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  1. James Fearnley (born 9 October 1954, in Worsley) is an English musician. He played accordion in the Celtic punk band The Pogues. Life and career. As a child he was a choir treble before his voice changed at the age of sixteen. He took piano lessons but did not enjoy it, so he chose to learn the guitar instead. He played with the singer Nik Wade ...

  2. Jun 14, 2012 · Here Comes Everybody by James Fearnley – review. A memoir of the Pogues and their self-destructive frontman. Alexis Petridis. Thu 14 Jun 2012 03.00 EDT. L ast year, the interiors magazine ...

  3. May 4, 2012 · 8.12K subscribers. Subscribed. 96. 17K views 11 years ago. James Fearnley -- founding member and accordionist in The Pogues -- discusses his love of writing and 'Here Comes Everybody', his...

    • May 4, 2012
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  4. James Fearnley. Born: October 9, 1954 in Worsley, West Manchester, England. Instruments: Accordion, Piano, Guitar, Mandolin, Clarinet, and more. As a child James was a choir treble, but his voice broke at 16. He also took piano lessons, but didn't like it so he learned the guitar instead. He played with the singer Nick Wade and later with a ...

  5. 47 min. A Conversation with James Fearnley For Songs. Music Interviews. Thirty years ago, I popped in If I Should Fall From Grace with God by the London-Irish punk band the Pogues, and my life changed forever. I was 17, socially awkward, and a bit of a loner, but discovering the Pogues opened a whole world for me.

  6. Feb 7, 2018 · As the accordionist for The Pogues, Fearnley and co. toured with Strummer in the 80s as a part of their group. KEXP caught up with Fearnley to discuss this time in his life, the impact of The Clash, and the uniqueness of Manchester in honor of International Clash Day. INTERVIEW BY OWEN MURPHY.

  7. Apr 1, 2012 · James Fearnley. 3.97. 693 ratings106 reviews. Here Comes Everybody: The Story of the Pogues, by James Fearnley, contains all the highs, lows, successes and excesses, in a definitive and honest account of the Pogues and their exuberant frontman Shane MacGowan. 'One of the best books I've read so far this year . . .

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