passenger poured his cup of wine into the sea, creating a patch of maroon that quickly fell behind the ship. Further down the rail a man shrieked, motioning downward to tiny particles of sand that had begun to stir in the water below the hull. 18 fathoms, the sounding report returned. The Captain ran to the Navigator touching his fingers upon his shoulder, questioning with his brow. I watched the rhythm of the artery in the Captains neck pulsing like a toad, exposed and terrified. The Navigator pushed off the Captains 77 hand and looked ahead. The Governor and his wife and daughter sat with a plate of fruit before them, isolated, chuckling to one another. A passenger ran below the quarterdeck and spanned out his arms, shouting up to the command, Sirs, we will hit. Such pleas also came from the sailors, stretching upward in a heap beneath the quarterdeck. Cait and Uncle Brian tied their fingers together. The Captain ordered over a squad to guard the quarterdeck. The Governor continued to nibble, making slight conversation with his wife and lifting his face to the sun, lathering himself in it. More shafts of river grasses floated past and larger kernels of sand twisted in the bow current. Our speed gained. Bogle spat into the water. The afternoon sun blazed upon our backs and necks, roasting them to deep red, but we continued to lean over, watching from the rail. A soldier standing next to Spider coiled upon his rifle and sobbed. In the revolution, it was a comfort to my mother that Id die in France, the soldier laid on his side, embracing the stock of his gun. Now my body will be lost. There were more shrieks and shouts and pleas while we continued our intrepid course. One of Ryans officers, a young ensign, rushed the stairs of the quarterdeck. A guard put his rifle into the ensigns ribs, casting him back down the stairs. Shane ran to the ensign and, with the aidof a passenger, helped him to his knees. Shane whispered to him and then stood, bracing the ensigns shoulders. Vapor hissed from his lips as he cursed up to the quarterdeck. Without tilting his head, the Captains eyes moved down to Shane, who stood below him in an open, filthy shirt and a beard that 78 cast black whiskers in every direction. Spider slung his arm around Shanes neck and shouted a diatribe, thick and taunting. The ensign then revived and caressed his head. He opened his shirt, revealing a patch of broken vessels that hung long and purple on the opposite side from his brand. I watched the wound throb like the Captains neck: they were in perfect synchronicity. A deafening beat could be discerned. I became aware of every heart, every vein, every wound of the ship beating together, loud and dull and then sharp and alarming like a bell. It grew into a hideous yet essential sound, a rhythm to frame everything that had happened or would happen, like a battle march, a droning beat, a death toll. Then two things happened in rapid succession: a sailor not far from us reeled in an enormous, writhing cod. As he boasted and tugged at it, another shout lifted above all the other noise: Six fathoms! the sounding report returned. Billys Bones Billys Bones accompanies the traditional Mrs. McGrath and Bob Dylans John Brown as songs that handle the emotional hardship borne by the mothers of soldiers. In the oldest of these songsand likely the source of the other twoMrs. McGrath, an impoverished Irish mother watches her son Ted leave to join the English army in the fight against Napoleon. In battle, a cannonball takes both of Teds legs, and he returns to her on crutches and pegs. His mothers initial despair turns to spite. In the final verse she says, All foreign wars I do proclaim. 79 Between Don John and the King of Spain, And by herrins Ill make them rue the time, That they swept the legs from a child of mine. Dylan portrays John Browns mother as an enabler, heaping with pride at her sons enlistment and departure to war, boasting all about town over his service. Its only when John returns to her, unrecognizably mangled, that she realizes wars brutal reality. Despite the contextual differences in these two songs, both are overtly antiwar in nature. Billys Bones, on the contrary, places greater focus on the soldier himself. While the song is also antiwar (though less clearly), the character of Billy is a hellion and a brawler whos revered for beating down a cop. For Billy, violence is a means of amusement. He is the antithesis of The Sickbed of Cuchulainn, in which violence is instead used to liberate and protect. Also deviating from Mrs. McGrath and John Brown is the songs tempo: Billys Bones is one of the fastest songs in the Pogues discography. My approach to this song was to play as fast as I fucking could to keep up, remembers James. Shanes auction-caller phrasing and the musics breakneck playing foster the image of Billy firing his machine gun, fighting, laughing, singingthe abandon that defines him. In an ironic turn, Billy joins a peacekeeping force and is deployed to Palestine. Here, he indiscriminately shoots at Arabs and Israelis all for the amusement of watching them run. Billy ultimately meets his demise in the desert somewhere on the Lebanon line. Unlike John Browns mother and Mrs. McGrath, Billys mother has no image of him: not a body or a shirt. Like many mothers, shes left with the 80 emptiness held by the. survivors of those lost in foreign places. Now Billys out there in the desert sun and his mother cries when the morning comes, And theres mothers crying all over this world, for their poor Dead darling boys and girls. The Arguin Bank, Afternoon, July 2, 1816 The Captain approached the Navigator again, this time like a deer to a brook. Sir, less than six. The words incubated with the Navigator for many seconds before he threw his charts and compass against the floor, the latter making a dense crack as it flipped around on its axis. Someone come forward who knows this coast better, he shouted into the side of the Captains face while he made a grand sweep with his hand. He looked to the Governor, who nodded approval while sliding an oyster into his mouth. The masses stood and craned up at the quarterdeck. The Navigator paused and ordered a new sounding to be taken. Before the result could be returned however, there was a shudder. It was slight, like the vibration on a table when a plate is set upon it. Some of the souls standing on the interior of the deck didnt even detect it. We rode along again in quiet. Then there came a second tremble, accompanied by a rushing sound that peeled along the keel. We slowed for a moment and then, as if released from a giant hand, we accelerated again. This sensation was felt by everyone and 81 there were screams and shouts. The knowing, upward hook in the Navigators mouth fell. The Governor stared from his armchair, holding his glass still while the wine inside it tipped from hemisphere to hemisphere. The Captain looked to both expressionless men, for whom this predicament was a novelty. I could hear and even feel the vital, horrid throbbing again, pulsing from necks and chests and closed fists. A lapping of the sea accompanied it, slurring the beat like a slip of air channeling through an enormous shell, inviting us into chambers of suffering. An officer yelled up from the silence, Turn sirs, please! And the Captain at last gave that order. The helmsman reeled around and the Medusa sliced west. But immediately there was a third trembling, which this time shook everyone from their feet. The Governors platter of delicacies clashed as it hit the floor. The Medusas timber gave a drawn groan. The sails fell like clouds into the sunset. The rigging swayed. There were screams and curses. There were threats to charge the deck. Turn! shouts came. It was too late. Small wakes collided with the ship and currents of water channeled around it. We werent moving. Wed been seized by the sea floor. Dozens hurried over and arrayed themselves on the rail, leaning from the ship. Below us, clouds of mud stirred in the water and the rippled sea floor, magnified up to us as close as the very floor beneath our feet. On the horizon, in any direction, there was nothing: just the gentle crease where the sea met the sky. 82 Down the long column of those standing along the rail came the Navigator, whod descended from the quarterdeck. He craned his neck. I watched his face project both terror and hubris in a single moment. Raising his head turning to the deck he called out, A calculated obstacle. A Lieutenant stepped in front of him, pushing his back into the Navigators gut. He hollered out, We must do what we can to lighten! For some minutes there was a frenzy to purge anything of weight. Men lifted chests of supplies over the rail and cast them into the water. The cooks tossed out armloads of pans. A team of others crouched to lift a canon off its mount. Women scurried to their cabins to secure their jewelry. And in spite of this turmoil about the deck and the goods raining from it, the ship was steadfast; stuck so completely that it could not shift so much as a grain of sand beneath its keel. When he saw the purging, the Captain descended onto the deck in a furious charge. This will stop! he howled. The King will not have his possessions put to sea. Officers and soldiers glared to their Captain before enforcing his command. With the butt of his pistol, an ensign smacked to the ground a navvy whod been sprinting to the rail with a wooden chair over his head. The navvys blood seeped upon the deck as the purging ceased. For some moments, the Captain conferred softly with the Navigator and the Governor until he began to bob his head. The Captain then composed his hands at his rear and called for the sailors to disassemble the masts and for others to lower down the six support boats that had been lashed to the Medusas side. 83 Having been to sea for so long it was odd to be sure of foot, reminding us of the permanence of our grounding. We could still feel, in our minds, the shift of the sea, but our feet were steadfast, the wisest of our faculties. The Governor had one of the Captains aides bring up a new tray of fruit and a loaf of dark bread. He picked at it with his wife and daughter as the sailors ran about the deck and shimmied along the rigging. Soon, the Medusa was a stout version of itself, stripped of topmasts and sailsits adornments. The Navigator descended to his cabin. The Arguin Bank, July 3, 1816 With its masts disassembled, the support boats pulled at the Medusa, toiling in the coming surf with columns of ropes, their fibers twisting loose after only a short time. We helped to lower material off the ship into organized aggregations of wood and rope that would float on the water. The kitchen had been scoured in the night, leaving only puddles of flour and fruit rinds. The cooks had vacated their duties and joined the endeavors of the crew. Spider and James had secured a satchel of biscuits that they passed among us. Later, Uncle Brian invited us to his cabin, where he distributed fist-sized blocks of cheese and bread. On the deck there were huddles of families weeping to each other. Until now Id not realized the number of children aboard. There were infants, curled into their mothers chests, sensing fear and wailing. Some passengers squinted toward the east, pointing, convinced that they saw the desert. Bogle put his hand about the back of one such man: Im sorry to tell you, its a reflection. 