Update on the Release of 'Spirit in the Room' in The US

We wanted to write this post as we've had a lot of enquiries about when Tom will be performing in The States and if 'Spirit In The Room' will be released over there. The reason there has been little activity in North America is because our US label, 'Lost Highway' closed its doors and therefore left us without an American distributor. We are however in the process of finding a new label for Tom in The States and will have 'Spirit In The Room' released asap.

With the release will come a tour, so please bear with us as we are making every effort to get Tom performing back in The States.

We value all of our fans worldwide and are especially grateful to you guys in the US for your continued commitment to Tom. It is very important for us to know how our fans are feeling so thank you to everyone who has got in touch.

News on a US release is imminent, so please watch this space!

Contact Music - Spirit in the Room Album Review

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_Tom Jones has been in music for over 50 years but he is just as active as ever even now that he is in his 70s. New album, 'Spirit in the room', follows on from Jones' hugely successful 2010 album, 'Praise and Blame.' It picks up where that album left off with full focus on the Welshman's unmistakeable voice as he makes his way through another selection of tastefully chosen covers. Ethan Johns, known for producing Kings of Leon, is once again in the chair after he produced 'Praise and Blame' which was a collection of Blues and Gospel songs.[...]

Tower Of Song Single Review - QTheMusic.com

Count it as a blessing Tom Jones has cast aside his predilection for legacy tarnishing trash, once happy as he was to shoot out ie. Sex Bomb. Now in Johnny Cash-esque, showbiz-pro-turned-flawed-blues-missionary fashion Jones recasts theLeonard Cohen classic Tower Of Song. It's a serene, albeit not-too-dissimilar reproduction, carried off gracefully by Jones' resounding gravitas and "golden voice."

 

BT London Live & Osborne House Shows CANCELLED This Weekend

Unfortunately, due to a chest infection with Bronchitis, Tom  has regrettably been forced to cancel his upcoming shows this weekend at the free concert at the BT London Live event on Saturday 28th July and at Osborne House, Isle of Wight on Sunday 29th July. We are sorry to all the fans who were looking forward to seeing Tom, but sadly there is nothing we can do.

Refunds for Osborne House will be available from point of purchase.

Please contact office@tomjones.com for any further queries.

 

FINAL WEEK OF COMPETITION!!

The final week of the competition where we are giving away 4 sets of 4 Tickets to see Tom Jones live at ‘BT London Live’ in Hyde Park on Saturday 28th July is here.

The day is a a combination of multiple state-of-the-art screens and concert quality sound systems that will show all of the London Olympic 2012 action. Plus sports participation activities, live music and cultural entertainment. Tom will be headlining the day and these tickets are for entry to the event and entry to the ‘Golden Circle’ to watch Tom’s performance.

For your chance to win a set of tickets we’re asking you to make a youtube video of yourself/friends or family members miming to one of Tom’s latest singles.

This is the final week of the competition and we’re asking you to recreate a video for ‘Tower Of Song’. You can use whatever equipment you wish to use, just upload the video to youtube and send us the link to: tomjonescontests@gmail.com

You have until Friday 27th July to enter your video.

We’ve created a lyric video to help you on your way, simply click the image below.

Hammersmith Apollo - Line of Best Fit Review

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_The doors are early. At 6.30pm, I’m normally finishing up the day’s work and arranging to go for a drink before we head to the venue in a couple of hours’ time. Tonight’s different though, different crowd, different part of town. Tonight there will be no support act. Tonight, Sir Tom Jones plays a headline London show, so I find myself on a (very) early evening tube with a lot of people in their 50s and 60s, heading west to review the show. And tonight, I have an assistant. Accompanying me is my mum Denise, who will be providing tonight’s commentary from the perspective of a 55 year old fan, to somewhat balance out the cynical opinion of myself, a 25 year old music critic. She’s well qualified, her last major concert was the Foo Fighters back in 2001, and since then she’s been to a few local hardcore shows in support of her drummer son. And she watched every episode of The Voice.

Tom Jones and Ronnie Wood interview: Why everyone’s still singing the blues

Tom Jones, Ronnie Wood and other stars tell Neil McCormick about their love of blues ahead of performing at Bluesfest 2012.

In a dingy, crowded rehearsal studio in north London, Sir Tom Jones sits on a high stool, facing his five-piece band as they come to the rumbling end of another song. “Sounds a bit timid to me,” says the grey-haired, grey-bearded, deeply tanned 72-year-old veteran. “Let’s do it again.”

A set list rests on an instrument case, 32 abbreviated titles representing the day’s work. Jones’s pop standards are easy to identify: Pussycat, Unusual, Delilah, Kiss, Green Green Grass. But the set is bulked out with less predictable fare, represented by titles such as Burning Hell, Memphis/Shotgun, St James and Evil. “Kick out the jams, brothers and sisters!” proclaims the bassist cheerfully, as the band shift back into action with a slinky bass and guitar riff, grinding through a tough, tight version of a song by the late US blues preacher Blind Willie Johnson. Jones slides off his stool, stands at the microphone and growls “Won’t somebody tell me what is the soul of a man?” in a low, dark voice that could strike the fear of God into an atheist.

