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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, November 12, 2007

Boston band is on a winning streak, too

By Ken Maguire
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Boston Red Sox pitcher Jonathan Papelbon, left, and the Dropkick Murphys celebrate the team's second World Series win in four years.

ELISE AMENDOLA | Associated Press

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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BOSTON — Nora Guthrie was looking for artists to provide the music for some of her father Woody's unpublished lyrics that had been sitting in boxes for 30 years. So she took a tip from her teenage son and called a little-known Irish-American punk band in the city.

Without that call six years ago, Boston's World Series victory parade would have sounded a lot different, because closer Jonathan Papelbon might have been dancing to another tune.

The Dropkick Murphys searched through Guthrie's lyrics and found one scribbled on a piece of yellow legal paper. Those words would become "I'm Shipping Up to Boston," the music behind Papelbon's now infamous jig and one of the most popular tunes off the soundtrack to "The Departed," the Oscar-winning, Boston-based mobster film.

"They liked this little ditty, this four-line ditty, not one of Woody Guthrie's greatest lyrics, but it had the word Boston in it," Nora Guthrie said. "They took it and created this masterpiece."

The band — which started as a group of buddies playing in the basement of a friend's barbershop — were the only entertainers in the Red Sox parade. Crowds that lined the three-mile route from Fenway Park to City Hall roared as they banged out their frantic, Celtic-tinged music from a slow-moving flatbed truck, with Papelbon providing the fancy footwork.

This wasn't the first time the Dropkick Murphys had connected with their beloved Red Sox: In 2004, the band's "Tessie" was the anthem of the team's championship, when the Red Sox broke an 86-year World Series drought.

But it was Martin Scorsese's selection of "Shipping Up" as the centerpiece for his "Departed" soundtrack that really put the band on center stage.

"Out of nowhere, we're getting a chance to turn this into something bigger," said James Lynch, the band's guitarist, who also sings.

"It opened up doors to us that never would have happened," he said.

Papelbon made the tune his dance song of choice as the Red Sox won the American League pennant and their second World Series in four years — another big win for a band with humble roots in working class Quincy, a suburb south of Boston.

"It's a slow, steady incline over the 12 years of the band," said Ken Casey, the bassist, vocalist and founding member. "It's a grassroots kind of thing. It's not a result of radio or MTV or glossy magazines. It's the connection to people."

The idea of the band, Casey explained, was to merge their musical and personal experiences into one sound. That meant bagpipes, tin whistles and accordions mixing it up with punk rock, topped off with lyrics celebrating unions, working-class families and the occasional drink.

"We've taken a similar approach as the Pogues," Casey said of the seminal Irish punk rock band. "People immediately gravitated to the fusions of music."

The band's latest CD, "The Meanest of Times," is proving successful. It sold 28,000 copies in its first week, debuting at No. 20 on the Billboard 200 in late September. It also has earned strong reviews. Spin said the CD "moves beyond connecting the dots between working-class punk and ancient Celtic ditties, with surprisingly thoughtful songs that explore lives shaped by drunken violence and Catholicism."

The single "The State of Massachusetts," about a mother losing her children to state custody, is getting heavy airplay in pockets around the country.

Their previous CD, "The Warrior's Code," which contains "Tessie" and "I'm Shipping Up to Boston," has sold nearly 200,000 copies.

"Shipping Up" has taken on a life of its own thanks to Papelbon's jigs. Before the start of the parade, the band presented Papelbon with a kilt.

Performing at the "rolling rally" gave people a chance to see what the Dropkick are about, Casey said.