If I Should Fall from Grace with God

If I Should Fall from Grace with God
Studio album by The Pogues
Released 18 January 1988
Recorded 1987 at Rak Studios, London
Genre Celtic punk, folk punk, Celtic rock, folk rock
Length 51:43
Label Pogue Mahone/Warner Music Group (UK & Europe)
Island (US & Canada)
Producer Steve Lillywhite
The Pogues chronology
Poguetry in Motion
(1986)
If I Should Fall from Grace with God
(1988)
Peace and Love
(1989)
Alternative cover
Original 1988 US & Canada album cover
Singles from If I Should Fall from Grace with God
  1. "Fairytale of New York"
    Released: 23 November 1987
  2. "If I Should Fall from Grace with God"
    Released: 22 February 1988
  3. "Fiesta"
    Released: 4 July 1988

If I Should Fall from Grace with God is the third album by Irish folk-punk band The Pogues, released on 18 January 1988.[1] Released in the wake of their biggest hit single, "Fairytale of New York", If I Should Fall from Grace with God also became the band's best-selling album, peaking at number 3 in the UK Album Charts and reaching the top ten in several other countries.

If I Should Fall from Grace with God saw the departure of original bassist Cait O'Riordan and the addition of her former bandmate Darryl Hunt, Phil Chevron and ex-Steeleye Span member Terry Woods to the line-up. Woods and Chevron (the only two members of The Pogues actually born in Ireland) contributed the first original songs to a Pogues album not written by singer Shane MacGowan or banjo player Jem Finer, and the album also saw the band begin to move away from their Irish folk/punk roots and start to incorporate musical styles from other parts of the world, most notably Turkey and Spain. Many of the songs' lyrics return to familiar themes in Pogues songs, such as emigration from Ireland or returning to the country and having to adapt to the changes that have taken place after a long absence, but other tracks dwell on Irish political history or protecting children from the issues encountered as adults.

Critically acclaimed, If I Should Fall from Grace with God marked the high point of the band's commercial success. Finer called the record "a very cohesive album that drew on a lot of styles. Everything came together and it was very focused. That [album is] really the creative peak for me, in terms of the whole band being on a wavelength."[2]

Background

The Pogues had received acclaim for their previous album Rum Sodomy & the Lash, released in August 1985, and had begun 1986 on a high note as they embarked upon a successful tour of the USA, their first in that country, and released the Poguetry in Motion EP which became their first top 40 hit in the UK. However, the relationship with their producer Elvis Costello was deteriorating, and tensions were further heightened by his romantic involvement with the band's bass player Cait O'Riordan. The group parted ways with Costello, and after increasingly erratic behaviour which included not turning up to play shows, O'Riordan also left the band in October 1986.[3] During this period The Pogues' record label Stiff Records went into administration: as the label still owned the rights to all Pogues recordings, the group were unable to record any new material until they were released from their contract with Stiff.[4] During 1986, the group occupied themselves by guesting on a cover version of "The Irish Rover" with the Dubliners, and taking part in Alex Cox's comedy action film Straight to Hell, shot in southern Spain and also starring the Clash's frontman Joe Strummer.

The situation with Stiff was resolved in early 1987 and The Pogues were finally free to begin recording a new album. After recording some demos in Abbey Road Studios in March, the group entered London's RAK Studios on 9 May 1987 to begin work properly on their delayed third album.[5] The band had chosen Darryl Hunt, a former bandmate of O'Riordan in Pride of the Cross as her replacement on bass, and multi-instrumentalist Terry Woods was also brought in to add his expertise on a range of instruments. Phil Chevron, who had deputised for Jem Finer on banjo on a previous Pogues tour while Finer had taken a break to be with his wife and new-born child, was recruited full-time to the band as its permanent guitarist after frontman Shane MacGowan had decided he wanted to concentrate solely on singing in live performance.

