S/D: Richard Thompson

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I mean, since he wants to take it in that direction, I'll take it a little further.

dow, Monday, 22 May 2023 16:08 (one year ago) link

(ED NOTE: The Guardian claims that Sting is the subject of that song)

LOL "claimed", it could hardly be more obvious who it's about!

Maggot Bairn (Tom D.), Monday, 22 May 2023 16:57 (one year ago) link

ten months pass...

My ex-brother-in-law, my sister's ex-husband, had this thing where he would shout out for "Louie Louie" at every gig he went to - I used to go to lots of gigs with him. Then they got divorced and he became persona non grata and I haven't seen him in years. However he still knows people I know and, at the weekend, I was told a story by someone who'd met him at a Richard Thompson gig. As usual, he had shouted out for "Louie Louie" but then, because of his notoriously weak bladder, he'd had to go to the bathroom - and while he was in the bathroom Richard Thompson played "Louie Louie", the first time anyone had ever played "Louie Louie" at a gig he was at and he missed it. Thank you, Richard.

The Prime of the Ancient Minister (Tom D.), Saturday, 30 March 2024 01:02 (two months ago) link

Amazing.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Saturday, 30 March 2024 01:24 (two months ago) link

lol, I’d love to hear what RT could do with ‘Louie Louie’.

Dan Worsley, Saturday, 30 March 2024 09:10 (two months ago) link

It looks like Thompson has played it at least one other time way back on Nov. 29, 2006 in Saratoga, CA, around the time the DVD version of 1000 Years of Popular Music was released. (The CD for it has already been out for several years.)

https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/richard-thompson/2006/carriage-house-theatre-saratoga-ca-23f6b82b.html

Amazing selection of covers, it may have been one of his all-request shows where you write a selection on a piece of paper.

birdistheword, Saturday, 30 March 2024 14:55 (two months ago) link

two months pass...

From New West---"Please Note: This ships on or before May 31":

When Richard Thompson began writing songs for his latest album, Ship to Shore, the artist was instinctively drawn to his own musical roots, employing them in the service of fashioning a deep and diverse 12-track collection that pulls from various styles, genres and eras, but remains unmistakably Richard Thompson. There’s the rumbling, Motown-style rhythm that propels “Trust,” and the straightforward riff-rock of “Turnstile Casanova.” The drone-y “The Old Pack Mule,” an “old man’s song” that takes musical cues from 1600s-era European music, and “Life’s a Bloody Show,” an ode to “snake-oil salesmen and hucksters” that floats on a glammy, cabaret-like melody that’s “almost like a parody of a Noël Coward song, or something from Berlin in the 1920s,” Thompson says. “I liked the idea of having a strong base to work from and reaching out from there,” he says. “And I think of my base as being British traditional music, but there’s also Scottish music, there’s Irish music. There’s jazz and country and classical. As far as I’m concerned, once you establish your base you can reach out anywhere. It’ll still be you ringing through, wherever you decide to go musically.”

TRACKLIST:

Side A -

Freeze
The Fear Never Leaves You
Singapore Sadie
Trust
Side B -

The Day That I Give In
The Old Pack Mule
Turnstile Casanova
Lost In The Crowd
Side C -

Maybe
Life’s A Bloody Show
What’s Left To Lose
We Roll


(2-LP, w etching on Side 4: $30, CD: $15)

dow, Thursday, 30 May 2024 02:16 (three days ago) link


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