Red Roses for Me
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Red Roses for Me | ||
Studio album by The Pogues | ||
Released | 1984 | |
Genre | Folk rock | |
Length | 40:12 | |
Label | WEA International | |
Producer(s) | Stan Brennan | |
Professional reviews | ||
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The Pogues chronology | ||
Red Roses for Me (1984) |
Rum, Sodomy, and the Lash (1985) |
Red Roses for Me was the first full length album by London-based band The Pogues, released in 1984. Filled with traditional Irish music performed with a furious punk attitude, this album was something the music scene never had seen before. Traditional songs and ballads mixed with Shane MacGowan's "gutter hymns" about drinking, fighting and fucking was considered a fresh breeze at the time. Or as lead singer MacGowan explained the music: "I couldn't believe that nobody else were doing it, so we went on doing it ourselves..." The title "Red Roses for Me" is the name of a song by Sean O'Casey, though it did not appear on the album, nor was it ever recorded by The Pogues.
[edit] Track listing
The following track listing differs from that on the UK LP:
- "Transmetropolitan" (MacGowan)
- "The Battle of Brisbane" (MacGowan)
- "The Auld Triangle" (Brendan Behan)
- "Waxie's Dargle" (Traditional)
- "Boys from the County Hell" (MacGowan)
- "Sea Shanty" (MacGowan)
- "Dark Streets of London" (MacGowan)
- "Whiskey You're the Devil" (Traditional)
- "Streams of Whiskey" (MacGowan)
- "Poor Paddy" (Traditional)
- "Dingle Regatta" (Traditional)
- "Greenland Whale Fisheries" (Traditional)
- "Down in the Ground Where the Dead Men Go" (MacGowan)
- "Kitty" (Traditional)
The original UK LP has the following tracklisting
- "Transmetropolitan" (MacGowan)
- "The Battle of Brisbane" (MacGowan)
- "The Auld Triangle" (Brendan Behan)
- "Waxie's Dargle" (Traditional)
- "Boys from the County Hell" (MacGowan)
- "Sea Shanty" (MacGowan)
- "Dark Streets of London" (MacGowan)
- "Streams of Whiskey" (MacGowan)
- "Poor Paddy" (Traditional)
- "Dingle Regatta" (Traditional)
- "Greenland Whale Fisheries" (Traditional)
- "Down in the Ground Where the Dead Men Go" (MacGowan)
- "Kitty" (Traditional)