Celtic punk's origin is in the 1960s and 1970s folk rock musicians who played electric folk in England and Celtic rock in Ireland and Scotland, as well as in more traditional Celtic folk bands such as The Dubliners and The Clancy Brothers. The Dunfermline, Scotland band The Skids were possibly the first UK punk band to add a strong folk music element, as they did on their 1981 album Joy. Around the same time in London,England, Shane MacGowan and Spider Stacy began experimenting with a sound that became The Pogues.[1] Their early sets included a mixture of traditional folk songs and original songs written in a traditional style but performed in a punk style.[3] Other early Celtic punk bands includedNyah Fearties and Australia's Roaring Jack.
North American Celtic punk bands have been influenced by American forms of music, some have contained members with no Celtic ancestry, and commonly sang in English.[4]
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_folk_rock_artists#Celtic_punk