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  1. Dec 9, 2023 · The song's lyrics paint a vivid portrait of defiance, oppression, retribution, observation, and violence, all grounded in the context of the working-class struggle. It explores the resilience required to navigate life's storms, the fight against oppressive systems, the cathartic release of rebellion, the complexities of privilege and belonging ...

  2. Boys From The County Hell Lyrics. On the first day of March it was raining. It was raining worse than anything that I have ever seen. I drank ten pints of beer and I cursed all the people there. And I wish that all this raining would stop falling down on me.

  3. Boys from the County Hell Lyrics: On the first day of March, it was raining / It was raining worse than anything that I have ever seen / I drank ten pints of beer and I cursed all the people...

  4. Boys From The County Hell by The Pogues song meaning, lyric interpretation, video and chart position.

    • Pair of Brown Eyes
    • The Old Main Drag
    • Body of An American
    • Fairytale of New York
    • Thousands Are Sailing
    • The Sick Bed of Cuchulainn
    • Streams of Whiskey
    • White City
    • Rain Street
    • The Irish Rover

    This is the one they’ll still be singing in 100 years time, along with ‘Danny Boy’ and other Irish laments. A young man who has lost the love of his life, a brown eyed girl, drinks himself into a stupor in a pub. As a jukebox plays Irish ballads, an old drunk in a corner starts up an unwanted conversation with the young man, describing how the only...

    It’s easy to forget that despite their Irishness, The Pogues were principally a London band. Shane Macgowan was born in Ireland but came of age in London. ‘The Old Main Drag’ describes, with journalistic detail, an all too common story of the Irish diaspora. A young rural Irishman arrives in London full of hope, but quickly falls on hard times, bec...

    Included on the Poguetry In MotionEP, this is perhaps the most cinematic of all the Pogues’ songs. You could easily imagine Scorsese directing an epic based on the fictional story of big Jim Dwyer, an Irish immigrant who made his name as a professional boxer in America. He returns to his homeland in a coffin in the back of a Cadillac for a burial w...

    Even if you know nothing else of The Pogues, you will recognise this song, which is now ubiquitous with Christmas. The first version was recorded as a duet between the band’s original bass player, Cait O’Riordan, but the one we all know appeared on If I Should Fall From Grace With God, with Kirsty MacColl (daughter of Ewan and wife of producer Stev...

    A stand out track from If I Should Fall From Grace With God, this is a bittersweet tale penned by guitarist Philip Chevron which covers hundreds of years of Irish migration to the USA. It opens with sparse pipes and banjo before a couple of wild instrumental breaks which recall a traditional Irish jig as the characters in the song dance their sadne...

    Incorporating ancient Irish mythology, modern drinking songs, 20th century political history, and a character straight out of a JP Donleavy novel, ‘The Sick Bed of Chuchulainn’ was the quintessential Pogues song. It opened their second, Elvis Costello-produced album, Rum, Sodomy and the Lashand is perfect from the first line which imagines the prot...

    The setting is a dream in which Macgowan meets Brendan Behan, the Irish writer and rebel who died early from alcoholism. In many ways, Behan was the template for the heavy drinking Macgowan, but also a cliche of the drunken Irishman and the chorus is a great singalong with a pint in your hand: ‘I am going/any way the wind may be blowing/I am going/...

    By the time of their fourth album, Peace and Love, produced by Steve Lillywhite, who was best known for his work with U2, the Pogues had expanded their numbers and broadened their instrumentation, with electric guitar and a more conventional drum kit. The result was a bland rock album and Macgowan’s absence from about half of the songs was a foreta...

    Joe Strummer and The Pogues was a match made in heaven. The former Clash front man produced the band’s fifth album, Hell’s Ditch, and would stand in as temporary lead singer once Macgowan’s alcohol and drug addictions forced him from the band soon after the record was released. Hell’s Ditchwas a vast improvement on its predecessor with several memo...

    The Dubliners were a legendary band who popularised Irish folk music in the 1960s and their sound and approach was in many ways a forebear of The Pogues. The two bands came together for this raucous version of the traditional Irish folk standard recorded in 1987. Although at least a century old by then, the tall tale of a fateful voyage by ship sou...

  5. It was raining worse than anything that I have ever seen. Stay on the other side of the road 'cause you can never tell. We've a thirst like a gang of devils, we're the boys of the County Hell. And it's lend me ten pounds and I'll buy you a drink. And mother, wake me early in the morning.

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  7. The song 'Boys from the County Hell' by The Pogues paints a vivid picture of a group of hard-drinking, rowdy individuals reflecting on their gritty, unsettled...

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