The group had decided to use Steve Lillywhite to produce their new record. Finer later said, "I think it was as exciting for him as it was for us because he'd never worked with a band live in the studio".[6]

Composition and writing

The title for "Turkish Song of the Damned" actually came first and inspired the song's storyline and the music's Middle Eastern influence, rather than the other way round, as Chevron revealed to the NME: "We were in Germany and this magazine had an article about The Damned – the B-side of one of their singles is called 'The Turkey Song' [the B-side of their 1979 single "I Just Can't Be Happy Today"] but the mag called it 'The Turkish Song of the Damned' – it was too good a title to overlook". MacGowan explained the lyrics as being a mixture of pirate and ghost story "about a guy on a Turkish island who deserted a sinking ship with all the money and all his mates went down – I'm not totally sure about this – he's haunted and he's dancing around with all this Turkish music in his brain... Then his best mate comes back, and all the crew, to drag him back down to hell or wherever they are."[7] The song ends with a rendition of the traditional Irish jig "The Lark in the Morning".

"Bottle of Smoke" is the story of an imaginary horse of that name that goes on to win the Cheltenham Gold Cup, winning the song's narrator a large sum of money after he bets on the horse at long odds:[4] MacGowan called it "the sort of weird impossible name that always wins a race".[6]

"Fairytale of New York" remains The Pogues' best known and best-selling single. It was named after J.P. Donleavy's 1973 novel A Fairy Tale of New York which Finer had been reading in the studio when the song was first written.[8] The song dated back to 1985 when Finer had written the original melody and lyrics, about a sailor looking out over the ocean, but he admitted that his lyrics had been terrible and MacGowan had come up with a better storyline of a couple arguing in New York City at Christmas time.[6] MacGowan had always intended the song to be sung as a duet, originally with O'Riordan providing the female vocal part, but despite attempts to record "Fairytale of New York" in January 1986 during the sessions for Poguetry in Motion, the band were unhappy with the results and abandoned the song.[9] During the sessions for the third album at RAK in May 1987, MacGowan recorded new guide vocals for the song but with O'Riordan's departure it now had no female vocalist. Lillywhite took the tapes home and recorded his singer-songwriter wife Kirsty MacColl singing the female lines: when he brought them back to the studio The Pogues were so impressed that the song was re-recorded with MacColl as the replacement singing partner for MacGowan.[8] "Fairytale of New York" was released as the album's lead single in November 1987 in the run-up to Christmas and reached number one in Ireland and number two in the UK. Its enduring popularity has seen it re-enter the charts several times since 1987, eventually going on to sell over a million copies in the UK[10] and being voted the most popular Christmas-themed song of all time.[11]

Despite never being released as a single, the track "Thousands Are Sailing" has since become one of The Pogues' most popular songs, and according to The Irish Times, it is "recognised as one of the finest songs about Irish emigration".[12] It was written by the band's new guitarist Chevron, and although he had written many songs before as the frontman of his previous band the Radiators, he admitted that for a long time he had felt unsure about putting his song forward for consideration as MacGowan was the recognised songwriter in the band. It was only when Terry Woods offered to help him out with the track and MacGowan showed his approval of the song that Chevron gained the confidence to complete it. Featuring what has been described as a "heartfelt lyric, soaring tune and compelling chorus on the theme of emigration from Ireland to America", "Thousands Are Sailing" inspired the 2012 Derek McCullough graphic novel Gone to Amerikay.[13] Although Chevron also contributed other songs to later Pogues albums, "Thousands Are Sailing" remains his most popular composition, and it was played at his funeral when he died of cancer in October 2013.[12]

"Fiesta" was inspired by a riotous party, which lasted for several days, that the band had during their stay in southern Spain while filming Straight to Hell.[6] Finer based the melody of the song on a fairground-style tune played by fast-food stalls which the band kept hearing everywhere in Spain, and which Finer said he found it impossible to get out of his head. The chorus of "Fiesta" also contains elements of "The Liechtensteiner Polka", written by Edmund Kotscher and Rudi Lindt, and on later Pogues compilation albums they are given co-writing credits. "Fiesta" includes a verse in Spanish which adapts four lines from Federico Lorca's poem and changes the name of the character to "Jaime Fearnley", the Spanish version of the name of the Pogues' accordion player James Fearnley. The verse also namechecks Elvis Costello (described as el rey de America, a reference to his 1986 album King of America) and Cait O'Riordan. The date at the start of the verse changes Lorca's original date of the 25th of June to 25th of August, which happens to be Costello's birthday.

