philipchevron wrote:And The Great Hunger, although I did decline to take part in that one, was immensely frustrating. As I watched people like Bono, Nick Cave and Christy Moore talking hagiographic shite, I felt the film was unfair to both Shane and his part in the greater entity that is The Pogues. I felt an impression was starting to form that The Pogues and The Popes were somehow interchangeable. Wrong.
I agree Phillip. I'm not trying to bash anybody or get anybody down, because I enjoy the Pogues and the Popes, but Shane speaks about the Popes sometimeas as if they're more Irish or allow him to mess up without stopping the song etc. etc., as if that makes them a better band for him right now. I have to say, that as much as I enjoy the Popes and their music, they don't have the full, rich sound as the Pogues, nor the energy or the ability to play a fast hard song at full tilt.
Live at Monteuix (sp?) when they play Fall From Grace, I could barely believe they played the intro with a fiddle that was louder than the small accordion they were using. It sounded like a shadow of the former recording and performances I'd seen with the Pogues. To say the two groups are interchangeable, or that the Popes can play the Pogues songs to any sort of measurable degree is false.
Again, I'm not Popes bashing--I like them, but they're not the Pogues.