84 The Captain knew that he was impotent to give any further order that would save the ship. So he turned away from the boats that tugged at the Medusa from the surf. He called to a squad of soldiers who in a moment stood crooked before him. In light of the plundering, I ask you to secure the kings gold. What about the prisoners in the hold? Asked the sergeant. Prisoners? The thief and the brawler. Yes. For only the sake of the gold they should come out and remain under watch. Led by the holler of their sergeant, the squad descended to the hold. Shane walked to the door frame and leaned against it, looking, at intervals, down the stairs, eager to see his friend Ryan again. Spider joined him, hoping to talk again with Jesse James. After a short time the squad reemerged without the prisoners. The sergeant trotted to his Lieutenant and whispered to him. Then the Lieutenant charged down the stairs, followed again by the squad. Shane lifted his shoulders and grimaced from across the deck. He and Spider stepped slowly through the door and descended the stairs. Soon they both rushed back out and quickly sat on either side of the door. The Lieutenant charged out next, shifting his head, searching. The Captain shouted down from the quarterdeck, Sir, you were to guard the hold. The door was broken down, we found no one, the Lieutenant called. 85 I ask you to guard the gold. The Lieutenant bowed his head to the deck and took in a breath. The Captain had turned to the sea, disinterested in the affair. The Lieutenant moved to climb the stairs to the Captain, but a guard kept him back. Sir! he shouted and the Captain brushed him away. At last he said, The gold also is gone. The Captain swiveled and stared at the Lieutenant. Then he charged down the stairs, shoving sailors from his path. He crossed the main deck and descended to the hold. Throughout the afternoon, he plucked squads from the rescue effort to search for the gold, Jesse James, and Frank Ryan. As night came, Shane and Spider roared when they learned that none had been found. Jock Stewart, having forecasted disaster even before leaving Rochefort, moved among the exhausted crew and passengers. He twiddled his fingers in his pockets, occasionally walking up to men and placing a hand upon their shoulders. Hed whisper in their ears and drop coins into their hands. To me and Philip he brought wine. From my cabin, he said motioning to the cups. Part of the Governors St. Croix supply. He nudged me with his elbow and opened his coat, revealing a pair of pistols, Returned to me last night, by the Governor. Then he closed his coat and ambled away into the crowds. 86 A Pistol for Paddy Garcia The distant shadow that approaches in the valley is a rider. He ambles along a path that ribbons through barren scrub. At his back theres a wrinkled mountain. The rider comes closer amid the quiet. Then a rifle cocks in the foreground, and a shot follows. Smoke rises and the rider falls. The horse bolts. Ennio Morricones Per Qualche Dollaro in Piu then erupts from the desolate echo, introducing Sergio Leones film For a Few Dollars More. Replacing Jems composition A Pistol for Paddy Garcia into this scene would achieve the same harrowing effect. Finer used the character of Paddy Garcia as a symbol for his spaghetti western-styled compositions, writes Carol Clerk in Pogue Mahone. The piece includes each of the instruments that had become Pogue standards: whistle, banjo, acoustic guitar; simple though dynamic percussion, accordion, and bass. In spite of this, the piece deviates from the folk-flavored tunes that had dominated the bands discography to that point. (Such deviations would become common in the bands future musical explorations, but were novel for the Rum, Sodomy & the Lash period.) While A Pistol for Paddy Garcia wasnt the Pogues first recorded instrumental, it revealed a new dimension of the band: one that could convey landscape and emotion without Shanes lyrics. A Pistol for Paddy Garcia opens with a lone harmonica, followed soon by Jem slow-plucking on the banjo. Then a tin whistle enters with a wailing melody. Then a slow drum beat, like a rifle shot resounding over a plain. These components perfectly evoke the eerie desolation of the old American west that Leone captured in his films. Simultaneously, they retain 87 an Irish melodic influence. The composition builds to a heroic trot employing the Pogues full instrumental ensemble. A Pistol for Paddy Garcia, produced by Philip Chevron, was both a B-side for the Dirty Old Town single and a bonus track on the albums CD and cassette versions. That it seems to emulate Morricones spaghetti western film scores is perhaps no accident. The Pogues were fans of Sergio Leones films, especially those scored by Morricone. In fact, while Rum, Sodomy & the Lash takes so many cues from the decades and centuries that preceded it, it seems that, aside from late 1970s punk, Sergio Leone and Ennio Morricone were some of the only direct, contemporary influences on the band. Philip Chevron says in the documentary If I Should Fall from Grace,One of the movies that the band watched a lot on the tour bus was Once Upon a Time in America we approached the Fairytale (of New York) intro as if good old Ennio Morricone had arranged it. Although the creative forces for Rum, Sodomy & the Lash predate Once Upon a Time in America, the two share a common tone. Morricones overture for the film is glorious and grand, while the story happening amid it is both violent and seedy. But just like in the many stories of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, there resides an inherent, poetic beauty that rewards a viewers concentration and compassion. Whether this paucity of contemporary influences on the Pogues reflected the bands deliberate decision to turn away from the crowd is not entirely clear. The musical landscape of the mid-1980s was bleak. Jon Tout, Pogues fan and an administrator of the Pogues Webring recalls, Britain was in the last throws of ska, punk, and new wave. Metal and pop 88 were the dominant factors in music, which was generally electronic or guitar based. Not many bands stood out from the crowd, and those that did had really interesting instrumental tracks normally hidden away on B-sides. I was always a big fan of western movies, so Pistol was the first wow track that didnt need any researching as to what the song related to. Philip supports this notion again in the documentary: After the first blossom of the punk movement [modern music] seemed to all go horribly wrong quickly. Fitting then that journalists such as Melody Makers Barry McIlheney began to write of the band: The Pogues are leading the forward commando unit dedicated to destroying the new Toryism of pop. The Arguin Bank, July 4, 1816 The Medusa shifted heavily and many thought wed been freed from the Bank. There were cheers, arms extending into the sky. Even the Navigator lifted his head out from the quarterdeck to ascertain the movement. When we looked down into the ocean, though, we found swells coming to crash at our side, frothing up and channeling around the ship. It was a bombardment that we felt, the impact of a surging mass with a stationary one. With it, we could sense the Medusas timbers bending. Sailors and officers ran past, remarking that the ship couldnt long withstand such an assault. We must embark from here, said Bogle. The spring tide wont bring us any higher. Through the day, the sun would rage when the surf ceased, alternating wraths. It grew clear that the dislodging effort 89 would fail, and the support boats were called back to the Medusas side. The Captain and the Governor went below deck together. In the time that they were gone, the day dimmed to brown in spite of its brilliance, like tarnishing silver. The sun cast golden shadows. The faces and bodies all took on these effects, allowing us to glimpse every flex of muscle, every sweep of hair. A new series of waves began at the ship, hurling around the support boats. One of them collided with the Medusa, causing a row of planks to come splintering loose. Spider had ascertained that there were four hundred people aboard. There wouldnt be enough support boats. The Captain and Governor emerged into the brown shadows after some hours. They sent every last person away from the quarterdeck, even the Governors wife and daughter. Then the Captain came to the front, ten feet above us, ascending to the golden beams. His voice was slow and sure, We will leave the Medusa together. For those who cannot be assigned a boat, we will build a raft, one for each boat to tow to shore. Gold beamed from his buttons and his nostrils, and the throbbing that had become so deafening diluted into the background, pulsing idle for a while, unsure of itself. An officer shouted up to the Captain, Why not ferry each other to shore in shifts? We wont have the fighting strength to repel the warriors in the desert. He nodded east. How will assignments be made? 90 The Captain extracted a paper from his coat pocket. Its here. How far must we go? For now build a raft. Of what? Within an hour, masts and planking were hacked from the Medusa and the once great, fast ship was a heap of timber. Ropes lashed together the timbers until a plot the size of a barn had been formed. We descended to the gundeck with the others for our instruments, but theyd been purged. Andrew stood where his drum cases had been, reaching up to a ceiling beam and tapping a rhythm upon it. Spider smirked and held up his whistle from his pocket. Then he descended with Shane to the hold. Later theyd say they found something scrawled upon a plank down there, a message from Ryan, that Shane vowed only to reveal once we were ashore. He said that barrels of flour had been spilt everywhere, leaving a film of powder. He motioned back to the white footprints of his boots and I watched the flour while it raced away, particle by particle, into the wind. We helped with the raft, looking for some pattern in its construction, until we determined that there wasnt one: it would be stitched together like a sock doll. We beat crude, bent nails into the rafts planking with our boot soles. The entire ship listened to the navvy work songs as they too 91 constructed the raft: a single man calling and the rest responding, each voice a rhythm, a melody. Before the raft was complete, the Governor came to the front of the quarterdeck and everything dimmed, and as I remember now, only he stood there. He was a figure of gold, his coat flaring around his thighs, emitting flecks of glitter in the brown haze surrounding him. He raised his arms and it was silent. You are all under my hands. I vow to bear all of you safely to my colony, or I will not bear myself. Navigator Carol Clerk begins her biography of the Pogues in 1977 at the Cambridge Pub in London. Its there that a friendship formed between Shane and Phil Gaston, who worked at the punk congregational Rock On Records. As far as the Pogues were concerned, it was a friendship that predated most others, and it served as an origin from which much else radiated. For example, Gaston and friend and coworker at Rock On Stan Brennan managed the Nips, which included Shane on vocals and, eventually, James Fearnley on guitar. Stan went on to produce Red Roses for Me. Philip Chevron also worked at Rock On, where he met a sixteen-year-old Cait ORiordan and later Elvis Costello. Also convening with Shane and Gaston at the Cambridge was Deirdre OMahony, an art student and Gastons future wife. Like Gaston, she was a steadfast supporter of the Pogues musical endeavors. She was with Gaston when early audiences cast food at the band for celebrating Irish culture. She was also there when the Pogues won over audiences with their ever-current, throttled energy that at the same time held so close to her Irish past. 92 Aside from this cascade of personal relationships that Gaston facilitated both deliberately and by chance, he also wrote Navigator for the Pogues. The song, about the plight and culture of rail workers, fits so well onto Rum, Sodomy & the Lash that it could easily have been written by the band. Like The Old Main Drag, its a waltz that runs contrary to the lyrical description of the workers exhausting and sometimes tragic existence. Its akin to Poor Paddy, a traditional song that the Pogues interpret with furious exuberance on Red Roses for Me. The music resembles a song that might sound from a work camp at night. The intro to Navigator finds Jem (banjo) and James (accordion) doubling in a climbing melody that seems to compose itself in the playing. The verse of the song waltzes along with James following Shanes vocals. James recalls, On Navigator, and with many of the Pogues songs, the accordion tried very hard to follow the vocal melody line, which was a contract I entered into with Shane and something I enjoyed and still do very much to get his phrasing and nuances as best I can. The chorus is a plea to the workersrolling drums, soaring vocals: Navigator, Navigator, rise up and be strongperhaps revealing that in spite of the hardship and tragedy that accompanies their work, theres a pride in their persistence. * * * In addition to Phil Gaston, there were others who contributed to Rum, Sodomy & the Lashs creation. At the soundboards at Elephant Studios were engineers Nick Robbins and Paul Scully. Philip Chevron said of Robbins in our correspondence, Nick Robbins became my chief engineer/lieutenant in 1984 and remains so to this day. Philip credits the Robbins-Scully 93 team with creating the sound design for Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, which captures the organic nature of the instruments while also containing the slightest film of rust, to yield a weave of fresh and aged sounds. Philip went on to tell me, [Costello] understood the distinction between producer and engineer and, having made his overall concept clear, he essentially allowed Nick Robbins and Paul Scully to design the sound accordingly. Costello brought in session musicians Tommy Keane (Uileann pipes), Henry Benagh (fiddle), and Dick Cuthell (horns). Keane and Benagh are both featured in the video for Dirty Old Town, with their thrilling sonic duel two-thirds of the way through the song. Cuthell, a mainstay in the UKs 2-Tone ska scene, handling the horns for the likes of the Specials and Madness, plays a cornet solo on And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda. Darryl Hunt had been in London cabaret band Pride of the Cross, which also featured Cait on vocals. Though he was an apt musician, Hunt was part of the Pogues road crew during the Rum, Sodomy & the Lash period. Based on this proximity to the band and his musical ability, Darryl was able to fill in for Cait when she left the band in the middle of their 1986 tour of the United States. After the tour, he became a permanent member of the band. The Pogues met Frank Murray, their future manager, on their 1984 tour supporting Elvis Costello. Murray, whod been a tour manager with Thin Lizzy, the Specials, the Selecter, and Madness, had more recently worked with Kirsty MacColl and Philip Chevron. Murray had the Pogues on the road often, 94 exposing more and more audiences to the bands live prowess. Shane remembers of Murray: I think Frank did a great job. He didnt make any promises. I think he was the right man for the Pogues at the time. Stiff Records, whose roster included Madness, the Damned, and Elvis Costello among others, released the Pogues first three records. Dave Robinson, Stiffs cofounder, recalls: Stan Brennan came to see me and then I met the band and we did the deal. We worked out a very cheap budget to make the first album and we, Stiff, put the money up. Frank Murray recalls Stiff during the Rum, Sodomy & the Lash period, The relationship with Stiff was good. Almost anything we asked of them, they gave us. They wanted Sally MacLennane out first as a single. We said no, we wanted A Pair of Brown Eyes and they gave us that. Filmmaker Alex Cox took note of the Pogues in early 1985, and soon thereafter directed the surreal video for A Pair of Brown Eyes. In it, a paper bag of brown eyes are escorted through an Orwellian version of London. Later, Cox would recruit the Pogues to appear in his film Straight to Hell and to contribute to the soundtrack for his film Sid and Nancy. The Raft of the Medusa, July 1816 The men beside me moaned as they entered the sea. Theyd just turned their wives to the support boats, while they themselves assumed places on the raft. There were so far only a pack of us aboard the raft, and already it floated below the surface; water cuffing at our ankles. Through the morning they loaded barrels of wine and flour and pemmican while 95 more men descended ladders to the raft. We watched the support boats and the Governor and his wife and daughter being hoisted in their armchairs down to the one that was most seaworthy. Their leather chests came next, followed by crates of delicacies from St. Croix. A Royalist Lieutenant commanded their boat that also included a well-armed squad of soldiers and a small group of sailors. When their boat was half full of persons and cargo, it cast off from the Medusa. The Captain rode upon a similar boat, equipped with able sailors and two squads. Families, officers, and soldiers crowded the other four boats. I watched for Jesse James and Frank Ryan as souls boarded and wept, but they werent seen again. Neither was there a trace of the gold. We were together at the interior of the raft, our feet wedged between planking for balance, the water souping now at our waists. Our bodies held tight together like eggs, each one gaining stability from the other with the knowledge that a single shift could send us all into the sea. Uncle Brian held Cait at the hips, his hands submerged. Bogle was right in among us. For him, the water came to his thighs. Men close by braced their hands upon him, as sturdy as a mast. Corrard, who refused his assignment upon one of the boats, stood close by with his navvys, between us and a crude mast that had been rammed between the planking. Savigny, the surgeon, similarly refused a position upon the boats. We huddled into each other as a single body, without the room to step. At last the boats organized. I craned back toward the Medusa: There was a collection of passengers who wouldnt ride on the boats or the raft and would instead remain aboard. Most of these souls stood at the rail watching us prepare to go. I could hear the Medusas wood baking in the sun and could see Jock 96 Stewarts figure standing above us. He smiled, tilting his hat and then ceremoniously drawing out his pistol. He aimed it at the Captains boat, squinting, taking aim. The sound of his shot barely emerged above the moaning around me. His arm coiled back to his forehead. A splinter of wood flew up from the Captains boat. He aimed another shot and a tiny plot of water burst. Then he disappeared behind the rail. The support boats each held a separate rope, which tensioned at our raft when theyd gone some distance away. At first, there was nothing but the bark of the rafts resisting fiber. Were too heavy, men began to wail. Then, slowly, the water smoothed around us and we moved east. The Medusa fell behind as the raft slipped along beneath us, water rushing around our bodies. There was unity: we held each others arms, we discussed our fears. The sailors revered the sea and the rafts inadequate construction. The soldiers expected a battle onshore: There are warrior tribes in the deserts, they said. Yet there was hope. The Medusa was