Tom Waits, Bruce Springsteen, the Jesus and Mary Chain, and over two dozen other artists are part of a new tribute album celebrating the late Shane MacGowan of the Pogues. 20th Century Paddy: The Songs of Shane MacGowan is out November 13 via Rubyworks. The first sampling of what to expect comes from the Boss, who covered the Pogues’ 1986 classic “A Rainy Night in Soho.” Give it a listen below.
Springsteen also shared a lengthy, personal note about how much MacGowan’s music means to him, as well as their brief time spent together before the Irish punk singer died in 2023. “His soul was filled with the transgressive and ecstatic properties of the saints,” said Springsteen. “I don’t know who’ll be listening to my music in 100 years, but I know they’ll be listening to Shane’s.” Read his full statement:
In addition to a modern cover by the Pogues themselves and Waits’ cover, which is his first new studio recording in eight years, the tribute album also features new renditions of the band’s music by Primal Scream, Steve Earle, Dropkick Murphys, Glen Hansard, Hozier and Jessie Buckley, Johnny Depp and Imelda May, Kate Moss, Lisa O’Neill, the Libertines, the Murder Capital, LYRA, Johnny Mac and the Faithful, Camille O’Sullivan, Liam Ó Maonlaí, Cronin, Damien Dempsey, Lisa Moorish and Another Day, Madra Salach, Amble, Moya Brennan, David Gray, Garron Noone, Mundy, Picture This, Pinch of Snuff, and the High Kings.
20th Century Paddy: The Songs of Shane MacGowan takes its name from an album that MacGowan always wanted to make himself, according to his wife Victoria Mary Clarke. The full tracklist has not been shared yet, but Clarke and Rubyworks both promise that it will be announced soon — along with additional artists, too.
MacGowan died on November 30, 2023 at age 65. As the frontman of the Pogues, he was heralded for his cranky, often tongue-in-cheek delivery of songs about the misadventures of Ireland’s residents. The Pogues’ biggest single in the United States is the sour-then-sweet holiday hit “Fairy Tale of New York.” Nick Cave, Billy Bragg, Jack Antonoff, and countless others mourned MacGowan after he died by writing heartfelt tributes. The Pogues lost other members in recent years as well, including bassist Darryl Hunt and drummer Andrew “The Clobberer” Ranken.
Read the Sunday Review of the Pogues’ 1985 album Rum Sodomy & the Lash.
20th Century Paddy: The Songs of Shane MacGowan:




