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Shane MacGowan & the Popes - Across the Broad Atlantic: Live on Paddy's Day-New (CD)

Album Details: Across the Broad Atlantic: Live on Paddy's Day-New

Release Date:02/26/2002
Label:Red Int / Red Ink
UPC:766925706822

User Reviews: Across the Broad Atlantic: Live on Paddy's Day-New

  • Overall:

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    Mashed up!

    By The Dogs Bollox  Jul 16, 2003

    You bloody C*%ts this album rocks. Get some drink in and get mashed up.
    I saw Shane many a time totally mashed up and this is still one of those rare preformers who can crank out a bloody good tune.

Pro Reviews: Across the Broad Atlantic: Live on Paddy's Day-New

  • All Music Guide

    Dublin had to move 2001's St. Patrick's Day from March 17 to May 19 due to an outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease. Consequently, Shane MacGowan was able to perform Paddy's Day shows at both ~Webster's Hall in Manhattan and ~Olympia Theatre in Dublin during the same year. Across the Broad Atlantic, which features performances from these two shows, is basically the soundtrack to a 75-minute party. The audibly rowdy crowd noises combined with the boisterous performances by MacGowan and his fine band give this album a celebratory atmosphere. Upbeat numbers such as "If I Should Fall From Grace With God" tend to benefit from this raucous setting more than ballads such as "A Pair of Brown Eyes," but MacGowan and the Popes are hardly the only musicians to sacrifice a bit of subtlety and finesse for raw energy in their live performances, and the group sounds tight most of the time anyway (e.g., the impressive interplay between banjo player Tom McMannamon and accordionist Mick O'Connell on the "P...opes' Instrumental" medley). MacGowan's vocals and between-song comments are somewhat slurred, of course, although this isn't much worse than on the recorded versions of the songs. Indeed, his enunciation is actually better in some instances, and he seems particularly adept at pronouncing his favorite expletive. Anyway, the album's 20 songs feature a nice balance of MacGowan's songs from the Pogues and his solo career, as well some traditional numbers and a fine cover of Hank Williams' "Angel of Death." As you'd probably expect, the songs flow together well without jarring juxtapositions and seem appropriate for a Paddy's Day show. The album concludes with a rendition of "Fairytale of New York" in which Theresa MacGowan trades vocals with Shane; it's an odd pairing considering the song's lyrics, and Theresa's off-key singing can't match the wonderful Kirsty MacColl's performance on the original recording of the song, but it's a fitting conclusion to an album that conveys the good-natured cheer of a drunken gathering of friends. - Todd Kristel, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Shane MacGowan

A transcendent singer/songwriter and twofisted gutter poet whose notorious drunken behavior, rotten teeth and drugfueled excesses often threatened to eclipse his reputation as a performer, Shane MacGowan was born on Christmas Day, 1957 in Kent, England. Within months, his family returned to their native Ireland, where he spent the first several years of his life immerse... Read more