in the distance now and we surmised that the shore was close. The sea was calm and cups of wine began to move among us. The length of the ropes connecting us to the support boats creaked and shifted from time to time. Far ahead, we could see the boats, streaming into radiating white. The night before, we drank and sang with the soldiers. The belief was common that wed reach the desert before the end of the next day. There were some who brooded over this, leaving tears to pool on the deck. There was the hope, too, that should we perish, the wine and brandy could obscure that sensation of dying, that wed simply merge with a death that 97 tipped like some numbing liquid. The songs we sang were common ones that we taught and bellowed into the morning. The Parting Glass A collection of traditional songs were recorded at the time of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash with the intent to be used as B-sides. The Chevron-produced The Parting Glass was included on the Dirty Old Town twelve-inch single, along with A Pistol for Paddy Garcia. The Wild Rover and The Leaving of Liverpool were B-sides for Sally MacLennane, and Muirshin Durkin and Whiskey, Youre the Devil were also produced by Chevron in quick order for inclusion on the A Pair of Brown Eyes single. The performance of each of these songs revealed yet another aspect of the Poguesone that paid homage to the Clancy Brothers and, especially, the Dubliners. Each of these songs had been released in a version by at least one of these bands, and the Pogues versions deviated little from them. Later, the Pogues would corecord a set of pub standards with the Dubliners, including the single The Irish Rover at Elephant Studios (a song that merrily describes the tragic end of a magnificent ship). In Pogue Mahone, Spider speaks of the Dubliners: Of all the Irish bands, they were the closest to us. They understand that music is a living, breathing thing and you dont put it up on a plinth. Muirshin Durkin and The Leaving of Liverpool are songs of emigration. The latter bears a strong thematic resemblance to the sweet melancholy of Kitty, a traditional with which the Pogues closed Red Roses for Me. Its also the lyrical root for Bob Dylans Fare Thee Well. Whiskey, Youre the 98 Devil describes the Irish involvement in the fight against Napoleon, akin to Mrs. McGrath. Although The Wild Rover involves only an acoustic guitar accompaniment, its a rowdy pub sing-along. With the performance of pub standards like these and the strength of their original material, the Pogues became one of the UK and Irelands most heralded live bands. In 1985 NME named them the years top live musical act. In A Drink with Shane MacGowan, Shane recalls the musical climate at the time: There was no decent live music around when the Pogues started. What I wanted to do was to go back beyond rock and roll, before rock and roll and do Irish music but do it for a pop audience. But the Pogues did more than that. Alex Cox caught the bands January 1985 gig at the Mean Fiddler. There were people stage diving and jumping around and although Id seen that reaction to American hardcore bands, Id never seen it happen in England before. At about the same time, Barry Mcllheney wrote, The music of these islands played by the Pogues is certainly a unique and joyous experience, especially when the atmosphere is just right. In other words, whenever the room is small enough for the sweat to peel off the walls, and sufficient Guinness has been taken to make even the baddest of bad times seem good. In my conversation with Spider, he likened the live Pogues experience to a mix between a punk gig and a football match: Its an intensely passionate fan following. A keen sense of compassion among the band came through too in these gigs, as they played benefits for the likes of Jobs for a Change and Jobs for Youth; benefits for striking coalminers; and the Nicaraguan Solidarity Campaign. Revealing the Pogues sympathy for such causes, James told 99 me in our correspondence over the use of the Raft of the Medusa imagery for Rum, Sodomy & the Lash:The themes that abound in the Raft of the Medusa were applicable I think throughout English society at the timebut probably specifically embodied in the miners strikes and such and the beginning of Margaret Thatchers destruction of the workers unions. There too was their onstage shouting bout with neo-Nazis in Berlin, where Cait lashed out with her bass and Philip reprimanded them by stopping the show and introducing a rendition of And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda. In the US, the Pogues played to packed houses every night, which is particularly impressive considering that in the mid-1980s their records were only available on import. DzM wrote to me on the Pogues mounting prominence at the time of Rum, Sodomy & the LaskThe song selection speaks to the young and disenfranchised, the disaffected and alienated. It captured a band with energy and passion, a band that the music industry had not yet begun to try shaping. And Philip told me, As time passes, one gets drawn not to particular numbers from the album but to the ones that still live and breathe in a live context. Songs should grow in meaning if they can. Their recorded versions are just templates. The Raft of the Medusa, July 5, 1816 The sea had become violent, budging and tilting the raft. Surges of water washed over our heads, immersing us in the waves in complete quiet. When each wave dissolved, I could hear the shrieking: clips of men, especially at the edges of the raft, yelling for something to hold to. Then the next wave 100 would come, drowning their words. Sometimes the waves washed me into a suspended state, my feet coming free of the planks, with lengths of water above my head. I imagined burial this way, stranded at some stratum within the earth. Then my feet would find the planks again and my head would surface. I could feel Philips hand at my coat and Andrews around my neck. There came a rhythm: wed drown, lift, and resurfacetiny resurrections. After every series of waves, I looked for my friends. When Id accounted for each of them and summoned enough air, the next wave would come. In time, the sea calmed and the waves came to our foreheads, then our shoulders, then our chests. We embraced and cheered. There were claims that the shore was close, that wed just crossed an outer shallow that forecasted the beach. There were more cheers, a feeling that wed survived the worst the ocean could offer. An ensign though, an unfortunate one charged with the command of the raft, lifted his voice above the cheers. He stabbed his arm into the expanse of water before us. There were just three boats in sight now, and three taught lines extending out to them. A group of sailors fished around with a pole and brought up three limp ropes. Each person surveyed the water; it no longer moved around our waists. Bogle extended out his telescope and narrated what he saw: The three boats are toiling to move us. After some time, I cannot see the others. After longer, I cannot see the desert. When he finished, the raft shuddered and we braced each other. 101 Theyve cut the rope, men brooded. Theyve betrayed us! There were other contrary suggestions of faith that the boats would ferry back for us once they reached the shore. Another! shouted the ensign as he lifted a fourth rope above his head. Then another series of waves came that swelled above our heads. When they ceased, we collected and counted each other. Though wed survived, we recognized that we were still. It was an immediate and familiar sensation, like hunger, though at first our hope suppressed it. We tried to imagine gentle channels of seawater flowing around us, that the silent pools that filled the negative space between us somehow stirred. The inevitable realization soon emerged, the simplest conclusion: wed been abandoned. The soldiers, inflating their chests like it was duty, accepted this first, then the sailors, and not long after, the rest of us. We accepted it like heritage: that our bodies, fates, families were governed by forces beyond us. Notions of survival were whispered, along with the solemn and brutal things that must be done: Food, Shade, Water. The pulsing emerged again, and for the first time I could feel my own body tremble with that rhythm. This time it was in our brains: skulls inflating and contracting; thought processes, dreams, instincts, no emotion. It was a moment of paralysis: wills summoned, strength mustered, a transformation from hope to survival, like the mind giving a final parting instruction to the body before itself pushing off for the shore. Amid the pulse, fighting its current, I went somewhere else. I ignored my instinct to leap from the raft and swim, to plunge my hands into the water for fish, to cry out into the unrelenting stillness; in my mind I found stray bastions of freedom and beauty, somehow woven into our abandonment. For this, I held to my mind while the 102 other minds departed, their pulses dampening into one long, persistent drone, until only mine remained. The ensign brought up the last two ropes. Wed been abandoned; free to drift within the swells, sometimes east and other times back toward the Medusa. The ensign now held all six of the thick ropes into the cove of his chest. He offered them above the water at his waist until he was exhausted. We imagined the sabers that cut the ropes, coming down at the same time, splitting them apart like the head of a bird. The boats were gone. The Raft of the Medusa, July 6, 1816 There were attempts to fashion paddles and sails, but nothing could overcome the current. It would bear us wherever it wanted, rarely in a single direction for long. At some point in the night the sea erupted, flaying and submerging us in black waters. One wave curled around me and I lost all orientation. I swam, ramming my face into the deck of the raft, where a curved nail clawed a portion of my nostril. A shroud of warmth rushed up past my eyes. Then a grip seized at my feet, twisting me over, pulling my hair above the surface. It was the immense hand of Bogle. I hadnt taken a breath when the next wave came. Philip held me straight as it passed over us, my chest scalding for air, kicking the planks below me. James, Andrew, and Philip lifted me upon their shoulders, above