The song "Streets of Sorrow"/"Birmingham Six" is the album's most explicitly political commentary. The first half is a ballad composed and sung by Woods about the life of Irish independence leader Michael Collins.[2] It was originally a much longer standalone song, but the band felt it would work better as a shorter introduction to MacGowan's more uptempo second half of the song, which is about the Birmingham Six and the Guildford Four, two groups of Irish people imprisoned in the UK for terrorism offences. Their sentences were later found to be unsafe, and the Guildford Four had their convictions quashed and were released in 1989, followed by the Birmingham Six in 1991. The song also makes a passing reference to the Loughgall Martyrs, with the line "while over in Ireland eight more men lay dead, kicked down and shot in the back of the head". MacGowan reflected, "It's about anybody in that situation, getting locked away without any real evidence... Basically it's a prison song about someone pacing round his cell or round the yard wondering what the fuck it's all about... It's a depressing song – it's not a song that I enjoyed writing or find much pleasure in singing."[7]

MacGowan described "Lullaby of London" as being about a man who comes home at night drunk and proceeds to start telling his young son, who is in bed, about how everything is going to be fine and to go to sleep, while privately the man is worried and hoping that the child will not have to go through the same hardships that he did while growing up.[6] "Sit Down by the Fire" is about "the old ghost stories people used to tell you in Ireland before you went to bed. They used to tell you some horrific stories to prepare you for the horrors of the world ahead."[6] "The Broad Majestic Shannon" is named after the longest river in Ireland and, according to MacGowan, is a song about an Irishman returning to his home town in County Tipperary after many years of living in London, and finding that everything about the place he grew up in has changed or disappeared. MacGowan revealed that he had written the song with former Clancy Brothers members Liam Clancy and Tommy Makem in mind, in the hope that they would record a version of it.[4][7]

Release

The compact disc version of If I Should Fall from Grace with God contained two extra tracks not included on the vinyl LP or cassette versions: a cover of the traditional song "South Australia" and the instrumental "The Battle March Medley".

The alternative album cover, issued in North America, is a collage of faked photos of the group's members standing in a line, in which each of their faces have been superimposed onto a shot of Irish author James Joyce. The original unedited picture of Joyce appears fourth from the left in the line.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[14]
Melody Makerunfavourable[15]
Mojo (2004 reissue)[16]
NME10/10[17]
Q (1988 release)[18]
Q (2004 reissue)[19]
Robert ChristgauB+[20]
Rolling Stonefavourable[21]
Sounds[22]
Spinfavourable[23]

If I Should Fall from Grace with God was well received by critics. In the UK the NME lauded the record, saying, "If I Should Fall from Grace with God sees The Pogues venturing towards the area occupied by the latter day Madness, troubled words on top of happy tunes, stormclouds casting shadows across forced smiles... With their new LP, The Pogues have given us a thing of beauty, the bleakest of masterpieces which will find few equals in 1988."[17] Sounds stated that "within the grooves of Grace, the third Pogues LP, you get heaven and hell and everything in between. If you've ever viewed The Pogues as a quaint rabble-rousing cult band then think again, for this is a record of rare quality and seductive charm."[22] Q described the album as "old-style Pogues, as dependably garrulous and irreverent as ever, but the album also advances on new fronts with a gleeful sense of adventure".[18] Melody Maker was the only UK music paper to give the album a negative review, being fiercely critical of the idea that traditional Irish music should be mixed with rock music, before admitting "so far removed is this album from my constituency that I feel scarcely qualified to review it at all".[15]

The reaction from US critics was also very positive. Kurt Loder of Rolling Stone stated "obviously the Pogues can do it all. And it sounds as if they've only just begun."[21] Spin stated that "it's got guts and soul, and will make poor people dance until 4 a.m., even if they have to be at work until 7 a.m." and that despite containing a few songs that could be skipped over, "this LP on cassette will cause more wear on the rewind button than on the fast forward".[23] Robert Christgau gave the album a B+ and said that "neither pop nor rock nor disco crossover stays these groghounds from the swift accomplishment of their appointed rounds".[20]

