Education
He took piano lessons but did not enjoy it, so he chose to learn the guitar instead.
He took piano lessons but did not enjoy it, so he chose to learn the guitar instead.
He plays accordion in the folk/punk band The Pogues. As a child he was a choir treble before his voice changed at the age of sixteen. He played with the singer Nik Wade and later with a group called The Mixers, a band based in Teddington.
Fearnley became the guitarist in the last edition of Shane MacGowan"s band The Nipple Erectors.
The group then consisted of Shane MacGowan on vocals, Shanne Bradley on bass and Jon Moss on drums. When The Nips disbanded at the end of 1980, Fearnley joined the soul band The Giants.
Due to a misunderstanding, Fearnley never joined Culture Club, and shortly after this the band went on to fame. Fearnley sold his guitar and spent a year writing a novel.
In 1982, MacGowan and Jem Finer were seeking an accordion player for their latest project
MacGowan knew that Fearnley had taken piano lessons and believed that he may have been able play the accordion too. Finer turned up at Fearnley"s flat with an accordion in a laundry bag and persuaded him to give it a try. Fearnley was nicknamed "maestro" because he could tune the instruments.
Fearnley left The Pogues in 1994 due to the band"s heavy touring schedule, to spend more time with his family.
He rejoined the band following its reunion in 2001. This group consisted of former Thelonious Monster vocalist Mike Martt, Circle Jerks" Zander Schloss (guitar), the brothers Kieran and Dermot Mulroney (violins, cello, dobro), Tom Barta (bass) and Will Hughes (drums).
Fearnley has appeared as a guest musician on albums with Talking Heads (Naked), David Byrne, Julia Fordham, Steve Earle and Melissa Etheridge (Yes I Am) among other. In 1995 he wrote the score for the film, God"s Lonely Manitoba
Fearnley plays accordion, guitar, foot-operated snare drum and sings with Cranky George, "a band of one-man-bands" with Dermot Mulroney (cello, guitar, mandolin, foot-operated cymbal and hi-hat, and vocals), Kieran Mulroney (violin, ukuleles, guitars, foot-operated cowbell) and Brad Wood (bass, hat-box bass-drum and vocals) and Sebastian Sheehan (percussion).
On 12 January 2012, he released his first single "Hey Ho". lieutenant was recorded with John King of Dust Brothers. The first volume of his memoirs, Here Comes Everybody: The Story of the Pogues was published by Faber and Faber on 19 April 2012 in the United Kingdom.
Fearnley was asked by Moss if he wanted to become a permanent member of a band in which he sometimes played, Culture Club. He was a founding member of The Low And Sweet Orchestra, which released their debut album of spaghetti western-styled ballads Goodbye To All That in 1996.