Showing posts with label Richard and Linda Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard and Linda Thompson. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

40 Year Itch : A Broken Promise or a Broken Heart

Photo I shot this Summer of my hometown

Richard and Linda Thompson : Dimming of the Day


    I don't have this album, but having heard the two tunes posted below, I feel like I must be missing out on one of 1975's most beautiful releases. By 1974 Richard and Linda Thompson had adopted the Sufi faith and moved into a commune. Their sheikh had originally forbid them from recording music. On the other hand, they owed Island Records another album. It was like a toss up between Allah and Richard Branson. A compromise was reached and the couple recorded subtle songs of faith. 



   "Dimming of the Day" has often been interpreted as a love song but I don't think it is. The lyrics could just as well be sung to God:

 This old house is falling down around my ears 
I'm drowning in a river of my tears 
When all my will is gone you hold me sway 
I need you at the dimming of the day 
You pulled me like the moon 
Pulls on the tide 
You know just where I keep my better side 
What days have come to keep us far apart 
A broken promise or a broken heart

  What stands out is Linda's beautiful voice and Richard's eloquent guitar. Stunning! "Night Comes In" is simply epic. Perhaps Pour Down Like Silver is the real gem in the Thompson's discography.



Friday, April 17, 2015

40 Year Itch : Wishing

Carlton Fisk waves a ball fair in 1975 World Series

Richard and Linda Thompson : Wishing ( BBC session)

[Purchase]



    It may be unfair that Hokey Pokey isn't considered as strong as the other early Richard and Linda Thompson albums or that the track I've fallen for is a previously unreleased Buddy Holly cover from a John Peel Session.

   I make no apologies. 

  The Thompsons recorded Hokey Pokey during their conversion to Islam. It's a bit schizoid, leaping from the silliness of "Smiffy's Glass Eye" to the sheer torment of "Never Again", about the death of Richard's girlfriend in a 1969 car accident that also killed Fairport Convention drummer Martin Lamble. The album also contains one of the couple's best recordings: "A Heart Needs a Home".







Friday, April 4, 2014

40 Year Itch: Only Sad Stories To Tell




  I once tried to expense a Richard Thompson concert. It was 1991 and Kevin and  I had been sent to Columbia, South Carolina to cover a trial of state representatives charged with selling their votes to undercover Government operatives who were seeking their support for a bill authorizing parimutuel horse and dog racing in South Carolina. Good stuff except that we were up there covering jury selection on the same day James Brown was getting released from prison. 



  Despite repeated phone calls back to the station pleading with the News Director to let us cover James Brown, we were told to "stand down" and stay at the Federal Courthouse. When Brown got out of prison he told a group of reporters and cameramen " I Feel Good!". Kevin and I watched the local news in a fury. That night, after dinner, Kevin and I saw Richard Thompson kick off his show at a local club with the Rumor and Sigh opener " I Feel So Good" as a tribute to the newly freed Godfather of Soul.

    It was a great show and at the end of the week, on the drive back to our station, Kevin and I decided we should expense the concert as "Entertainment". After all, we were thoroughly entertained and if a company is going to send two people to Columbia, South Carolina shouldn't the company make sure they were entertained? The News Director did not buy it.


    All of which is to say Richard Thompson's songs may seem sad, gloomy and bleak on record but his skill as a guitarist and his sense of humor in the stage bantering department more than offsets songs about drunkards and other outcasts. Such songs are the staples of I Want to See The Bright Lights, the first of six Richard and Linda Thompson albums and a perennial favorite among critics.

    Here you'll find the grinding title track which, on the surface, sounds like a "come hither" from a party girl. Then the desperation starts to slink through. My buddy at Charity Chic Music is worth visiting for more about this tune and the album itself.



Rooted in the Celtic folk that made the band Thompson co-founded, Fairport Convention, so pioneering, I Want to See The Bright Lights showcases Linda's amazing, non-plussed voice, Thompson's fiery Stratocaster solos ( was there a better guitarist not rooted in the blues?) and his world weary view that probably does little to convert fans to his Sufi brand of Islam. Witness the lines in the album closer "The End of the Rainbow", a children's lullaby of sorts with a message that sums up the album nicely.

There's nothing at the end of the rainbow/ There's nothing to grow up for anymore.





   Footnote: In 1978 Richard Thompson took another crack at the title cut when producer Joe Boyd presented the song to actress/singer Julie Covington who has just hit #1 in the UK with "Don't Cry For Me, Argentina". With Thompson on guitar, Covington's version is more upbeat and polished. Released as a single, it failed to make an impact.