Reviewing the 2004 reissue, Mojo called If I Should Fall from Grace with God "an amazingly original, democratically written and ethnically adventurous album".[16] Allmusic has since awarded the album four and a half out of five stars and its reviewer, Mark Deming, called it "the best album the Pogues would ever make".[14]

In 2006, Q magazine placed the album at #37 in its list of "40 Best Albums of the '80s".[24]

The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.[25]

Track listing

Original release

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "If I Should Fall from Grace with God"  Shane MacGowan 2:20
2. "Turkish Song of the Damned"  MacGowan, Jem Finer 3:27
3. "Bottle of Smoke"  MacGowan, Finer 2:47
4. "Fairytale of New York"  MacGowan, Finer 4:36
5. "Metropolis"  Finer 2:50
6. "Thousands Are Sailing"  Phil Chevron 5:28
7. "South Australia" (CD bonus track, not on vinyl, LP, or cassette editions)Traditional 3:27
8. "Fiesta"  MacGowan, Finer 4:13
9. "Medley: The Recruiting Sergeant/The Rocky Road to Dublin/The Galway Races"  Traditional 4:03
10. "Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six"  Terry Woods/MacGowan 4:39
11. "Lullaby of London"  MacGowan 3:32
12. "The Battle March Medley" (CD bonus track, not on vinyl, LP, or cassette editions)Woods 4:10
13. "Sit Down by the Fire"  MacGowan 2:18
14. "The Broad Majestic Shannon"  MacGowan 2:55
15. "Worms"  Traditional 1:01

2004 reissue

No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "If I Should Fall from Grace with God"  MacGowan 2:20
2. "Turkish Song of the Damned"  MacGowan, Finer 3:27
3. "Bottle of Smoke"  MacGowan, Finer 2:47
4. "Fairytale of New York"  MacGowan, Finer 4:36
5. "Metropolis"  Finer 2:50
6. "Thousands Are Sailing"  Chevron 5:28
7. "Fiesta"  MacGowan, Finer 4:13
8. "Medley: The Recruiting Sergeant/The Rocky Road to Dublin/The Galway Races"  Traditional 4:03
9. "Streets of Sorrow/Birmingham Six"  MacGowan, Woods 4:39
10. "Lullaby of London"  MacGowan 3:32
11. "Sit Down by the Fire"  MacGowan 2:18
12. "The Broad Majestic Shannon"  MacGowan 2:55
13. "Worms"  Traditional 1:01
14. "The Battle March Medley"  Woods 4:10
15. "The Irish Rover" (bonus track, not on original release (with The Dubliners))Joseph Crofts/Traditional 4:08
16. "Mountain Dew" (bonus track, not on original release (with The Dubliners))Traditional 2:15
17. "Shanne Bradley" (bonus track, not on original release)MacGowan 3:42
18. "Sketches of Spain" (bonus track, not on original release)The Pogues 2:14
19. "South Australia"  Traditional 3:27

Personnel

The Pogues:

Additional personnel:

  • Ron Kavana – banjo, spoons, mandolin
  • Kirsty MacColl – vocals on "Fairytale Of New York"
  • Siobhan Sheahan – harp
  • Brian Clarke – alto saxophone
  • Joe Cashman – tenor saxophone
  • Paul Taylor – trombone
  • Chris Lee – trumpet
  • Eli Thompson – trumpet

Charts

Chart (1988) Peak
position
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[26] 52
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[27] 4
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[28] 15
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[29] 9
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[30] 9
UK Albums (OCC)[31] 3

Release history

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United Kingdom 18 January 1988 Pogue Mahone LP NYR 1
cassette TCNYR 1
CD CDNYR 1
United States 1988 Island LP 90872-1
cassette 90872-4
CD 90872-2
Canada LP ISL 1175
cassette ISLC 1175
CD CIDM 1175
Worldwide 1994 Pogue Mahone/Warner Music Group LP 2292-44493-1
cassette 2292-44493-4
CD 2292-44493-2
Worldwide 13 December 2004 Warner Strategic Marketing CD 5046759602
United States 19 September 2006 Rhino CD R2 74069