Jones and his band are preparing for their Sunday-headlining slot at the Bluesfest 2012, a series of gigs running at various venues in London and Manchester from this week to July 6, in which stars such as Van Morrison, Hugh Laurie, Erykah Badu and Robert Cray gather to celebrate the enduring appeal of the blues. “This is our musical heritage,” according to Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood, who will be performing on Saturday night in an ensemble featuring ex-Stones Mike Taylor and Bill Wyman. “The blues echoes right through into soul, R’n’B and hip hop,” says Wood. “It’s part of the make-up of modern music. You can’t turn your back on the blues.”

Blues music has been around for over a hundred years. Its basic 12-bar structure and simple chord progressions consolidated out-of-the-field songs of American slavery with elements of gospel and country. Developing in the ghettoised US margins as race music, early, low-quality pre‑war blues recordings feature near-mythical travelling minstrel figures like Robert Johnson, Blind Willie McTell, Lead Belly and Son House, telling tales of hard lives and weaving magic on acoustic guitars.

In its electrified form in the Fifties, blues underpinned rock and roll, the swinging attack of Howling Wolf, Muddy Waters and BB King infusing R’n’B and soul and developing into the heavy rock of the Seventies, with artists from the Stones to Led Zeppelin deeply indebted to the blues. And while it might at first seem wishful thinking to imagine blues still matters in the 21st century, Adele’s massive international hit Rolling in the Deep can essentially be boiled down to a fairly basic blues song, while Jack White, arguably the greatest rock star of the modern era, plays music absolutely drenched in the blues.

“The blues is a lot more open than it might seem,” according to American bluesman Robert Cray, who opened the Bluesfest on Tuesday night. “It’s had to constantly change in order to broaden its base and maintain a relationship to what’s going on now. Electric guitars, horns, beats – we’ve come a long way from Robert Johnson, and even he didn’t always play the blues, he played all kinds of songs. The reason the blues survive is because it’s about people’s lives, love and loss and things that really matter, not because it follows a certain chord progression.”

“To me it’s a language that represents personal truth,” says renowned acoustic bluesman Eric Bibb, an American based in Finland (who played the Bluesfest last night). “It began with people in very difficult situations unable to really honestly express their feelings except through music, so there is something transcendental about the blues, something universally powerful. It’s important to tap into its heart by being well-versed in the older recordings but it’s vital that people write new blues tunes from their own experience and not just hack away at old chestnuts forever and ever, songs that had great personal and collective meaning 60 years ago but might not have much relevance now. To pretend we’re living those lives is absurd. The way the music will survive is by carrying on our own history through it.”

To Ronnie Wood, the context is personal. “It came out of slavery, the cotton fields, but everybody gets p----- off with their day-to-day stuff, anyway. It’s a bit like a chain gang, even if you’re only chained to a desk. For me, it’s a music of spiritual release. It’s a way to battle life getting you down. Even though it’s simple and repetitive, it’s a bit like reggae – there’s always a little intonation, insinuation, little nudges and nuances that make it original to each artist. We interpreted it in a British way and sold it back to the Americans. And they were delighted about it. Most white Americans only discovered the blues with the British invasion.”

Tom Jones links blues and gospel to the music he would hear being sung in the mining community of his childhood in South Wales. “The songs were different but they had the same feeling, it was where those people came from, work songs, field songs, songs about the things that affected their lives, singing because it was the only way they could get it out. My old man was a coalminer, so he’d come home sometimes and he might be a bit grumpy and my mother would say: 'Don’t take any notice of your father, he’s got the blues.’ So I knew the feeling before I knew the music.”

Having rose to fame with a vigorous version of easy listening, Jones might not be the first person you would associate with the blues. But his most recent albums, Praise and Blame (2010) and this year’s Spirit in the Room, have seen him strip back to bare-bones arrangements of rootsy gospel and blues-inflected songs to critical and popular acclaim.

“I don’t know why it took me so long,” he admits. “It has been in me all the time. I remember when I heard Smokestack Lightning by Howling Wolf (released in 1956) I thought: '---- me! What is that?’ The feeling these records put out was tremendous, the structure was simple, they didn’t have too many chords to get in the way, it cut to the quick. The raw emotion, that never gets old. Maybe I just had to get older to really sing it.”

“I was in Helsinki airport yesterday, and over the sound system, piping music into this shiny, modern building, I heard Robert Johnson singing Come Into My Kitchen,” says Eric Bibb, in tones of wonder. “Instead of some kind of plastic pop, I’m hearing a recording from 1936 that is timelessly fantastic and powerful. He would never have been able to imagine that.