the next swell of water. There, I discerned between the seawater and the salt of my blood. I tore off my sleeve cuff and held it to my nose as I watched a 103 burst light come up in the distance, staining the frothed sea orange. When the waves subsided, we found that the assault had been perilous for the men along the edges of the raft. Rows of them were gone. In the morning, the water was at our hips. There was room to step upon the raft. The ensign waded out to its center. Well ration now, he said and he distributed to each of us a cup of wine, a biscuit, and a slab of pemmican. There were only a few cups that we passed between us. Uncle Brian gave his biscuit to Cait, who pulled it apart in her fingers, savoring the crumbs. We gulped the wine like water, slurping, impervious to its burn. The sailors determined that barrels had come off in the nights waves. There was less pemmican than theyd calculated. And some barrels thought to contain biscuits actually held flour. The sun had risen to its full intensity and, even with the food, some of the older, slighter passengers began to falter, to lose balance, to lose grip. Others paddled at the sea with their hands, hollering for everyone to join. As the day endured and the sun heated the pools of water among us, some men asked for more rations. The ensign refused. We looked around to each other, to the tensing faces, fists. The previous night we were a stranded people, betrayed by our leaders: we were unified in this. Now, in heat and hunger, wed become soldiers, navvys, sailors, passengers, French, Africans: divided masses. The first brawl occurred at the front of the raft over a soldier stealing a cup of wine. Two punches were landed before both men were braced. 104 The same passenger who had days earlier corroded before us on the deck let out a horrible wail and released his feet from the raft, leaping backward. He fell into a mounting swell and slipped beneath it. A sailor created a fishing pole from thread, a slice of wood, and a curved nail. When he reached for a sliver of pemmican for bait, a soldier swept his hand away. Fish would feed us longer. More soldiers forded the raft to molest the sailor, and the naavys and sailors stepped in their way. Let him fish. The raft began to polarize this way, soldiers migrating to one end, navvys and sailors to the other. Only a few of usBogle, Pogues, and the ensignremained at the center. The sailors, intent to fish, would try to take up more pemmican for bait. The soldiers would draw their sabers and hold them before their faces. The fish are abundant here, it is known, said a sailor. Do you see any fishermen? a soldier motioned around us to the blank, rusted sea. The sun had baked crusts of salt upon our arms and backs. The water, below our hips, had thinned our skins. We were raw now, attuned to each lick of the water, each nerve of us heightened. 105 There was silence for some time, then another call by the ensign to distribute rations. Another series of swells reached the raft, and with each person engaged in his own struggle to keep balance, the tensions diffused. Then, as the series dwindled, a call sounded through the waves and two sabers slashed forth, slicing the shoulder of a navvy and hewing a passenger through the stomach. The passenger, whod been a bystander to the conflicts, retched for some minutes, falling to his knees, gurgling in the water, emitting a foam of red. Then he succumbed, floating away, past our thighs into the ocean. Seeing the innocent blood, the soldiers pulled themselves back. Then the sun depleted any other desires to fight for the rations. It was quiet until night. The sabers held the reflection of the moon as they sliced through the air. Sometimes the pitched rush of the blades would end in the absorbing thud of meat, human meat, and then cries of agony. There were such brawls in every quarter of the raft, men being maimed and killed and cast to sea. Rising above it was Bogle, who pulled sabers from the clutches of men and hurled them away. He pushed charging soldiers to the floor of the raft and pulled apart grappling men. As he moved to the center of the raft, he harnessed a soldier with the thick of his arm and squeezed until his machete dropped into the water. He cast the man down. From behind, another soldier took back his saber and cut into the legs of Bogle, whose knees pounded onto the planking. The soldier reeled back for another cut, but before he could deliver it a group of navvys mauled him, ripped the saber from his fingers and threw it off toward the stars. They held the soldier beneath the 106 water until he ceased moving, then they stabbed him through the chest and allowed him to float away. Bogle crawled to a wine barrel and propped against it. He brought his leg out of the water and bellowed as he twisted it to inspect the wound. Savigny waded toward him and tore away a section of Bogles pant leg. A wedge went deep through both of his thighs, and blood ran from them, flooding his boot. Savigny ripped a sleeve from his shirt and, with it, dabbed at the wounds. Then he slid off his belt and strapped it about one thigh. Bogle leaned his head to the barrel groaning, watching the brawling. When the sun rose, the water was to our ankles. More barrels were missing, and there were open expanses of raft where no one stood. The soldiers had retreated to their half of the raft, where they soaked their wounds in the water. Between them and the rest of us was a heap of flesh, some of it heaving, some of it entirely motionless. There was an effort in the morning to cast these souls off of the raft. For them perhaps silent prayers were conjured, but it became as much duty as anything else, to lighten the raft, to float properly. No one could determine how long it had been since wed been abandoned, there was only the sense that any ferry that might return for us was late. Wed been left to hold their ropes. The notion drew me to anger until I collapsedno further energy for anger; I had to summon what I could for survival, for the strength so that when rations came, I should have the ability to raise my fingers to my mouth. And so the Captain, the Governor, and the Navigator escaped their roles as adversaries through our focus on things more primal than hatred. 107 The ensign distributed rations: wine and a cake of flour. The pemmican was gone. Later in the morning, before the sun reached its crest, a school of flying fishes leapt up into the raft. At first I watched them, flipping, their wings seething, unable to propel themselves back into the sea. In our fists we caught them, eating them whole like tiny silver wafers. In the afternoon I pulled a cloak over my head to block against the sun. Within this cavern, I fell away from any real event on the raft. I remembered things of my boyhood: Sitting in a tree with my eyes closed, I felt the sway of the smallest branch, understanding its tiny contribution of stability. I felt roots holding to every particle of soil and every rock, moving with the slightest stir. There were tiny oscillations: birds, perhaps a nest. When a leaf popped off and fell below me to the ground I sensed life transforming in all that surrounded me: tiny, tiny changes that determine everything. More brawling came in the night. I peeked from my coat to see purple blood and men falling. I saw a soldier grab at Cait, tearing at her arms. Uncle lurched at the soldier, driving the three of them into the sea. Cait and Uncle emerged beyond the edge of the raft, drifting away. Corrard lashed a rope to his waist and dove for them. Uncle offered Caits elbow to Corrard and he swam back with her to the raft, where the navvys clustered around her. Uncle fell further back into the blue heights of the sea. Corrard dove in again and tugged at his arm. Uncle reeled over without the thick of glasses and, for a moment, no one recognized him. On their backs, Corrard brought Uncle Brian in and again the remaining navvys pulled him out. 108 The clashes ceased from exhaustion. Uncle and Cait sat together weeping, holding each others cheeks in the palms of their hands. James and Andrew huddled around Bogle. The blood from his leg had saturated his pants and stained the water where he sat. Shane and Spider attended to their wounded navvy friends. The newly slain were once again cast off of the raft to float for some seconds like kelp and then fall below the seas surface. The ensign walked over and smeared a cake of flour into my hand. His boots tapped upon the planking and, for the first time, the raft drifted upon the water like a proper craft. When blended with seawater, the flour gained a clumped consistency like dough before baking. Philip stirred it in his palm with his finger before licking it clean. There was utter silence as thirty-odd of us lay, consuming what was the last ration, watching the distant sea bulges roll ahead. Night, with the agony of the sun gone, evoked madness. Bastards cut the rope, screamed Andrew to the stars. A soldier moved to shove him from the raft when an elbow pounded in at the core of his cheek. The soldier fell flat to his side and remained that way, without the strength to rise. Shouts rose about the raft, from soldier to Pogue, from navvy to soldier, but all of them were impotent, without the will to brawl. The shouts continued even as black swells began to lap at the raft again, rolling it high and low. At times the raft shifted almost vertical. Men gripped at planks and ropes to 109 steady themselves while they cursed to each other. The heaviest swell sent a sailor over the edge of the raft and below the surface. Cheers sounded from the soldiers and other shouts intensified, then more swells came, sending more out of the raft. Bastards cut the rope! Again. Then Bogle, now completely serene, began a lyric, and the cursing ceased. They cut our rope And that is our lot, They rowed away This is our lot, Theyre safe at the shore And this is our lot, And contrary to this day Theyll be left to sea And well be on the shores For bullets to eat us away Well hide in holes From the sea theyll watch us fall 110 And that is our lot, To be left for boats. Bogle sat propped against the last of the wine barrels and stared out through the waves for a while. Then, without cue, his neck hinged over and a new, heavy swell washed him