No artist to emerge in the second half of the ’60s—a remarkably bountiful period—has gone on to have a more productive and vital career than Richard Thompson. While still a teenager, he founded and led Fairport Convention, which was to British folk-rock what the Byrds were to the idiom’s American equivalent—meaning more Childe ballads and less sunshine. Thompson’s solo albums, beginning with 1972’s Henry the Human Fly, reveal an artist of unparalleled dimension who has followed his muse as boldly as fellow iconoclast Neil Young. The series of albums Thompson recorded during the 1970s and early ’80s with his then-wife Linda, including the exquisite Pour Down Like Silver and culminating in the devastating Shoot Out the Lights, charted the ups and downs of a relationship with unstinting candor. The last twenty years have seen a steady supply of critically acclaimed solo albums, including successful major label releases like Rumour and Sigh and a number of 'homemade' discs available only through BeesWeb (www.richardthompson-music.com). His vast and ever-growing body of original material is marked by consistent intelligence, taste and emotional purity—which is why so many of his songs have been covered by other quality artists, a stellar list that includes the likes of Elvis Costello, Bonnie Raitt, Del McCoury, Graham Nash, X, Los Lobos and Bob Mould. And Thompson is among the most distinctive of guitar virtuosos, capable of breathtaking drama and sublime delicacy, depending on the song and the amp setting, if indeed an amp happens to be employed. Over the course of his career, Thompson has earned numerous awards and honors, including the Ivor Novello Award for songwriting, the Orville Gibson Award for guitarists, and a spot in the top 20 of Rolling Stone's 2004 list of all-time guitar greats. In February 2006, he was awarded a BBC Lifetime Achievement Folk Award.

2007 finds Thompson in the midst of a whirlwind of activity, with the recent release of multiple performance documents—Live in Providence (band recording on DVD), Austin City Limits (CD and DVD from the television program), the Thompson composed and played soundtrack to Werner Herzog’s film Grizzly Man, RT (a five-disc box set containing classics and unreleased tracks, just released on Free Reed Records), the 1000 Years of Popular Music (CD and DVD), and the upcoming Sweet Warrior (CD).

What keeps him going? “It’s just a drive—you’re driven to do it,” Thompson says. “If you’re not driven, maybe you shouldn’t bother. If you haven’t written a song for a couple of weeks, you get itchy—you start twitching. You have to get it out there, whatever it is. I’ve been twitching for 40 years…which is great. It’s wonderful to still be enthusiastic about what is basically one’s employment, and to have been that way all the way through. I still guiltily look over my shoulder sometimes, thinking, ‘This is too much fun.’”

A detailed biography and discography are available at http://www.richardthompson-music.com/bio.asp

Blog Entries by Richard Thompson

Dad's Gonna Kill Me

Posted February 5, 2007 | 05:28 PM (EST)


I've always been interested in military slang -- it's always colourful, and usually gets to the heart of the matter, and cuts through whatever bullshit the generals and politicians are spouting. There are various websites where GI terminology is posted, as well as GI rap and poetry (of varying quality)....

Read Post