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Peace and Love (Pogues album)

Peace and Love
Peace Love.jpg
Studio album by The Pogues
Released July 1989
Studio RAK Studios, St. John's Wood, London
Genre Celtic rock
Length 44:54
Label Island
Producer Steve Lillywhite
The Pogues chronology
If I Should Fall from Grace with God
(1988)
Peace and Love
(1989)
Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah
(1990)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
Robert Christgau B

Peace and Love is a 1989 album by The Pogues, their fourth full-length studio production.

The album continued the band's gradual departure from traditional Irish music. It noticeably opens with a heavily jazz-influenced track. Also, several of the songs are inspired by the city in which the Pogues were founded, London ("White City", "Misty Morning, Albert Bridge", "London You're a Lady"), as opposed to Ireland, from which they had usually drawn inspiration. Nevertheless, several notable Irish personages are mentioned, including Ned of the Hill, Christy Brown, whose book Down All The Days appears as a song title, and Napper Tandy, mentioned in the first line of "Boat Train", and was adapted from a line in the Irish rebel song "The Wearing of the Green". Likewise the MacGowan song "Cotton Fields" draws on the Lead Belly song of the same name.

Mark Deming of Allmusic said that Peace and Love "isn't as good as the two Pogues albums that preceded it", but felt that "it does make clear that MacGowan was hardly the only talented songwriter in the band".Robert Christgau, on the other hand, believed that "Shane MacGowan will remain the only Pogue in the down-and-out hall of fame".


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