away. And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda Yet of all the contingents which went to Gallipoli, it was Australians who were most marked by the experience and who remembered it most deeply, remember it to this day.John Keegan, The First World War The banjo can be a lonesome, solemn instrument, especially when its plucked slowly. As it alone introduces the Pogues rendition of Eric Bogles And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda, we find a young man wandering Australia with his pack across an innocent and hospitable landscape. Most of the land is wilderness, but its hospitable nonetheless because the young man knows how to reap and respect its nutrients. Its a free and happy existence. The year, however, is 1915, and somewhere on the other side of the equator theres a war and a strategic little finger of land in the Ottoman Empire called Gallipoli. Whether for adventure or through persuasion, the young man joins the war effort for Australia, a fledgling nation still tied tight to the interests of its stepmother, Great Britain. He joins the army and finds himself training to be part of a landing force, whose task it will be to open a new front in the war. He ships out of Sydney with his comrades in a great, proud ceremony. The accordion enters and 111 accompanies the ships departure from the quay into the vast foreign ocean. (James Fearnley told me of his performance: I gave myself free rein, drifting like smoke over the battlefield listening to the lyrics and echoing whats going on in them in some fashion being plaintive then angry both at the same time.) The men land on Gallipoli and a slow bass, and drum rhythm joins, describing the impact of the invaders and defenders: two nations colliding, laying waste to each other. There are distant blasts of howitzer guns. The lauded Alliednaval bombardment didnt clear the Turks away from the hills and cliffs that define the peninsula of Gallipoli. The Turks pound the beaches and sand cliffs as scores of Australians and New Zealanders scatter to negotiate the impossible terrain. That the landing force is even there, on that particular beach, is folly. The intended flatter landing site is a mile away. Quickly, on the tiny, unintended plot of land, the soldiers are trapped, exposed to slaughter. From their ships, the architects of the invasion watch. Over the weeks they grow frustrated with their mens lack of progress and order frontal charges at the well-entrenched Turks, who proceed to gun down their invaders with little difficulty. Waves of reinforcements arrive, though neither can they advance much beyond the beach cliffs. The intelligence on the Turks is poor and their leader, General Kemal, is too adroit at maneuvering his forces along Gallipoli. A stalemate is reached, and each day more men succumb to sniper fire and artillery blasts. All the while we hear Waltzing Matilda, the unofficial Australian national anthem. It rouses some, while others slouch in their trenches, pining for their former isolated, free lives. 112 In spite of the shellings and the bayonet charges into catastrophe, the young man survives. Then one day, a shell comes over the edge of his trench and, with a pronounced strike of the drum, explodes onto him. (Andrew described the creation of this most poignant drum beat: By me playing a flam on the snare so it sounds like an echo and by treating it with reverb also. I was trying to think visually about it and had this image of a soldier falling but far away as if seen through binoculars.) The young man wakes in the hospital to find that his legs have been taken in the blast. The verse breaks and a cornet joins that, like Taps, mourns the loss at Gallipoli. Then the cornet breaks and the accordion swells to the forefront with a climbing melody that sweetly reminisces on the young mans former life. When the first hospital ship returns to Australia, every citizen has readbut, hasnt been able to comprehendthe headlines: 50, 000 ALLIED DEAD AT GALLUPOLI. Their curious pride dissolves into horror as they watch their patched, bandaged, maimed sons being wheeled down the gangway. Though the invasion of Gallipoli ended in failure, Australias memory of it is enduring. Every April, veterans march, commemorating the war, as the nation hails them and mourns their dead heroes. The young man, now old and sedentary, recalls his own life when he watches the parades. He ponders how his sacrifice removed him from a peaceful existence in the bushes and plains. A coda featuring the chorus of Waltzing Matilda closes the song and the album. As it does, were compelled to remember the plight of the young man 113 and his comrades, who, at the hands of poor strategy and their commanders hubris, lost the essence of their country. * * * The Governor, who it seems did not like the sight of the unfortunate, had, however, no reason to fear that it would too much affect his sensibility. He had elevated himself above the misfortunes of life, at least, when they did not affect himself, to a degree of impassibility, which would have done honor to the most austere stoic and which, doubtless, indicates the head of a statesman, in which superior interests, and the thought of the public good, leave no room for vulgar interests, for mean details, for care to be bestowed on the preservation of a wretched individual.Alexander Corrard and J.B. Henry Savigny, Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816 A century before the invasion of Gallipoli, France emerged from a revolution, exiling its usurper, Napoleon. In the aftermath, a convoy of four ships departed from Rochefort, France, to reclaim, as a result of a treaty with the British, the Port of St. Louis in Senegal. The convoys frigate, the Medusa, carried the loftiest passengers and cargo of the convoy: Julien Schmaltz, Senegals new Governor; the convoys commander, Captain de Chaumereys; and 90, 000 Francs in gold that had been hidden in the ships hold among barrels of flour and wine. The Captain, whod gained the post as a reward for his loyalty during the French Revolution, had virtually no experience at seamuch less at commanding a ship. France though, was still a country divided, and loyal military officers were at a premium. 114 Upon embarking, the new Governor immediately forced his will upon the Captain. He wished to make it to St. Louis with all possible speed. The Captain knew that this meant passage through Africas treacherous Arguin Bank, but alongside his inexperience, he was also easily manipulated. Against the will of his officers, many of whom had fought with Napoleon during the Revolution, the Captain agreed to deliver the Governor to St. Louis by the quickest route. With the voyage already underway, the Captain appointed M. Richefort, a civilian, to be the ships Navigator. Being of the same elite stock as the Governor, Richefort executed his desire for a speedy journey without question. Meanwhile, the Captain stood by, his authority shrinking each day. As the convoy approached the African coast and the Arguin Bank, the other three ships of the convoy departed the Medusas company, opting for the safe but slow route into the Atlantic and around the Bank. On July 2, 1816, the Medusa struck the Bank in a spot where it remains to this day. Upon the wrecked ship, a plan quickly materialized to abandon it, using six support boats and a crude raft constructed from the Medusas scrap. The support boats would tow the raft to shore. Before embarking from the ship, the Governor made an elaborate vow to keep each passenger safe. When the plan came into fruition however, the Governors boat was well provisioned, well protected, and underloaded. The remaining boats, on the other hand, were crammed with passengers, leaving 149 people to ride upon the raft. Almost immediately, the support boats encountered difficulty with navigation, either due to their overcrowding or their poor condition. Since the burden of the raft appeared to narrow the boats chances for safe passage, one by one the boats cut their tow ropes, until the raft was left to drift alone, with no means of 115 navigation or propulsion. Through brawling, starvation, and exhaustion all but fifteen perished on the raft. In the two intervening weeks before they were rescued, the fifteen had to engage in cannibalism to survive. In spite of the similarity in these historical references, as well as the cultural ones, that weave throughout Rum, Sodomy & the Lash, it wasnt ever intended to be a concept work in this sense. Philip told me, If the overall effect was to suggest that there was erudition at work in the Pogues artistic outlook that was not intentional. Rather the album, stitched from pub room and street tales, new and revitalized Irish melodies, reinterpretations of beloved folk songs, and iconic paintings, seems to be assembled from an innate consciousness, a soul. The Raft of the Medusa, July 14, 1816 There comes a hunger so profound that it exceeds both flavor and appetite. Theres another type still that exceeds even morality. It instructs that any nourishment is necessary for survival. We couldnt be sure of time. There was night, there was unrelenting heat, and there were torrents of waves that shook the raft: these became our only dimensions. I looked out into the sun from beneath my coat to observe men sucking on wood and cloth for stray nutrients their reason purged. Other men didnt move at all, and it was from them that we gained our nutrition. A soldier was the first to do it. He made a quick, shallow gouge, slicing out what he could from the shoulder of his dead comrade. He twisted up the cluster of brown and purple, causing it to snap. He brought the piece to his mouth, trembling. Then he gulped it and crawled away. As the day 116 wore on he gained the ability to stand and walk. He could survey the ocean and make remarks to us. We learned of the poignant cycle hed endured: one of Napoleons soldiers, jailed, branded, a sentry aboard the Medusa, a crazed brawler, and now a survivor urging us to eat. Later a navvy rose, lifted a saber, and cut into the same dead man. He devoured the innocuous piece of meat and soon he too could walk. The consumption continued: Corrard, then us. And soon we had the strength to sit among each other and talk. Some who refused to eat didnt have the strength to hold on when the waves returned. Even we, with our renewed strength, were too weak to survive many more assaults. I clung to a rope, Andrew wrapped his knees about the leaning mast, embracing it. Philip looped his arm under a row of planking. Shane tied a rope about his ankles. Spider did the same with his forearms. James held to a spike driven into the deck. Cait and Uncle laid flat, flush with the surface of the raft, under a cloak. We each adhered to something. And although we did so alone, it was our adherence that connected us in the very worst moments. For a while, we worried about Shane, with the ropes about his ankles, sitting at the very edge of the raft, tempting the waves to throw him off. How will you keep your head above the surface? we asked. Shane reached into the water and washed it over his chest and head. Then he widened his arms and smiled into the sundeteriorating, basking. 