Ireland bids farewell to Shane MacGowan singing his Christmas classic
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[December 09, 2023]
By Graham Fahy and Karen Cox
NENAGH, Ireland (Reuters) -Shane MacGowan's friends and family sang and
danced in the aisles to a rousing rendition of The Pogues' Christmas
anthem "Fairytale of New York" at a joyous funeral marking the singer's
colourful life on Friday.
Hundreds of Dubliners had earlier lined the streets singing the same
festive classic before MacGowan's horse-drawn hearse headed for the
small southern town of Nenagh, the home of the singer's late mother,
where friends including actor Johnny Depp and singer Nick Cave led
tributes.
MacGowan, the London-Irish punk who transformed Irish traditional music
with The Pogues and penned some of the 1980s' most haunting ballads
before sinking into alcohol and drug addiction, died last week aged 65.
"I think Shane would have enjoyed that. That's some send-off for my
brother," said MacGowan's sister Siobhan, after she and other family
members turned the front of the church into an impromptu dancefloor as
Irish singers Glen Hansard and Lisa O'Neill played "Fairytale of New
York" from the altar.
Australian musician Cave, who last week described MacGowan as the
greatest songwriter of his generation, gave an emotional rendition of "A
Rainy Night in Soho". Some of MacGowan's Pogues' bandmates sang the
traditional ballad "The Parting Glass".
Irish President Michael D. Higgins was also among the mourners, while
actor Aiden Gillen, former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams and U2 singer
Bono - via a recorded message - read prayers and readings during the
two-and-a-half hour service.
Just as the funeral was a celebration of the lyricist's life, the crowd
young and old that earlier gathered for a procession through central
Dublin joined in as a near 50-piece marching band and lone piper played
Pogues' classics.
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A person holds a service order leaflet of late Irish singer Shane
MacGowan during his funeral, in Tipperary, Ireland, December 8,
2023. REUTERS/Karen Cox
"Shane MacGowan, man, meant
everything to me," said musician Roland Conroy, 50. "Irish punk
rocker, he embodied everything: James Joyce, Oscar Wilde, William
Butler-Yeats. A poet, just (brings) a tear to the eye. It's a sad
day."
MacGowan became almost as well known for his
slurred speech, missing teeth and on-stage meltdowns as drug and
alcohol abuse took their toll from the 1990s. His wife, Victoria
Mary Clarke, told mourners that when she met MacGowan for the first
time, his friends told her he would be dead within six months.
The height of his success came in 1987 with "Fairytale of New York",
which MacGowan sang in a duet with Kirsty MacColl to create an
instant Christmas classic in which the estranged couple exchange
insults.
The song, which has returned to the UK Top 40 singles chart every
year since 2005 but has never made it to number one, climbed to
third position in the charts in recent days with a week to go before
this year's Christmas number one is decided.
"He's a legend. What you see is what you get with Shane. He enjoyed
life," said John Farrell, his hair spiked upright in the punk style,
as MacGowan's coffin, draped in an Irish flag, passed through
Dublin.
(Writing by Padraic Halpin, Editing by Angus MacSwan and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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