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RICHARD & LINDA THOMPSON – HOKEY POKEY LP – Nr MINT A1/B1 UK ORIG 1975 FOLK ROCK FAIRPORT

SKU:ILPS9305

1 in stock

£15.99

Richard and Linda Thompson – First Light
(Island Records  1975  ILPS9305)
Matrix No’s: A1/B1 – UK Pressing

Sleeve in Excellent condition
– some wear to edges/corners
Also includes a tour insert listing dates and info
Plain white inner sleeve

Vinyl in Nr MINT condition
(there are some surface marks visible on the vinyl when held up to the light but they don’t affect the sound quality apart from the odd light pop/crackle)

Richard Thompson OBE (born 3 April 1949) is an English singer, songwriter, and guitarist. He made his début as a recording artist as a member of Fairport Convention in September 1967. He continues to write and record new material regularly and frequently performs live at venues throughout the world.

Music critic Neil McCormick described him as “a versatile virtuoso guitarist and a sharp observational singer-songwriter whose work burns with intelligence and dark emotion”. His songwriting has earned him an Ivor Novello Award and, in 2006, a lifetime achievement award from BBC Radio. Thompson was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2011 New Year Honours for services to music. Many varied musicians have recorded Thompson’s compositions.

By the 1970s, Thompson had begun a relationship with the singer Linda Peters, who had sung on Henry the Human Fly. In October 1972 the couple were married, and Thompson, with Linda now effectively his front woman, regrouped for his next album and the next phase of his career.

The first Richard and Linda Thompson album, I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight, was recorded in May 1973 in short time and on a small budget. Largely because of the petrol shortage in Britain and its impact on the availability of vinyl for records, Bright Lights was held back by Island Records for nearly a year before being released in April 1974. The album was well received by the critics, though sales were less than stellar.

Thompson’s lyrics expressed a rather dismal world view, and it has been suggested that the bleak subject matter of his songs helped to keep his recordings off the hit parade. A more likely explanation was given by ex-Island A&R man Richard Williams in the 2003 BBC TV documentary Solitary Life: Thompson was just not interested in fame and its trappings.

The Thompsons recorded two more albums—Hokey Pokey and Pour Down Like Silver, both released in 1975—before Richard Thompson decided to leave the music business. The couple moved to a Sufi community in East Anglia.

It was not apparent from their records at first, but the Thompsons had embraced an esoteric Sufi strand of Islam in early 1974. I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight was recorded before this conversion, but released some time afterwards. The songs for the second Richard and Linda album, Hokey Pokey, were similarly written some time ahead of the album’s recording and eventual release. It was Pour Down Like Silver, with its cover photo of a turbaned Richard Thompson, that tipped the public off to the Thompsons’ growing preoccupation with their faith.

The trilogy of albums released before and after his sojourn in the commune was heavily influenced by Thompson’s beliefs and by Sufi scripture, but in the long run his religious beliefs have not influenced his work in an obvious manner. The outlook expressed in his songs, his musical style, the subjects addressed by his lyrics have not shown any fundamental change. He remains a committed Muslim.

Thompson started to re-engage with the world of professional music in 1977. He played on an album by Sandy Denny, and had undertaken a short tour and started recording with a group of musicians who were also Sufis. Thompson asked Joe Boyd to produce these sessions, and two days were spent on the initial recordings. Boyd recalls that the sessions were not a success: “It was really, I felt, very poor. I didn’t have much confidence in the musicians that he was working with. The atmosphere was very strange and it just didn’t seem to work.”

At about this time the Thompsons and their family moved out of the commune and back to their old home in Hampstead. Boyd had already invited Richard Thompson to play on Julie Covington’s debut album. With spare studio time and the American session musicians hired to work on the Covington album available, the Thompsons went back into the studio to record under their own name for the first time in three years.

The resulting album, First Light, was warmly received by the critics but did not sell particularly well. Neither did its follow up, 1979’s harder-edged and more cynical Sunnyvista. Chrysalis Records did not take up their option to renew the contract, and the Thompsons found themselves without one.

Tracklist

A1 Hokey Pokey (The Ice Cream Song) 3:22
A2 I’ll Regret It All In The Morning 3:35
A3 Smiffy’s Glass Eye 2:52
A4 The Egypt Room 3:54
A5 Never Again 3:08
B1 Georgie On A Spree 3:39
B2 Old Man Inside A Young Man 4:26
B3 The Sun Never Shines On The Poor 3:40
B4 A Heart Needs A Home 3:48
B5 Mole In A Hole 3:21

Credits

  • Accordion – John Kirkpatrick
  • Bass – Pat Donaldson
  • Design [Sleeve Design], Painting – Shirt-Sleeve Studio*
  • Drums, Percussion – Timi Donald
  • Fiddle – Aly Bain
  • Guitar, Mandolin, Dulcimer [Electric], Dulcimer [Hammered], Piano, Vocals – Richard Thompson
  • Guitar, Piano, Organ, Vocals – Simon Nicol
  • Harp – Sidonie Goossens
  • Piano, Organ [Flute Organ] – Ian Whiteman
  • Producer – John Wood, Simon Nicol
  • Vocals – Linda Thompson
  • Written-By – Richard Thompson
Weight 1.00000000 kg

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