117 The Raft of the Medusa, July 18, 1816 Everything is dim, drowned. I lie alone and sense fragments of vision and sound. A slight remainder of us falter under our cloaks, while others are claimed by the sun: humps of cloth riding our stitched, wooden chimera of the Medusaa raft of the dead. I hope for the swells to come again and for their cooling water to be put across the planking and my skin. I imagine what it would be like to dissolve into the ocean like a cake of salt. How would my diluted self be any different? In spite of what I ate, my arms no longer hold the strength to rise. The moans and the slices of sun drown into fading aggregations of confusion. Then a shout comes piercing the core of my ear, penetrating my skull; then the vibration of someone leaping upon the raft; then a lurching tip, a splash. Amid my silent disintegration, there at last comes a clear shout. I raise the cloak that smothers me to find one of the navvys bounding. His voice channels in the air, hanging there, incomprehensible. He shouts again. Then a shout comes from behind me. My mind hums, processing the intersecting sounds. The raft begins to shift with movementabrupt polar tilts, different from the waves. More shouts rise. I crane my head from under the cloak. The sunlight blinds my eyes, but I raise them. At the edge of the boat, a navvy bounds in the air. A soldier clutches his waist and brings him upon his shoulders for as long as he can muster. They collapse and rise again. The navvy waves a red cloth in the air. More souls attempt to rise: Corrard, Savigny, navvy, Andrew, Shane, then Cait, each of them reaching up to the pack of us shouting, signaling out to the 118 sea, to some spectacle we cannot detect. I pull at the shoulder of a soldier. Its there, we must summon it! he motions to a tiny crest of material at the edge of the sea. Its a ship, simple to recognize, our eyes so accustomed to seeing nothing but sky and ocean. I turn back to my friends, summoning them and pointing out to it. Theres hope, I say. A ship. I tear up the cloak that has shielded me for so many days. I sweep it in the air about my head and others join. We shout for some time as the tiny, distant ship toggles in and out of sight. For some time it seems not to react. Then, a series of low waves rise that obscure it. Are we too far? I ask. And our shouts die. Some fall again to the deck of the raft. My mind shifts with the water, but I stand for some blank stretch of time, my chest aching with each breath. Then the shouts rise again. The navvy bounds on the edge of the raft. A soldier waves his shirt. I scan beyond them and find the larger, darker profile of the ship. Brown skies, gold shadows, and a dark ship. It laps closer with every swell of water; we can see sailors on the deck who dont hail, they stare, turning their faces. I kneel to my friends. We are saved. Fifteen of us are saved. A boat lowers from the ships side and crashes into the water. I fall away again. While the sailors carry us away, I watch the raft drift empty in a shifting current. Its a trodden slab of wood with ruts and splinters like an ancient road consumed in meadow grass. I listen to the ocean as the sailors lay me next to my friends, covered in sheets, gagging on broth. 119 The Old Main Drag I like the stink of the streets, it makes me feel good. I like the smell of it. It opens up my lungs.Noodles Aronson (Robert DeNiro), Once Upon a Time in America The Old Main Drag predates Red Roses for Me and is among the oldest original songs that the Pogues played. James recalls, The Old Main Drag was one of the first songs I remember rehearsing with Shane and Jem at Shanes flat in Kings Cross. The song begins with a pipe drone that seems to describe the drawn suffering revealed in the lyrics. James again recalls: The idea with this song was to discover a purity of tone, to refer to the drone of the uileann pipes in the bass-end which was looped (in true analog fashion, on a tape that stretched some ways across the monitor room of Elephant Studios, from the tapeheads to a reel whose pivot was a pencil taped to a back of a chair if I remember rightly). For me, with that song, its the way the chords go, pivoting around the root note, as if the root note stood for fate. The song is also in three-time, giving grandeur to its brutal tale. The song is a young mans tale of the streets. It takes place near Londons Piccadilly Circus, where he wanders one day. Quickly, hes drawn into the locales vices, including drug addiction. As a result, he prostitutes himself, is beaten and arrested, eventually becoming an artifact of the neighborhood. The tale ends with the young man lying broken, wishing he could escape from the existence hes etched. Carol Clerk writes in Pogue Mahone: [Shane] insisted that his songs were not built around grand themes but were just stories, 120 albeit stories that were often filled with characters and situations he had personally observed, such as those in the Piccadilly streets of The Old Main Drag. Also in Pogue Mahone, Dee OMahoney recalls some of Shanes Paddy-bashing beatings in London, It was awful, Shane would come into the pub with black eyes, covered in bruises. The lyrics to The Old Main Drag are laden with such sorrow and brutality that the initial reaction is to sense nothing but futility. And yet residing deeper in the song is a beauty to the young mans downtrodden existence. Like the fifteen emaciated survivors of the raft of the Medusa, he does what he must to survive. So, while the music sweetly harmonizes and drones, the lyrics broach crescents of hope for the young man: And I wished I could escape from the old main drag. * * * The painting Le Radeau de la Mduse, completed in 1819 by Thodore Gricault, hangs in the Louvre. It depicts a Collection of castaways whose commanders had, in the aftermath of a shipwreck, turned them loose to sea on a makeshift raft. The images creation, which had been informed by the accounts of survivors and anatomical studies at a hospital morgue, recounts the struggle and loss of the Medusas socially expendable: soldiers, immigrant workers, sailors, modest passengers. Each individual in the painting (which measures an enormous five by seven meters) lies somewhere upon the mortal continuum: dead, moribund, hoping. A modified version of it appears on the cover of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash. After the recording of the album, Marcia Farquhar, an artist, art historian, and Jems wife, immediately 121 suggested that the painting be used for the cover upon hearing Andrew Rankens idea for its nautical title. Andrew remembers: I think I mentioned it with reference to George Mellys book Rum, Bum and Concertina, which I was reading at the time. I dont think I was serious about it as an album title, but somebody went, Ooh thats nice, and it just sort of stuck. The phrase is often attributed to Winston Churchills description of naval life (according to his assistant, Anthony Montague-Browne, although Churchill didnt say this, He wished he had). On the records cover, the faces of the Pogues (minus Philip, though he does appear on the back and insert photography) are superimposed over the faces of the castaways in the original painting. Though Marcia didnt perform these modifications for the cover, it was a technique that shed previously employed, notably in an image superimposing the bands faces onto babies bodies. Jem recalls Marcias work: All the time Id known Marcia she had a legendary ability with scissors, which at the time of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash was culminating in scenes of a savage domestic. Culling images from the National Geographic and Mothercare catalogs, she sliced and snipped through the long pregnant nights of summer 83. I can remember being soothed in my sleep by the sound of her scissors. To celebrate the birth of Jack Richmond Brennan, Marcia made Sophie [Richmond] and Stan [Brennan] a card with Pogue heads collaged onto catalog model crawlers. The pairs of figures, and in one case a little family, were far from random. Stan suggested it as a possible cover for Red Roses for Me, but Marcia thought it would be misunderstood. 