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    Front Parlour Ballads is the twelfth studio album by Richard Thompson, recorded in 2004.
    Released on the Cooking Vinyl label in August 2005, Front Parlour Ballads was literally a homemade album. Thompson's aim was to create an album that sounded small and intimate. It was hailed as his first solo, all acoustic album since 1981– but strictly speaking it's neither of those things – percussionist Debra Dobkin played on two tracks ("Let It Blow" and "My Soul, My Soul") and Thompson himself added electric guitar to the same two tracks.
    Thompson had a small studio built in his garage at home and recorded the tracks onto his laptop computer, adding his own overdubs as he deemed necessary. Dobkin's contributions were recorded in the same way.
    Thompson did not expect to sell many copies of Front Parlour Ballads. The critics, as usual, acclaimed the new release, but rather more surprising were strong early sales in both the U.S. and Britain, and Front Parlour Ballads debuted in the indie charts on both sides of the Atlantic.


    Reception


    Reviewing the album for The Guardian, Robin Denselow said: "Recording at home suits him. Even with the over-dubs, this set has the vitality of a live performance, and he clearly feels relaxed enough to take chances with the sometimes elaborate songs, delivering both the expected guitar skills and some fluid, difficult vocals. As with Dylan, Thompson's singing is something of an acquired taste; here it ranges from the wild and declamatory to slow, brooding and often complex ballads... Thompson has always mixed humour with a bleak sense of impending danger, tragedy and anger (it was only appropriate that his retrospective compilation was titled Watching the Dark) and the songs here are often more bitter than sweet."


    Track listing


    All songs written by Richard Thompson.

    "Let It Blow"
    "For Whose Sake?"
    "Miss Patsy"
    "Old Thames Side"
    "How Does Your Garden Grow?"
    "My Soul, My Soul"
    "Cressida"
    "Row, Boys Row"
    "The Boys Of Mutton Street"
    "Precious One"
    "A Solitary Life"
    "Should I Betray?"
    "When We Were Boys At School"


    Personnel




    = Musicians

    =
    Richard Thompson – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, mandolin, accordion, bass guitar and vocals
    Debra Dobkin – percussion


    = Technical

    =
    Producer – Simon Tassano, Richard Thompson
    Mixing – Simon Tassano
    Mastering – Jim Wilson
    Package design – Tornado Design
    Art direction – Al Quattrocchi, Jeff Smith
    Cover illustration – Lou Beach
    Photography – Ron Slenzak & Associates


    References

Kata Kunci Pencarian:

front parlour ballads
Richard Thompson: Front Parlour Ballads Album Review | Pitchfork

Richard Thompson: Front Parlour Ballads Album Review | Pitchfork

RICHARD THOMPSON Front Parlour Ballads SOUTH AFRICA | Subterania

RICHARD THOMPSON Front Parlour Ballads SOUTH AFRICA | Subterania

Richard Thompson: Front Parlour Ballads Album Review | Pitchfork

Richard Thompson: Front Parlour Ballads Album Review | Pitchfork

Richard Thompson – Front Parlour Ballads - USED CD – Encore Records Ltd

Richard Thompson – Front Parlour Ballads - USED CD – Encore Records Ltd

Richard Thompson - Front Parlour Ballads (2005, CD) | Discogs

Richard Thompson - Front Parlour Ballads (2005, CD) | Discogs

Front Parlour Ballads - Rare Records Au

Front Parlour Ballads - Rare Records Au

Roots Vinyl Guide

Roots Vinyl Guide

An awkward conversation in the front parlour · The Opening Lines

An awkward conversation in the front parlour · The Opening Lines

Front Parlour Ballads: Amazon.co.uk: CDs & Vinyl

Front Parlour Ballads: Amazon.co.uk: CDs & Vinyl

front-parlour-3rd - Home House

front-parlour-3rd - Home House

Front Parlour Ballads - Richard Thompson

Front Parlour Ballads - Richard Thompson

Car tula Interior Trasera de Richard Thompson - Front Parlour Ballads ...

Car tula Interior Trasera de Richard Thompson - Front Parlour Ballads ...