The Snake (Shane MacGowan album)
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The Snake | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1994 | |||
Genre | Rock | |||
Label | ZTT | |||
Producer | Dave Jordan | |||
Shane MacGowan and the Popes chronology | ||||
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The Snake is the first album by Shane MacGowan and the Popes, released in 1994 by ZTT Records.[1][2] It peaked at No. 37 on the UK Albums Chart.[3] The band supported the album with a North American tour.[4]
Production
[edit]The album was produced by Dave Jordan.[5] The guest musicians included Johnny Depp and members of the Dubliners and the Pogues.[6] "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" is a cover of the Gerry Rafferty song.[7] Colm Ó Maonlaí contributed on tin whistles.[5] Like a number of songs recorded by MacGowan's previous band, traditional tunes are sometimes used as a base for a new song (for example, the melody for "The Song with No Name" is based on "The Homes of Donegal"). MacGowan wanted a less polished, more straightforward sound, likening the Popes to a bar band.[8]
Releases
[edit]An expanded edition was released in 1995.[9] It had a revised running order and added three additional tracks: the traditional songs "Nancy Whiskey" and "Roddy McCorley", which had been released as b-sides the previous year, as well as a duet with Sinéad O'Connor—a new recording of the Pogues song "Haunted". The song also appeared on the soundtrack for the romantic comedy film Two If by Sea. A third edition, first released on vinyl in 1995, adds another duet, "You're the One", this time with Clannad's Máire Brennan, from the soundtrack to the film Circle of Friends. A fourth, further-expanded release appeared as a limited edition CD remaster in Japan only in 2009, adding the 1997 b-side "A Man Called Horse" as a bonus track.
Critical reception
[edit]Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [10] |
Calgary Herald | B+[11] |
Chicago Tribune | [5] |
Robert Christgau | A−[12] |
MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide | [13] |
The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music | [6] |
The Guardian said that "the brassy 'A Mexican Funeral in Paris' is passable, despite MacGowan's slurring and rasping reaching the level of parody."[14] The Independent concluded that "MacGowan abandons the more restless global influences which, for better or worse, infected the Pogues' later albums, returning to the rock'n'rebel-song Celtic-rock style of earlier years."[15] The Calgary Herald wrote that "The Snake shows that Shane has lost not an iota of his irascibility, eccentricity and ability to wring every emotion out of a song."[11]
Robert Christgau considered it to be MacGowan's second best work, after the Pogues' Rum Sodomy & the Lash.[12] Mark Lepage, of The Gazette, opined that "most of the time, MacGowan is a lampshade looking for a party... I'd pay money to see him and his band do all of this live, and risk the odds, but the recorded version is slapdash even for him."[16] The Los Angeles Times determined that MacGowan comes on "like the seedy, scrappy spawn of the Clancy Brothers and punk rock."[17]
Track listings
[edit]All songs composed by Shane MacGowan; except where noted
Original Edition
[edit]Released by ZTT in 1994 on CD and cassette in 1994 in Europe, Canada, Australia and Japan, and on vinyl in Europe only. Re-released on vinyl in Europe in 2016 by Music on Vinyl/WEA.
- "The Church of the Holy Spook"
- "That Woman's Got Me Drinking"
- "The Song with No Name"
- "Aisling"
- "I'll Be Your Handbag"
- "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" (Gerry Rafferty)
- "A Mexican Funeral in Paris"
- "The Snake with Eyes of Garnet"
- "Donegal Express"
- "Victoria"
- "The Rising of the Moon" (Traditional, arranged S. MacGowan)
- "Bring Down the Lamp"
First Expanded Release
[edit]Released in 1995 on CD and cassette in the US by Warner Bros. Records/ZTT, in Europe by ZTT, and in Poland by Warner Music Poland
- "The Church of the Holy Spook"
- "Nancy Whiskey" (Traditional)
- "The Song with No Name"
- "Aisling"
- "Roddy McCorley" (Traditional)
- "Victoria"
- "That Woman's Got Me Drinking"
- "A Mexican Funeral in Paris"
- "The Rising of the Moon" (Traditional, arranged S. MacGowan)
- "The Snake with Eyes of Garnet"
- "Haunted"
- "I'll Be Your Handbag"
- "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" (Gerry Rafferty)
- "Bring Down the Lamp"
- "Donegal Express"
Second Expanded Release
[edit]Released by ZTT in 1995 on vinyl in France & Germany only, and on CD in Europe in 1998
- "The Church of the Holy Spook"
- "Nancy Whiskey" (Traditional)
- "The Song with No Name"
- "Aisling"
- "Roddy McCorley" (Traditional)
- "Victoria"
- "That Woman's Got Me Drinking"
- "You're the One" (Shane MacGowan, Michael Kamen)
- "A Mexican Funeral in Paris"
- "The Rising of the Moon" (Traditional; arranged by Shane MacGowan)
- "The Snake with Eyes of Garnet"
- "Haunted"
- "I'll Be Your Handbag"
- "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" (Gerry Rafferty)
- "Bring Down the Lamp"
- "Donegal Express"
Third Expanded Release
[edit]Released by ZTT in 2009 as a limited edition remastered CD in Japan only.