122 As the cover for Rum, Sodomy & the Lash came to fruition, Jem, whose face is morphed onto a man motioning out the edge of the sea, remembers: We were given a choice of who we wanted to be, and I knew I didnt want to be a dead person. I imagine I made it because there was some hope there. He went on to remark on the overall significance of the cover: It wasnt just chosen because it was a good image, it was chosen because it had a whole history behind it which resonates with a lot of subject matter of Pogues songs. A lot of Pogues songs are about people being shat on. The Medusas story so captivated Jem that he later wrote the song The Wake of the Medusa for the Hells Ditch LP. Rum, Sodomy & the Lash assembles a collection of characters and images that confront, head-on, the seedy, absurd, brutal, haunting, heartbreaking aspects of life. The songs and the cover art are sad and even horrifying when you first give a listen or a glimpse. Each hue seems darker than the next, and the tales all end in death or ruin. The music is organic, toggling between fragile melodies and unhinging stomps. There arent any explicit catharses to flesh out satisfying conclusions either. Instead, through the words, music, and imagery were drawn into rusted little worldsand then abandoned. But this abandonment allows us to dwell in spaces of existence that are often occupied and seldom shared. Its culture, its experience, its history, but not of Captains and Kings. Rum, Sodomy & the Lash is an assembly of peoples songs, folk songs, soul songs. It leads us here without any grand themes and without us even realizing: to a compassion, to a soul that connects it. A secret beauty emerges, one thats imbedded in culture, in Irish culture, and even further, in humanity: were not stranded when we hold onto each other, when we attempt to comprehend each other, to see circumstance, to hear songs. Look at the album cover 123 and find Jem pointing out over the ocean to a ship, hear Spiders whistle ringing above even the saddest tale, watch James and Philip lurch and slide about the stage behind their instruments, hear Andrew give a vital pulse and time that frames everything, find the spirit and mystery of Cait ORiordan and the celebratory urge in Shanes words: theres always beauty and always hope. [The Old Main Drag] came across to me as one of the most beautiful things Id ever heard, while the words were all dashed hope and dealing with things that just werent very beautiful at all. Thats one of the most enduring things with Shanes songs: how the arse-end of life can have a beauty of its ownwhich makes me think of the Raft of the Medusa too, and the songs on Rum, Sodomy & the Lash are as big as the fucking canvas used for his painting. I went to see the painting once. Its enormous.James Fearnley The story of the Medusa is one of ordinary people being shat upon from a great height by the rich and powerful. The insatiable, capitalist, fascist, colonialist, warmongering entrepreneurs are lurking around every corner, just itching to turn us into wage slaves, sex slaves, cannon fodder, and lampshades. But wait, some of us will live to tell the tale, and here comes Jesse James, Frank Ryan, Cuchulainn et. al. Yes we have our heroes, flawed they may be, but like Gricaults great painting, no amount of slashing, burning, lies, and propaganda will succeed in trampling them underfoot.Andrew Ranken One of the reasons a song like The Old Main Drag is so potent still is the fact that, though written by a twenty-seven-year-old about, in part, his fictionalized teenage 124 years, it is actually best performed by the same man, now in his mid-forties. Not even Shane could have predicted that such an alignment of meaning had a realistic chance of taking place, regardless of what he defiantly says about his determination to live to a ripe old age just to annoy the journalists who have been giving him six months to live for the past thirty years. To me, therefore, there is a sense in which we have brought these characters with us over the years. Frank Ryan is still drinking whiskey in a brothel in Madrid; men are still returning, broken of heart and wounded of limb, from tragic and superfluous wars; Jimmy is still sad to say he must be on his way. Survival.Philip Chevron The Port of St. Louis, Senegal, July 21, 1816 There were columns of white beds, and open windows with an orange wind breathing inside. I recognized the sleeping faces in each of the beds. Some I hadnt seen since wed embarked from the Medusa. Theyd been chapped, burned, emaciated, withered in that short stretch of time. I saw my own face reflected in a hall of windows, taut and expressionless, a corpse. Corrard walked to my bedside, adjusting in his fine clothes. He smiled and put a hand to my shoulder. How long? I asked. Sixteen days. 125 Then he walked out of the long, room and into a train tunnel that was dark enough to dim the rays of heroism that emanated above his waist. Later, Shane sat up in the next bed. He cackled into the air and turned to sip a green liquid on the table beside him. The sun had scorched every whisker from his face. Want to know what Ryan wrote in the hold? he asked. He looked up at the lights and recited this before returning to sleep: Every fiber of this ship is dead. The place where you stand is buried in the sea floor and youre beyond the horizon in a shallow ocean. We are survivors who have starved, blistered, come to the verge of madness, and seen the worst qualities of our kind. The golden francs, which will have undoubtedly been spent upon your reading this, were obscured by your fingertips, and therefore, were always lost.F.R. & J.J. The Medusas surgeon, Savigny, walked to Andrew, two beds away. He waved to me. Three were found alive on the ship, he called. Jock Stewart? Jesse James? Frank Ryan? He lifted his shoulders, No. Then he tangled his hands up in bandages, waving and cycling them like a busted clock. The Governor has mild sunburn, but has taken office. The bandages thickened at his arms. The Captain will return to France to stand trial. The Navigators missing, shortly after he arrived. When the roll of bandage ended, his arms were immobile. He twisted his torso to a nurse and asked her to cut 126 him free. The nurse chased him with scissors while he ran to each bedside delivering the same message. If I listened closely, I could hear the waves through the window. For some time I tried to determine if it was the ocean I heard or some dangling fragment of memory, a dark scar. Then a brushing came at my neck, like little spittles of sea foam. It seeped around me and drew into my face. I closed my eyes and allowed it to lather me. It thickened the crimson paper of my skin and nourished my throat, stomach, and legs. It lifted me, allowing me to float: no more resistance from anything, free to sleep. The Bank of the Thames, 1985 The old sailor closed and folded the volume of papers. He slung off his swollen pack of belongings and stuffed them inside of it. A publicity sheet, he said. The Pogues. A collection of youths ran up from the riverbank. The Pogues. Where have they gone? They asked. The man motioned to the tavern across the road. The youths entered and looked around the crowded room. They inquired with the bartender, who pointed toward the corner. There they found pint glasses, chiggers, a book of Behan, and a slender whistle strewn about the table with the Pogues arrayed around it. Their heads were tucked inside their arms, where, accompanying their dreams of the living, the dead, the ruined, and a wrecked ship were unfaltering ages of song. 127 Authors Note Rum, Sodomy & the Lash found its way into my Walkman nearly twenty years ago in the form of an imported cassette. A few years later, after the tape had slurred into a heap of brown ribbon, I bought the CD version. A few years after that, I bought the CD reissue for its collection of bonus tracks. Most recently, I bought the LP. With each edition of the album that I owned, the cover art grew larger and larger andwithout my knowledge, at firstso did the songs. After a while, I began to think of them not as separate entities but as related fragments of heritage: secret histories. There were odes to the misunderstood, eulogies to the unsung, and unrelenting celebrations. Through the years, as I listened, I began to merge the characters and images of Rum, Sodomy & the Lash into a single story. Unsurprisingly, it was a nautical story, based somewhat on the historical plight of the French frigate Medusa. This story, at last transcribed from my brain to paper, comprises roughly two-thirds of this book. Like many stories, it has evolved over the years and will probably continue to do so after this book is done. I offer this story to you not for you to adopt my rendition, but with the hope that Rum, Sodomy & the Lash (or any music for that matter), if it hasnt already, might invite you to similarly honor your imagination. I based much of my story on Alexander Corrard and J. B. Henry Savignys account of their experiences aboard the Medusa and its raft, Narrative of a Voyage to Senegal in 1816. Alexander McKees haunting and harrowing book The Wreck of the Medusa was also extremely helpful. Most of the 128 characters in the story do or have existed, though their behaviors and actions in my story are fictional. The other third of this book is comprised of facts, analyses, and more lucid interpretations of the people, places, and events that led to Rum, Sodomy & the Lash. Toward this effort there are many to thank. Pogues: Philip Chevron, James Fearnley, Jem Finer, Andrew Ranken, and Spider Stacey kindly shared their thoughts and memories with me. The breadth and candor of their information allowed me to explore their album more completely than Id anticipated upon embarking on this book. Carol Clerk was likewise generous with her correspondence and advice. Carols comprehensive biography of the Pogues, Pogue Mahone: The Story of the Pogues, was a wonderful resource for my research and is a book that Id recommend to anyone interested in the Pogues or simply in the many paths that modern music can take. Similarly, DzM, creator and administrator of pogues.com, and Jon Tout, site coadministrator of the Pogues Webring, whose websites often served as launching points into my research, kindly shared their perspecrives. Stephen Kingston at the Salford Star magazine was most kind in aiding me with my research on Dirty Old Town. I thank David Barker, John Mark Boling, Gabriella Page-Fort, and the rest of Continuum Publishing for creating the 33 1/3 book series and, furthermore, for giving me the opportunity to contribute to it. Charles Ubaughs and Marvin Lin at Tiny Mix Tapes nurtured my love for writing about music. My parents and siblings: Chris, Sarah, Hillary, Lauren, Annie, and Craig, supported me with their encouragement. My ladies: Shannon, Emma, and 129 Hannah loved me through my rants and exuberance, keeping me at a satisfactory distance between the moon and the shallows. 130 Bibliography Castle, Charles & Tauber, Diana Napier. This Was Richard Tauber. London and New York: WH Allen, 1971. Clarke, Victoria Mary & MacGowan, Shane. A Drink with Shane MacGowan. New York: Grove Press, 2001. Clerk, Carol, Pogue Mahone. London: Omnibus Press, 2006 Cohn Livingston, Myra. Lots of Limericks. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, 1991. Cole, William ed. Folk Songs of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Garden City, NY: Doubleday and Company Inc., 1961. Corrard, Alexander & Savigny, J. B. Henry. 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