“There is something interesting about the fact that people who were basically the offspring of slaves, under the thumb of so much oppression, could come up with a music that is played in all corners of the world. It was a survival tool for the people who originated it, and a century later it is still giving voice to people’s inner feelings. I like that. It’s kind of a cosmic revenge.”

By Neil McCormick 28th June

For details of Bluesfest concerts go to bluesfest.co.uk. Ronnie Wood & Friends are at HMV Hammersmith Apollo on Sat. Tom Jones performs on Sunday at 8pm.

Read the article at www.telegraph.co.uk by clicking here

Leanne Mitchell's Debut Video 'Run To You'

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_As most of you are aware 'Team Tom' was victorious on 'The Voice UK' with one of Tom's artists, Leanne Mitchell walking away as winner. This was a great achievement for both Leanne and Tom and everyone was extremely delighted.Leanne's winning prize was a recording contract with Tom's very own Island Universal, so we can expect great things to come; and with that said it gives us great pleasure to share with you Leanne's debut video of her winning single 'Run To You'.[...]

4* Spirit In The Room Review: Record Collector

4**** - Finding his voice on his 40th long-player It arguably started with Johnny Cash, then producer Rick Rubin applied the same methods to Neil Diamond; take a veteran performer, a "heritage" act, in music biz parlance, and place them in an earthier, more intimate environment. "Unplugged" isn't an entirely accurate description, but a word in the promotional material for Spirit In The Room pretty much hits the nail on the head - "unvarnished".

At various points in his lengthy career, Jones has bordered on self-parody, all booming voice and larger-than-life persona, and the thing that he's really good at - ie, singing - has tended to be a secondary consideration.

Here, working in tandem with producer Ethan Johns, the often overlooked interpretative skills he possesses are given free rein, be it on a subdued but superbly passionate reading of Leonard Cohen's Tower of Song or a yearning take on Richard Thompson's Dimming Of The Day.

The song choices are exemplary, allowing soulful testifying on Paul Simon's Love And Blessings, a country-blues swagger on Odetta's Hit Or Miss, and a surprisingly dramatic but not overly theatrical howl on Tom Waits' Bad As Me. In essence, Jones takes a back seat to the material, his voice serving the specific needs of the song rather than the other way round, and he hasn't sound this good, so on top of his game in years.

Terry Staunton

Spirit In The Room - Music OMH Review 3.5***

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_Song selection, say the judges on UK talent show The Voice, is all important. This appears to have been a lesson it has taken Tom Jones, one of these said judges, some time to learn. For every wonderful interpretation (Kiss), there has been a What’s New Pussycat, successive collaborations with one eye on the marketplace, or some uncomfortable novelty abomination (Sex Bomb). For too long, his self-important bellow had two default settings - very loud and unsubtle, and even louder and even less subtle. So 2010’s Praise And Blame came as a quite glorious surprise - an intimate but gritty album of roots music on which Jones’ true abilities came to the fore, along with a new sense of nuance.

Music Pick: The New Yorker

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_In the twilight of his career, Tom Jones, like Johnny Cash before him, is producing a series of sparse covers records that showcase his still-powerful vocals. The last time out, on “Praise and Blame,” he took a stab at songs by Bob Dylan, Billy Joe Shaver, John Lee Hooker, and Sister Rosetta Tharpe. On his new record, “Spirit in the Room,” also produced by Ethan Johns, Jones has a slightly more contemporary bent, with recent compositions by Paul Simon (“Love and Blessings”), Tom Waits (“Bad As Me”), and the Low Anthem (“Charlie Darwin”), along with older songs by Leonard Cohen (“Tower of Song”) and Blind Willie Johnson (“Soul of a Man”). The vocals are heartfelt and powerful; the arrangements are unobtrusive; the results are impressive.

Tom Jones: Spirit in the Room – Observer Review 3/5*

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_Before TV viewers ask, there is, thankfully, no version of U2's Beautiful Day on Tom Jones's latest record. Like its successful predecessor, 2010's God-fearing Praise & Blame, Spirit in the Room is an album of covers. It does not feature Jones's most recent venture into other artists' material, however, in which the massed ranks (and we use the word "rank" advisedly) of Jones and his fellow judges on BBC1's The Voice performed cruel and unusual punishments upon Beautiful Day the other week. You almost felt for the Irish rock titans as the remains of their Day lay bleeding on to the set. On the other hand, neither does this album feature Jones's blistering cover of Howlin' Wolf's Evil, or his extraordinary take on Jezebel, recorded with Jack White in the manner of a satanic Delilah. [...]

Spirit In The Room - The Independant Review 4/5*

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_Continuing the association with producer Ethan Johns that proved so fruitful on Praise and Blame, Tom Jones's 2010 exploration of American blues and gospel modes, Spirit in the Room takes a decisive step forward by focusing instead on a more modern repertoire. The sound remains substantially the same, but rather than pitting himself against history, as it were, Sir Tom here tests his interpretive grasp of contemporary classics. [...]