Shane MacGowan's London Haunt Fiddlers Elbow Hits Market for 1.75 Million cover art

Shane MacGowan's London Haunt Fiddlers Elbow Hits Market for 1.75 Million

Shane MacGowan's London Haunt Fiddlers Elbow Hits Market for 1.75 Million

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Shane MacGowan, the late Pogues frontman who passed away in late 2023, has resurfaced in the spotlight this week with a poignant nod to his wild early days. Time Out London reports that the Fiddlers Elbow, a legendary north London music pub in Kentish Town where MacGowan was a regular performer back in the 1970s, just hit the market for 1.75 million pounds. The 150-capacity Grade II-listed venue, a grassroots haven that also hosted James Bay's music video shoot and gigs by Frank Turner and Imelda May, is up for grabs as its owners retire, with an Instagram plea for a buyer to preserve its punk-spirited legacy. This slice of rock history could reshape MacGowans biographical footprint, cementing the pubs role in his raw, pre-fame hustle amid fears of losing another music relic. No major headlines scream his name anew, but the sale whispers of his enduring haunt in Londons underbelly. Elsewhere, Wexford Arts Centre reviews from early 2026 evoke his shadow, noting a gig shrouded in gloom over his passing anniversary, though no fresh tributes surfaced. Celtic Fanzine quietly peddles a Shane MacGowan pin, a fan trinket nodding to his Celtic FC fandom, but thats more merch murmur than news splash. No public appearances, business moves, or social media buzz from the man himself or his estate popped in the last few days, per reliable scans. Speculation swirls on whether a deep-pocketed buyer might turn Fiddlers into a Pogues shrine, but thats unconfirmed chatter. For now, MacGowans ghost rocks on through venues clinging to his chaos.

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