Wednesday, November 11, 2015

CD Odyssey Disc 798: The Pogues

My last review for Little Feat happened coincidentally when we were doing something social with the friend that introduced them to me. This time, my friends Anthony and Laura were over from Vancouver with their family right at the same time as I rolled a band that Anthony inspired me to delve into years ago. As the Police would say – synchronicity!

Disc 798 is….Hell’s Ditch
Artist: The Pogues

Year of Release: 1990

What’s up with the Cover? It’s the song titles put into ‘old pirate treasure map’ format. Modern maps may be more efficient but they are way less fun. I’d like to be able to set a car’s GPS to “old pirate treasure map’ mode. “Ar…at the sign of sea monster bring ‘er hard about, then proceed 24 cable lengths to your port of call!”

How I Came To Know It: I always liked the Pogues, but it was my friend Anthony who inspired me to dig into their collection. I think I bought this album back in the mid-nineties at the same time as “Peace and Love” (reviewed way back at Disc 121).

How It Stacks Up:  I have five Pogues albums, which is all the ones featuring Shane MacGowan. Of the five, I’ll put “Hell’s Ditch” a solid third.

Ratings: 4 stars

“Hell’s Ditch” is the last Pogues album to feature Shane MacGowan, and not coincidentally the last Pogues album I bought. Say what you will about how drunk MacGowan was getting at the time, he went out on top with “Hell’s Ditch.”

Here MacGowan’s voice still has all the raw and visceral energy that gives the Pogues their punk edge. His slurring style goes a bit overboard on “Hell’s Ditch” and at times interferes with my ability to understand what he’s singing about. This is the one small criticism I have for this album. Without this small fault it could easily rival 1988’s “If I Should Fall From the Grace of God” for second best Pogues album – the songs are that good.

The album initially feels lighter than earlier Pogues efforts musically, and has a trilling quality in the penny whistle and mandolin that made me think of fair seas and following winds. If not overtly nautical, most of the songs have a quality of travel, and you can tell the Pogues have now seen the world and been inspired to expand their sound accordingly.

The album opens with “Sunnyside of the Street” which is an upbeat tune that nevertheless finds time to mention children without shoes and bodies in the street. This is a song about finding the positives in life after escaping the horror of past experience, but there is also a twinge of unhealthy denial wrapped through the lyrics. “Sayonara” quickly follows on the same theme, and as I write this on Remembrance Day I have the impression of an old war vet trying to forget the past by sailing away somewhere warm. You quickly realize that all those fair winds and following seas aren’t so fair after all under the surface. Staying positive can be a test for those that have witnessed the worst of what our species is capable of.

The nautical theme returns on the second half of the album, with “The Wake of the Medusa.” This is simultaneously a thrilling tale of the famous wreck, an admiration of the painting that inspired the song (Theodore Gericault’s “Raft of the Medusa”), and a moving indictment of the rich and powerful cutting the poor and dispossessed adrift in society. I’m fortunate enough to have seen the original painting at the Louvre and it is both beautiful and haunting (check it out here). It takes those fair winds and following seas I felt early in the record and whips them into a tempest.

House of the Gods” immediately follows “Wake of the Medusa” and lightens the mood with a song about relaxing with a beer on Pataya Beach in Thailand. On an album full of vacation songs, it feels like the first one that doesn’t have a dark underbelly.

Here’s a funny and embarrassing moment: for years I thought MacGowan was singing “Singha beer don’t ask no questions/Singha beer don’t tell no lies” but somewhere along the way I convinced myself (or Sheila convinced me) that I had been wrong all those years, and that it was just MacGowan slurring “sea of green don’t ask no questions,” etc.

So last Sunday while out drinking some Singha beer with my aforementioned friend Anthony I related how the song had nothing to do with Singha beer. He was surprised, but not as surprised as me when I got home and checked the CD jacket sleeve to find…it had been “Singha beer” all along!

Oops. It would seem the ‘wally’ MacGowan sings about in the song is me.

The album feels packed with traditional folk songs, but that is only because they are so well written you assume they are old classics. The only traditional folk song comes near the end of the album, with the instrumental “Maidrin Rua.” It is a pretty little song, but the sea shanty “Six To Go” which follows it to end the record is better, and a Pogues original.

“Hell’s Ditch” is only 13 songs and 41 minutes long, and many of the songs are well short of three minutes. Despite this, they never feel rushed. The band has an innate feel of how to advance a musical theme at a good clip without ever jumping ahead too quickly.

The effect left me wanting more. So much so that a few years back I bought the remastered version of this record which had seven extra tracks. The tracks were OK, but the remastering made no noticeable improvement to Joe Strummer’s excellent 1990 production and the album now felt too long with the bonus material. I sold it and went back to the original recording. You just don’t mess with perfection.

Best tracks: The Sunnyside of the Street, Sayonara, the Ghost of a Smile, Hell’s Ditch, Rain Street, The Wake of the Medusa, Six to Go

No comments: