been repeatedly blasting out Rumor & Sigh tonight, fucking sick album.
― calzino, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 01:34 (five years ago)
just did an hour's worth of RT electric live jams on Dublab: https://www.dublab.com/archive/radio-free-aquarium-drunkard-w-guest-chad-depasquale-10-18-20
Starts about two hours in.
― tylerw, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 02:14 (five years ago)
Seems he's got a memoir coming out, Beeswing.
― Dog Heavy Manners (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 January 2021 19:17 (five years ago)
yeah just saw that was on the Rough Trade upcoming page. But I thinnk it may not be out until April.Sounds good anyway.
― Stevolende, Monday, 4 January 2021 00:05 (five years ago)
Yes, that date sounds about right
― Dog Heavy Manners (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 4 January 2021 03:33 (five years ago)
Yeah---RT's 'Beeswing' Memoir - Available April 6!
Very excited to be announcing the forthcoming publication of my book ‘Beeswing’. This is a memoir of the years 1967-76, an important, turbulent and world-changing decade in music. -RT Pre-order info via this:https://mailchi.mp/richardthompson-music/richard-thompson-frets-and-refrains-2018-on-sale-604114?e=3412af6338
Also on there:We had great fun performing the Live From London shows, that streamed online recently. We felt the audio quality was so good that we wanted to pick the best of those tracks, and release them on Bandcamp. I tried to pick an interesting and less obvious selection - hope you like the ones I chose! -RT Bandcamp sez: from his livestream series in 2020 from Kore Studios in the UK.Out today, Bandcamp Friday, w several sample tracks kicking it off:https://richardthompson.bandcamp.com/album/live-from-london
― dow, Saturday, 6 February 2021 02:22 (five years ago)
By no means a Thompson completist, I've only really been slowly digging my way into his non-Fairport work over the last few years, but I picked up the first French, Frith, Kaiser & Thompson dirt cheap on a whim - this is so great! Didn't realize how much I needed Thompson's guitars with Drumbo on the kit, but I love how silly and irreverent this is.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 12 April 2021 21:20 (five years ago)
yeah, it's a very cool record!
just started RT's memoir — really good so far. Just Fairport's 1969 seems like it could be an entire book on its own.
― tylerw, Monday, 12 April 2021 21:27 (five years ago)
No doubt! Will have to get that. Reminds me that I just came across this passage in a chronicle of South Africa's Blue Notes interacting with European musos:
Now Cape Town meets Canterbury. This 2020 reissue (Dudu Phukwana & The “Spears”) from the indispensable Matsuli Music contains two albums: Dudu’s S.A.-only 1968 solo debut, which gives this package its misspelled name, plus a recently discovered session. Both feature Pukwana, McGregor, Feza, and Maholo, more S.A. expats (bassist Harry Miller, trombonist Jonas Gwangwa) and future members of the great London-based Ghanaian Afro-funk band Osibisa. Yet the newly found Joe Boyd-produced sessions add Fairport Convention guitarists Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol for freewheelin’ cross-cultural wonder. Highly swinging horn- and guitar-heavy Afro-pop and kwela grooves shed more light on Pukwana’s melodic brightness and his ability to bridge continental gaps without sacrificing personality.--From:https://daily.bandcamp.com/lists/blue-notes-south-african-jazz-guide?utm_source=footer
― dow, Tuesday, 13 April 2021 00:15 (five years ago)
Xpost “A Blind Step Away” is easily in my all time top ten RT songs
― covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Tuesday, 13 April 2021 02:03 (five years ago)
That's a great one, also love "Drowned Black Dog Night". The whole thing is really great though, so many unexpected moments - I love how the "Surfin U.S.A." cover starts out pretty straight before going completely off the rails when the backing vocals kick in. The CD reissue adds a couple of other terrific songs, including "DrumBo Ogie", essentially an excuse for Drumbo to have a solo, and ends with cover of Willie Dixon's "The Same Thing" that is surprisingly straight-faced, considering the rest of the album.
― soaring skrrrtpeggios (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 13 April 2021 13:45 (five years ago)
"DrumBo Ogie" is a great song title.
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 13 April 2021 15:05 (five years ago)
There’s a live recording out there of French Frith Kaiser Thompson, maybe the only live show they did? It is great.
― covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 14 April 2021 00:30 (five years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcRlcdbDpTk
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 April 2021 00:48 (five years ago)
The first FFKT album is really one of my all-time favorites (and I discovered it by chance... it was misfiled at Amoeba, decades ago).
― Yawnsomely Literal Cover Band (morrisp), Wednesday, 14 April 2021 00:50 (five years ago)
Watch for Roy Eldridge - "Little Jazz!" - around the two minute mark, which segment was deleted in the South for some reason back in the day.
― It Is Dangerous to Meme Inside (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 April 2021 00:51 (five years ago)
Frets and Refrains, RT's guitar and songwriting camp, is back for its 10th Anniversary, in 2022:...We hope you will be able to join us for what should be a special year. We will be joined by a couple of our most popular teachers from the past, Martin Simpson and Jill Sobule, and we will have our regular instructors, Happy Traum, Sloan Wainwright, Teddy Thompson, Jack Thompson, Zak Hobbs, Bobby Eichorn, Simon Tassano, and Annaliese Tassano. We are also expecting some very special guests to drop by! We are proud of the community that has built up over this decade of camp, and love the fact that you can learn so much from fellow attendees, and that the atmosphere is supportive of every level of skill. The setting is Full Moon resort, in the picturesque Catskill Mountains, the food is excellent, and if you are any level of singer, songwriter or guitarist, we guarantee you will come away enriched and buzzing with ideas! I hope you will join us. Best wishes, Richard Thompsonand the Thompson family, Zak, Teddy and JackMore info and links:https://mailchi.mp/richardthompson-music/richard-thompson-frets-and-refrains-2018-on-sale-604126?e=3412af6338
― dow, Thursday, 28 October 2021 01:18 (four years ago)
Any of yall heard Serpent's Tears? Only one track streaming freely here: https://richardthompson.bandcamp.com/
― dow, Thursday, 28 October 2021 01:21 (four years ago)
For 40th Anniversary of Shoot Out The Lights, two sets of R&T w Simon Nicol etc. in NYC, at the Lone Star: https://doomandgloomfromthetomb.tumblr.com/post/678799150803042304/richard-linda-thompson-lone-star-cafe-nyc
― dow, Thursday, 17 March 2022 00:52 (four years ago)
Richard Thompson@RthompsonMusicThe 45th Anniversary re-issue of RT’s 1976 Collection of Rarities with Fairport Convention, Linda Thompson, and solo will be releasing 3/25. This remastered vinyl will also contain a download card and is available for pre-order from RT’s UK store now at http://richardthompson-music.com/ukstorevinyl
This remastered vinyl will also contain a download card and is available for pre-order from RT’s UK store now at http://richardthompson-music.com/ukstorevinyl
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FOaHLTpXMAEjMFO?format=jpg&name=medium
― dow, Tuesday, 22 March 2022 23:17 (four years ago)
Also, No Quarter is reissuing his soundtrack to Grizzly Man on May 6th:
Excited to announce a reissue of Richard Thompson's masterful soundtrack to Grizzly Man available May 6th on CD, LP and digital formats. Music From Grizzly Man is a remastered/repackaged set containing all of the music Thompson recorded for the Werzer Herzog-directed documentary about life and death in the Alaskan wilderness. Comprised of both solo compositions and material recorded in chamber setting, with Jim O’Rourke (piano, guitar), Danielle DeGruttola (cello), Damon Smith (upright bass) and John Hanes (percussion) joining Thompson to create tenderly detailed melodies and quietly visceral improvisations. The solo recordings are intimate meditations – from the acoustic opener “Tim & The Bears” to the long night of “Treadwell No More,” a harrowing darkness in slicing treble and tremolo shiver.
https://richardthompson.bandcamp.com/album/music-from-grizzly-man
― a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Wednesday, 23 March 2022 14:42 (four years ago)
So Beeswing is out in paperback, and Terry Gross is talking to RT, even got him singing "Adieu, Adieu" (he's in a carpark, birdwatching)--stream, download, even read:https://www.npr.org/2022/04/20/1093709649/fairport-convention-band-cofounder-richard-thompson-looks-back-on-his-life-in-mu Also, "you have a drone and melody and not an awful lot of saying what the chord is. And just drone and melody is a very old tradition. A lot of pipe music, bagpipe music from all around the world - it's basically drone and melody. So it's a very ancient thing. And you don't have to develop that into a chord structure necessarily. You can keep that ambiguity going. So in Fairport, eventually we really tried to do a lot more of that." Short excerpts, but good assortment so far. Going to break with "1952 Vincent Black Lightning."
― dow, Thursday, 21 April 2022 00:31 (four years ago)
Wow, this is intense. And lucid as hell.
― dow, Thursday, 21 April 2022 00:43 (four years ago)
Re "Adieu Adieu": there's a lovely version by Eliza Carthy that I rather like.
She's using the same melody as Thompson but it's an appealingly bonkers arrangement.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kP1-4RZJN-M
― Fifty Centaur (Ye Mad Puffin), Thursday, 21 April 2022 01:49 (four years ago)
I interviewed Richard Thompson! https://aquariumdrunkard.com/2022/05/05/richard-thompson-the-aquarium-drunkard-interview-2/
― tylerw, Thursday, 5 May 2022 15:59 (four years ago)
Excellent interview
― chr1sb3singer, Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:16 (four years ago)
Seconded!
― Wile E. Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:26 (four years ago)
Thirded! That was great!
Anyone have any idea why Daring Adventures doesn't appear to be streaming?
― Les hommes de bonbons (cryptosicko), Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:28 (four years ago)
Great read. Thanks Tyler!
― birdistheword, Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:34 (four years ago)
Beeswing so good, although maybe it goes bad at the end as he described.
― Wile E. Is President (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 5 May 2022 16:35 (four years ago)
Awesome.
― Was Hitler a Hobbit? (Tom D.), Thursday, 5 May 2022 17:40 (four years ago)
Great interview. I recently picked up the expanded version of Dudu Pukwana's first solo album from 1968 or so, which has a whole extra disc of outtakes that includes a session with Thompson playing guitar. I guess he knew that whole crew of South African musicians working in London at the time, they introduced him to township music. You can tell listening to it that he's a bit out of his element, mostly plays kind of ragged rhythm parts. Certainly not his best playing but fun to hear.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Thursday, 5 May 2022 21:47 (four years ago)
yeah that is a great record — though yeah, Richard is pretty subdued on it, might not know it was him if he wasn't in the credits. I think Joe Boyd was involved with the Blue Notes, later got Chris McGregor to play on Bryter Later.
― tylerw, Thursday, 5 May 2022 22:23 (four years ago)
Yeah, thanks for interview T--also came across this last spring:
I just came across this passage in a chronicle of South Africa's Blue Notes interacting with European musos:Now Cape Town meets Canterbury. This 2020 reissue (Dudu Phukwana & The “Spears”) from the indispensable Matsuli Music contains two albums: Dudu’s S.A.-only 1968 solo debut, which gives this package its misspelled name, plus a recently discovered session. Both feature Pukwana, McGregor, Feza, and Maholo, more S.A. expats (bassist Harry Miller, trombonist Jonas Gwangwa) and future members of the great London-based Ghanaian Afro-funk band Osibisa. Yet the newly found Joe Boyd-produced sessions add Fairport Convention guitarists Richard Thompson and Simon Nicol for freewheelin’ cross-cultural wonder. Highly swinging horn- and guitar-heavy Afro-pop and kwela grooves shed more light on Pukwana’s melodic brightness and his ability to bridge continental gaps without sacrificing personality.--From:https://daily.bandcamp.com/lists/blue-notes-south-african-jazz-guide?utm_source=footer― dow, Monday, April 12, 2021
― dow, Monday, April 12, 2021
― dow, Friday, 6 May 2022 01:02 (four years ago)
Yep! That's the one I just picked up on vinyl. Great, great stuff. The best is on the officially released album, but the outtakes are really good too.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Friday, 6 May 2022 01:59 (four years ago)
great interview!
― corrs unplugged, Friday, 6 May 2022 08:05 (four years ago)
From Post-Fahey thread---thanks Evan!
https://richardthompson.bandcamp.com/album/music-from-grizzly-man/Great stuff― Evan, Friday, May 6, 2022
Great stuff
― Evan, Friday, May 6, 2022
― dow, Friday, 6 May 2022 18:19 (four years ago)
Oh, very welcome! It's a beautiful record.
― Evan, Friday, 6 May 2022 18:32 (four years ago)
You can go with the crazy people in the crooked house
― Because the Nighttoad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 1 May 2023 10:14 (three years ago)
Music From Grizzly Man was for what Werner Herzog made of and around the outrider Treadwell's own footage, minus the concluding gore: the music is the trees---on another 2022 release the Acoustic Trio shows how to do it one night in Hawaii, with the right songs in the right sequence, for instance.https://richardthompson.bandcamp.com/album/live-from-honolulu
― dow, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 01:45 (three years ago)
oh yeah
1.Mingus Eyes 06:042.Ghosts In The WInd 07:293.Crawl Back (Under My Stone) 08:354.Dad's Gonna To Kill Me 06:185.Hots For The Smarts 05:586.Bathsheba Smiles 04:217.Al Bowlly's in Heaven 05:528.Johnny's Far Away 05:209.Waltzing's For Dreamers 04:1010.(I Want To See) The Bright Lights Tonight 03:2711.Misunderstood 04:4612.Shoot Out The Lights 06:4813.One Door Opens 04:33
― dow, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 01:47 (three years ago)
Except "Hots For The Smarts" is too stupid, even if he's just testing us.
― dow, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 01:49 (three years ago)
was going to see him again in a couple of weeks, but life has gotten in the way.
― Josh in Chicago, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 02:04 (three years ago)
Life!
― Because the Nighttoad (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 2 May 2023 02:52 (three years ago)
They say it’s the only thing worth living for.
Sunday supplemental reading re RT: first. over on the current What Are You Reading thread, Electric Eden came up, and Chinaski said,
liked *Electric Eden*, though I think I felt like Daniel does about *The Magic Box*: it's a fantastic work of archaeology but the archival instinct is so all-consuming, it ultimately outruns itself. Or, less politely, it goes on a bit. I've just discovered the long-ass review I wrote about it, which, well, goes on a bit: https://www.thelineofbestfit.com/reviews/book-reviews/the-history-of-british-music-rob-youngs-electric-eden-36400― Stars of the Lidl (Chinaski), Thursday, May 18, 2023Excellent--- and I can see from your Young take, more than ever, that I'm going to have to read the damn book at some point(as well as Toop's)---and you end with the questions that your descriptions led me toward--as far as the possibility of a visionary pushing past-through nostalgia and intimations x certainty of a fraught future (we know the environmental factors as well or better than we care to, but not how and when things will shake out, though the timeline keeps bumping forward in latest projections), since this is ILB, I'll mention a writer who sure tries, if with mixed results, having his own struggles with nostalgia, and that is Kim Stanley Robinson.I hope that Young cites Richard Thompson as a folk-rock songwriter who has never dealt much in nostalgia, except his occasionally overt conservative-reactionary tendencies could be a form of that, although never really "It used to be better dammit," more just disgust or sere vibe/sound, then on to something else. Occasional roots-work-outs are mainly for fun now, the scenic route to that (with a little mental cosplay if ye like).― dow, Thursday, May 18, 2023 3:10 PM (three days ago) bookmarkflaglinkThompson does build from the lyrical-lurid arterial trees of many ancient sources, pop artistry before pop (like Harry Smith turns into liner notes' tabloid headlines drawn from the musical contents of his Smithsonian Anthology). RT's "Beeswing" effectively (whatever his conscious intention) comments on the possible consequences of this kind of appetite, incl. on male collector-questlovers, as the waltzing wild child, now seen as increasingly self-destructive, keeps telling the earnest ex-bf narrator, "You wouldn't have me any other way." (perhaps Thompson does relate this to his own interests, having since used the song's title for that his memoir of youth, which he's said involves not-always-the-right-decisions).On the negative, reactionary side, when he was offended by Sting's rain forest advocacy, this son of a London cop songfully sneered at the son of a Newcastle area milkman for being a "little Geordie" who didn't know his place (also by being much more $uccessful than Thompson, while rarely being as much an artist: white trash with money)---I wonder if Young's book deals with classism and related matters?― dow, Thursday, May 18, 2023 4:05 PM (three days ago)
