DrugProwlingWolf wrote:It was everything I loved about punk rock, from the lyrics to the energy, and it was everything I loved about folk and country (as a kid), rolled into one. That sound was so amazing to me that it turned me off of country and straight folk almost forever. This was an album with all the social and political commentary, intensity, energy, and passion that those two genres pretty much never had. It was like country and folk music were totally obsolete to me. ...... Also, the only reason I thought country music was cool was that I liked the sounds of the instruments used in it. Listening to the Pogues was eye-opening for that reason. "Wait, holy shit, people can rock out on these instruments?"
treadhead1944 wrote:It is winter 1991. I am in Saudi Arabia, scared to death. I had joined the Army Reserves to help pay for college, and was not counting on Iraq invading Kuwait. My unit was called up in November 1990, sent to Maryland to train, and on December 7th we leave for Saudi. Once we get acclimatized we start doing our job being Military Policemen. My girlfriend at the time mailed me a care package with several mix tapes, and on one of them was "If I Should Fall...".
I wore that tape out rather quickly (it also had London Calling, and Alice's Restaurant two of my favorite songs). After I returned home, missing several pints of blood and three days after an accident the tape got lost, as did I. I dropped out of college and tried to drink my problems away.
We flash forward to 1993. I am an assistant manager of a Sam Goody. The fellow assistant is an Irish nationalist American, and he and I become friends. A benefit of working in a record store is free concert tickets, and my friend Paul gets 2 to see Shane (touring for the Snake I would imagine, but not too sure). We have a grand time, I think. I can't recall much of the show other than I took on 3 men afterwards and got a broken nose, and my friend Paul got arrested for public urination. The night goes down as a success.
Flash to 2002. I am married and living in God's Waiting Room (Florida land of the newly wed and nearly dead). The wife wants me to download some "Irish" music. So I go online and download The Rovers, The Pogues, The Dubliners, The Cheiftans, and the like for her. Turns out she wanted Clannad and Enya. Meh, I love her anyway.
On this 17 year journey the Pogues have played an important role as the soundtrack to my life, from hearing them in the Persian Gulf, hearing "Fairytale" for the first time working at the record shop (I still have that X-mas compilation), to the drunken chaos at the Shelter in downtown Detroit, to my more sedate existence in Florida. Music is important to me, and my collection of Pogues CD's doubly so.
I did, thanks for asking.philipchevron wrote:treadhead1944 wrote:It is winter 1991. I am in Saudi Arabia, scared to death. I had joined the Army Reserves to help pay for college, and was not counting on Iraq invading Kuwait. My unit was called up in November 1990, sent to Maryland to train, and on December 7th we leave for Saudi. Once we get acclimatized we start doing our job being Military Policemen. My girlfriend at the time mailed me a care package with several mix tapes, and on one of them was "If I Should Fall...".
I wore that tape out rather quickly (it also had London Calling, and Alice's Restaurant two of my favorite songs). After I returned home, missing several pints of blood and three days after an accident the tape got lost, as did I. I dropped out of college and tried to drink my problems away.
We flash forward to 1993. I am an assistant manager of a Sam Goody. The fellow assistant is an Irish nationalist American, and he and I become friends. A benefit of working in a record store is free concert tickets, and my friend Paul gets 2 to see Shane (touring for the Snake I would imagine, but not too sure). We have a grand time, I think. I can't recall much of the show other than I took on 3 men afterwards and got a broken nose, and my friend Paul got arrested for public urination. The night goes down as a success.
Flash to 2002. I am married and living in God's Waiting Room (Florida land of the newly wed and nearly dead). The wife wants me to download some "Irish" music. So I go online and download The Rovers, The Pogues, The Dubliners, The Cheiftans, and the like for her. Turns out she wanted Clannad and Enya. Meh, I love her anyway.
On this 17 year journey the Pogues have played an important role as the soundtrack to my life, from hearing them in the Persian Gulf, hearing "Fairytale" for the first time working at the record shop (I still have that X-mas compilation), to the drunken chaos at the Shelter in downtown Detroit, to my more sedate existence in Florida. Music is important to me, and my collection of Pogues CD's doubly so.
Goody got it. Merry Christmas. Hope you got the blood back.
treadhead1944 wrote:It is winter 1991. I am in Saudi Arabia, scared to death. I had joined the Army Reserves to help pay for college, and was not counting on Iraq invading Kuwait. My unit was called up in November 1990, sent to Maryland to train, and on December 7th we leave for Saudi. Once we get acclimatized we start doing our job being Military Policemen. My girlfriend at the time mailed me a care package with several mix tapes, and on one of them was "If I Should Fall...".
I wore that tape out rather quickly (it also had London Calling, and Alice's Restaurant two of my favorite songs). After I returned home, missing several pints of blood and three days after an accident the tape got lost, as did I. I dropped out of college and tried to drink my problems away.
We flash forward to 1993. I am an assistant manager of a Sam Goody. The fellow assistant is an Irish nationalist American, and he and I become friends. A benefit of working in a record store is free concert tickets, and my friend Paul gets 2 to see Shane (touring for the Snake I would imagine, but not too sure). We have a grand time, I think. I can't recall much of the show other than I took on 3 men afterwards and got a broken nose, and my friend Paul got arrested for public urination. The night goes down as a success.
Flash to 2002. I am married and living in God's Waiting Room (Florida land of the newly wed and nearly dead). The wife wants me to download some "Irish" music. So I go online and download The Rovers, The Pogues, The Dubliners, The Cheiftans, and the like for her. Turns out she wanted Clannad and Enya. Meh, I love her anyway.
On this 17 year journey the Pogues have played an important role as the soundtrack to my life, from hearing them in the Persian Gulf, hearing "Fairytale" for the first time working at the record shop (I still have that X-mas compilation), to the drunken chaos at the Shelter in downtown Detroit, to my more sedate existence in Florida. Music is important to me, and my collection of Pogues CD's doubly so.
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