Para fans de Folk y Blues, Country, Rock, y Indie y Alternativa.
genre_page_link
Thompson formed his first band Emil and the Detectives while still attending secondary school, and like so many of his age took to listening-to and playing rock and roll. At the age of 18 now in the band Fairport Convention Thompson was spotted by producer Joe Boyd who invited the band to make a record, soon after Thompson developed a reputation as being a brilliant guitar player. The band released five studio albums including “What We Did on Our Holiday” (1968) and “Unhalfbricking” (1969).
After leaving the group, unsure as to what to do with himself, Thompson undertook a sizeable amount of session work, appearing on the albums of John Martyn, Al Stewart and Nick Drake. The musician also collaborated on the projects Morris On and The Bunch around the same time and made guest appearances on albums by Crowded House, Loudon Wainwright III and Bonnie Raitt.
Thompson’s debut album “Henry the Human Fly” was released in 1972 and was Warner Bros. Records’ worst selling album in history, after which the guitarist focused on work with wife Linda Peters. The duo went on to release a string of albums including “I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight” (1974) and after returning to the music industry after a hiatus with a Muslim community “Shoot Out the Lights” (1982).
In 1984 Thompson signed to major-label Polydor who released the albums “Across a Crowded Room” in 1985 and “Daring Adventure” in 1986, neither album performed significantly well in the charts and the musician was dropped shortly after. Thompson then went on the form a band called French Frith Kaiser Thompson, formed of John French, Fred Frith and Henry Kaiser. The group signed to Capitol Records recorded and released the albums “Live, Love, Larf & Loaf” (1987), “Amnesia” (1988) “Invisible Means” (1990) and the commercial breakthrough album “Rumor and Sigh” (1991).
Due to his success and devoted following Thompson had free reign over his musical exploration, which allowed him to release a number of diverse studio albums in the 1990s and work on the soundtrack for the film “Sweet Talker”. The new millennium brought independent releases from Thompson; recorded in his garage studio were “The Old Kit Bag” (2003) and “Front Parlour Ballads” (2005).
Thompson’s next studio album “Sweet Warrior” arrived in 2007 which was followed by an album of live recordings called “Dream Attic” in 2010. Recorded at Buddy Miller’s home studio in Nashville, U.S. “Electric” was released in 2013 and highlighted the guitarist’s enviable musical talent.
Richard Thompson, is best known for his time in Fairport Convention, but that's just a tiny fragment of his output. Over the years, he's absorbed all manner of musical influences, leading to a very unique style and presence.
He's a superb songwriter; many have covered his work, and also a stunningly good guitarist. When you go to a Richard Thompson gig it might be a solo acoustic affair - I've had friends amazed by how he manages to play basslines, chords and solo lines simultaneously on a single acoustic guitar ('surely there must be a backing track' - he's that good). Or if it's a full band show, you'll hear his blistering electric solos.
Or it might be a more quirky show, like the tour where he performed covers of his favourite songs from the past 1000 years! Or a show of Elizabethan folk songs with period instruments.
But always accessible, engaging and with stunning musicianship. Thompson is a musician's musician.