― Stars of the Lidl (Chinaski), Thursday, May 18, 2023
Excellent--- and I can see from your Young take, more than ever, that I'm going to have to read the damn book at some point(as well as Toop's)---and you end with the questions that your descriptions led me toward--as far as the possibility of a visionary pushing past-through nostalgia and intimations x certainty of a fraught future (we know the environmental factors as well or better than we care to, but not how and when things will shake out, though the timeline keeps bumping forward in latest projections), since this is ILB, I'll mention a writer who sure tries, if with mixed results, having his own struggles with nostalgia, and that is Kim Stanley Robinson.
I hope that Young cites Richard Thompson as a folk-rock songwriter who has never dealt much in nostalgia, except his occasionally overt conservative-reactionary tendencies could be a form of that, although never really "It used to be better dammit," more just disgust or sere vibe/sound, then on to something else. Occasional roots-work-outs are mainly for fun now, the scenic route to that (with a little mental cosplay if ye like).
― dow, Thursday, May 18, 2023 3:10 PM (three days ago) bookmarkflaglink
Thompson does build from the lyrical-lurid arterial trees of many ancient sources, pop artistry before pop (like Harry Smith turns into liner notes' tabloid headlines drawn from the musical contents of his Smithsonian Anthology). RT's "Beeswing" effectively (whatever his conscious intention) comments on the possible consequences of this kind of appetite, incl. on male collector-questlovers, as the waltzing wild child, now seen as increasingly self-destructive, keeps telling the earnest ex-bf narrator, "You wouldn't have me any other way." (perhaps Thompson does relate this to his own interests, having since used the song's title for that his memoir of youth, which he's said involves not-always-the-right-decisions).
On the negative, reactionary side, when he was offended by Sting's rain forest advocacy, this son of a London cop songfully sneered at the son of a Newcastle area milkman for being a "little Geordie" who didn't know his place (also by being much more $uccessful than Thompson, while rarely being as much an artist: white trash with money)---I wonder if Young's book deals with classism and related matters?
― dow, Thursday, May 18, 2023 4:05 PM (three days ago)
― dow, Sunday, 21 May 2023 18:27 (three years ago)
I think I skipped right by the question, sorry! My instinct is to say the book largely avoids any grand political statements but I don't want to be unfair to Young so would have to have a re-read.
― Stars of the Lidl (Chinaski), Sunday, 21 May 2023 19:35 (three years ago)
He has got songs about Jimmy Shand and Al Bowlly so there's some nostalgia going on there.
― Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Sunday, 21 May 2023 19:40 (three years ago)
I never even knew who Jimmy Shand was until I saw him do that song at Summerstage in Central Park.
― Cathy Berberian Begins at Home (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 21 May 2023 19:42 (three years ago)
Oh yeah, "Al Bowlly's In Heaven," shoulda thought of that.
I wasn't thinking of xpost grand political statements, but more like how class might have affected or suggest ways of seeing, hearing the presentations of scholars and artists. For inst, Pete Seeger, whatever his choice of sources and arrangements, they were unified by his respectfully refined vocal style, which I heard as genteel, and you could argue that it made folk music more acceptable as a genre or subgenre, providing a gateway for rougher voices, deeper artists, such as Woody Guthrie; genteel-singing Baez may have opened things up a bit for Van Ronk and Dylan.
― dow, Sunday, 21 May 2023 20:30 (three years ago)