Feargal Sharkey got his start in the Northern Irish punk band, The Undertones. Best-known for "Teenage Kicks" (a John Peel favorite), the band kicked around during the late 1970s and early 1980s before breaking up in 1983. As an aside, Feargal Sharkey goes on our list of "best rock names ever" with Digney Fignus, Fee Waybill, and Benmont Tench (more on him later).
In 1985, Sharkey released his first solo album, called Feargal Sharkey (ok, so he wasn't the most original chap). He also transitioned from a new wave singer to a pop crooner (and we mean that in the nicest way possible). His first single, "A Good Heart" was a #1 hit in his native UK, and charted in the US (#74).
His second single, "You Little Thief" did not do as well, but it hit #5 in the UK.
Now stay with us, because here is where it gets interesting. Remember Lone Justice (the band just before this posting)? The band that was helped out by Tom Petty? Well, it turns out that Maria McKee (the lead singer of Lone Justice) and Benmont Tench (the guy with the cool name, as promised, who was Tom Petty's keyboard player) ... well, Maria and Benmont were an item for a while. And when they broke up, Maria wrote, "A Good Heart" about it. Perhaps in response to this, Benmont wrote "You Little Thief" about the same breakup. So Feargal Sharkey's first two single were written by ex-lovers about each other. Interesting, no?
Cool trivia fact: the Feargal Sharkey (still love that name) album was produced by Dave Stewart of Eurythmics, who was seemingly everywhere in the early to mid 1980s.