- "The Church of the Holy Spook"
- "Nancy Whiskey" (Traditional)
- "The Song with No Name"
- "Aisling"
- "Roddy McCorley" (Traditional)
- "Victoria"
- "That Woman's Got Me Drinking"
- "You're the One" (Shane MacGowan, Michael Kamen)
- "A Mexican Funeral in Paris"
- "The Rising of the Moon" (Traditional; arranged by Shane MacGowan)
- "The Snake with Eyes of Garnet"
- "Haunted"
- "I'll Be Your Handbag"
- "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" (Gerry Rafferty)
- "Bring Down the Lamp"
- "Donegal Express"
- "A Man Called Horse' [Bonus Track]
Personnel
[edit]- The Popes
- Paul McGuinness - guitar, vocals
- Bernie "The Undertaker" France - bass, vocals
- Danny Pope - drums, percussion
- Tom "The Beast" McManamon, aka "Tom McAnimal" - tenor banjo
- Kieran "Mo" O'Hagan - guitar, vocals
- Colm O'Maonlai - whistles
with:
- Barney McKenna - tenor banjo
- John Sheahan - fiddle, whistle
- Brian Robertson - guitar
- Siobhan Sheahan - Irish harp
- Spider Stacy - whistle
- Jem Finer - 5-string banjo
- Tomas Lynch - uilleann pipes
- Rick Trevan - tenor saxophone
- Dick Cuthell - trumpet
- Sarah Jane Tuff - alto saxophone
- Paul Taylor - trombone
- Johnny Depp - "guitar weird noises" ("That Woman's Got Me Drinking")
- Máire Brennan - vocals on "You're the One"
- Sinéad O'Connor - vocals on "Haunted"
- Ron Kavana - guitar on "Haunted" (uncredited)[18][better source needed]
- Technical
- Produced by Dave Jordan and Shane MacGowan
- Mixed by Steve Brown
- Engineered by Niall Flynn, Steve Musters, Darren Westbrook and Richard Rainy
- Recorded at Sarm East, Windmill Lane, Marcus, Raezor
- Mixed at Raezor
References
[edit]- ^ Cogan, Brian (2006). Encyclopedia of Punk Music and Culture. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 158.
- ^ Pareles, Jon (16 August 1995). "Gravelly Musings of an Irish Survivor". The New York Times. p. C12.
- ^ "Shane MacGowan". Official Charts. Retrieved 20 June 2024.
- ^ Sullivan, Jim (29 June 1995). "Concert Update: Shane MacGowan". Arts & Film. The Boston Globe. p. 72.
- ^ a b c Kot, Greg (10 August 1995). "From the Gut". Tempo. Chicago Tribune. p. 6.
- ^ a b Larkin, Colin (2000). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music. Virgin Books. p. 243.
- ^ Howell, David (10 December 1994). "Ex-Pogue back in boozy, brawling form with new band". Edmonton Journal. p. D6.
- ^ Ali, Lorraine (10 August 1995). "Message in a Bottle". Rolling Stone. No. 714. p. 27.
- ^ The Rough Guide to Rock (3rd ed.). Rough Guides. 2003. p. 624.
- ^ "The Snake Shane MacGowan, Shane MacGowan & the Popes". AllMusic.
- ^ a b Muretich, James (4 December 1994). "Shane MacGowan and the Popes: The Snake". Calgary Herald. p. C2.
- ^ a b "Shane MacGowan and the Popes". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 20 June 2024.
- ^ MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide. Visible Ink Press. 1996. p. 527.
- ^ Sullivan, Caroline (21 October 1994). "Pop". Features. The Guardian.
- ^ Gill, Andy (21 October 1994). "The Snake". Pop Music. The Independent.
- ^ Lepage, Mark (24 December 1994). "Even Keith Richards is worried about MacGowan". The Gazette. p. C3.
- ^ Cromelin, Richard (24 August 1995). "Reelin' and a-Rockin'". Los Angeles Times. p. F1.
- ^ Ron Kavana, interview printed in liner notes of Kavana's 1999 live album "Alien Alert", published by Proper Records