References

  1. "D'EMI 'God'?". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 3. 9 January 1988.
  2. 1 2 Clerk, Carol (2006). Kiss My Arse: The Story of the Pogues. London, England: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1-84609-008-0.
  3. "News". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 4. 15 November 1986.
  4. 1 2 3 Scanlon, Ann (28 November 1987). "The Rogues of Tralee". Sounds (London, England: Spotlight Publications): 22–24.
  5. Scanlon, Ann (September 2004). "Celtic Soul Rebels". Mojo (London, England: EMAP) (130): 76–82.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Martin, Gavin (2 January 1988). "Once Upon a Time in the West". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 22–23 & 31.
  7. 1 2 3 O'Hagan, Sean (21 March 1987). "Wild Rovers' Return". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 24–25.
  8. 1 2 Gilbert, Pat (August 2008). "20 Greatest Duets". Q (London, England: Bauer Media Group) (265): 106–09.
  9. Fearnley, James (2012). Here Comes Everybody: The Story of the Pogues. London, England: Faber and Faber. p. 220. ISBN 978-0-57125-397-5.
  10. Willcock, David (31 December 2012). "Sales of the Pogues' 'Fairytale Of New York' reach 1 million 25 years after release". The Independent (London, England: Independent Print Ltd). Retrieved 10 July 2014.
  11. "Pogues track wins Christmas poll". BBC News. 16 December 2004.
  12. 1 2 McGreevy, Ronan (12 Oct 2013). "'Grand finale' send-off for Pogues guitarist Philip Chevron". The Irish Times (Dublin, Ireland: The Irish Times Trust). Retrieved 13 March 2015.
  13. "Obituary: Phil Chevron". Daily Telegraph (London, England: Telegraph Media Group). 8 Oct 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2015.
  14. 1 2 Deming, Mark. The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God > Review at AllMusic. Retrieved 3 December 2005.
  15. 1 2 Stubbs, David (16 January 1988). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Melody Maker (London, England: IPC Media): 28.
  16. 1 2 Gilbert, Pat (December 2004). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Mojo (London, England: EMAP) (133): 123.
  17. 1 2 Staunton, Terry (16 January 1988). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". NME (London, England: IPC Media): 24.
  18. 1 2 Sinclair, David (February 1988). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Q (London, England: EMAP) (17): 75.
  19. Aizlewood, John (January 2005). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Q (London, England: EMAP) (222): 141.
  20. 1 2 Christgau, Robert (24 May 1988). "Christgau's Consumer Guide: The Pogues: If I Should Fall from Grace with God". The Village Voice. Retrieved 13 January 2012. Relevant portion also posted at "The Pogues: If I Should Fall from Grace with God > Consumer Guide Album". Robert Christgau. Retrieved 27 February 2011.
  21. 1 2 Loder, Kurt (25 February 1988). "The Pogues If I Should Fall from Grace with God > Album Review". Rolling Stone (520). Archived from the original on 16 November 2007. Retrieved 22 December 2006.
  22. 1 2 Perry, Neil (16 January 1988). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Sounds (London, England: Spotlight Publications): 27.
  23. 1 2 Corcoran, Michael (May 1988). "Review: The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Spin (New York City, USA: Spin Media LLC) 4 (2): 19–20.
  24. Q August 2006, Issue 241
  25. Robert Dimery; Michael Lydon (23 March 2010). 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die: Revised and Updated Edition. Universe. ISBN 978-0-7893-2074-2.
  26. "Dutchcharts.nl – The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  27. "Charts.org.nz – The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Hung Medien. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  28. "Norwegiancharts.com – The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Hung Medien. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  29. "Swedishcharts.com – The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Hung Medien. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  30. "Swisscharts.com – The Pogues – If I Should Fall from Grace with God". Hung Medien. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  31. January 1988 "Official Albums Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 12 July 2014.

External links

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