Tom Jones: 'Praise & Blame' 4* The Arizona Republic Review

An album of deeply felt spiritual music from the face that launched a thousand panties? The man who once titled an album "The Lead and How to Swing It?" That Tom Jones? Well, yeah. And it's actually kind of flawless, setting the tone with a haunted rendition of Bob Dylan's poignant "What Good Am I?," where, backed by thundering floor toms and plenty of atmosphere, he calls himself out on his personal shortcomings. Billy Joe Shaver's soulful, self-incriminating country ballad, "If I Give My Soul" is just as heartfelt. And "Ain't No Grave" sounds more defiant here than when an ailing Johnny Cash recorded it. In fact, what's most surprising is how frequently - and raucously - this album tears it up. The second track "Lord Help" is a swaggering blues-rock treasure. John Lee Hooker's "Burning Hell" rocks even harder, channeling Led Zeppelin's blue explosion with plenty of grit in the vocal department from Jones (whose voice, it should be noted, is a good three octaves lower than those Zeppelin records). And Sister Rosetta Tharpe's rollicking "Strange Things" sounds like it could blow the top off a revival tent. Despite the rocking, "Praise & Blame" is exactly the sort of album artists tend to turn to as the prospects of their own mortality start creeping up on them. And Jones, who recently turned 70, has done a more compelling job than most - thanks in part to Ethan Johns (of Kings of Leon fame), whose less-is-more production here can't help but echo Cash's late-period work with producer Rick Rubin. That Jones holds up to those comparisons says all you need to know about the artistry this often underrated vocal presence brings to the proceedings.

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Praise for Tom Jones' "Praise & Blame" - CNN

I've been with The Morning Express team for a few years now, and I can't think of any stories we've ever done involving singer Tom Jones. So it was unusual to be showing his latest music video on the show yesterday. In fact when I said I was a Tom Jones fan, one of our editors laughed in my face... right in the middle of the newsroom! Maybe because when you think of Tom Jones you think of his hit songs that go best with a wink-and-a-nod, like "What's New Pussycat?", "She's A Lady," "Sexbomb," and his cover of Prince's "Kiss."But his new album is a big step away from those types of brassy songs. "Praise & Blame" is a serious collection of stripped-down songs meant to capture the spirituality and depth of human emotion. There's a good mix of gospel, traditional country, and blues on the album. Also in the mix are a couple of up-tempo rockers, like "Lord Help" and "Don't Knock" that have a White Stripes-kind of sound to give them some edge.

But the album is at its best with the slower, more thoughtful songs. My favorite is his cover of Bob Dylan's "What Good Am I?" His voice is raw, but powerful, giving soul to the self-introspective lyrics.

I also liked "If I Give My Soul" which has an ethereal quality, along with direct confessional lyrics. It sounds like an attempt to do a U2-sounding song, and it works.

As I listened to the album, I kept thinking, for a man who turns 70 this year, his voice is amazingly strong. Hopefully that will mean more great records in the future and that he'll still be on the road doing the fun stuff he's known for.

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The cool new Tom Jones record? - The Oregonain Review

Things I didn't expect about the new Tom Jones record:tomjones160x120 1. There was going to be a new Tom Jones record.

2. It would be released on Lost Highway, label of Hayes Carll and Black Joe Lewis and Ryan Bingham and Ryan Adams and Lucinda Williams and on down that particular line of music.

3. That the new Tom Jones record on Lost Highway would be really cool.

I mean, does that sentence even make sense?

Because Jones is kind of a complicated figure. Some will read that and say, "Of course he does, he's Tom Jones." Then they'll throw their underwear and room keys before going back to the slot machines.

Others will read that sentence, brows furrowed, and say, "You might as well have just said, 'The duck and the cat are sharing a six pack on the Space Shuttle' -- and said it in Quechaua."

Anyone possessing even the smallest of the skepticism genes would have to think: Seriously? In 2010, the 70-year-old guy who did that cheesy "What's New Pussycat?" made a cool new record? No he didn't. Shut up.

But he did. He totally did.

"Praise and Blame" is 11 songs of classic American gospel and blues sung by a Welsh hero still in full possession of a big voice. It's sparse and hot and powerful. You can almost see a Southern heat coming off it as Jones (with much help from producer/guitarist Ethan Johns) runs through tunes by the likes of Bob Dylan and Billy Joe Shaver, John Lee Hooker and Rosetta Tharpe.

He covers "Ain't No Grave," the title track of the final Johnny Cash record (also on Lost Highway), and so lines are drawn between "Praise and Blame" and the work so-adored work Cash did with Rick Rubin.

Well, those were so adored because they were good and they were good because they showcased an icon aging gracefully. At 70, Jones needed to step away from sex symbol status. The guy's kept in shape, but a few years ago when he played the Schnitz, he popped the top couple buttons on his shirt, and women screamed and it was ridiculous.

But when he sang "Green, Green Grass of Home," it was moving. The one thing Jones has always been able to do is sing, if you could just focus on his voice. And his voice works these songs expertly. Seriously.

Ryan White, The Oregonian

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'Praise & Blame' an A.V. Club B+ Review

By Jason Albert July 27, 201051-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_ From a distance, Tom Jones’ new Praise & Blame seems like just another Johnny Cash-style comeback by an aging star. And in a sense, it is. But Jones is a pop artist, and as such, he has every right to latch onto whatever trend he likes. With Praise & Blame, however, he’s done more than shallowly recasting himself as a gospel-and-blues interpreter. He’s reached deep and tapped into the real stuff. Jones’ leap is less radical than it looks. He has been doing credible R&B covers—forget his kitschy rendition of Prince’s “Kiss”—since the ’60s, and his voice has always held a magisterial authority. In fact, the friction between his booming pipes and his often-lightweight material has long been his trademark. But Praise & Blame features no such disconnect. Jones’ thunderous baritone, eroded to perfection, is wedded to spectral folk hymns and skeletal gospel stompers—most of which are harrowingly fixated on death, hellfire, and Jesus. The disc’s production and arrangements are impeccably sympathetic. Haunting and rawboned, the backing music sweeps Jones closer to Nick Cave than to Johnny Cash, though like Cash’s American Recordings series, Praise & Blame is a stark, soul-probing study in imminent mortality. But amid its grim-yet-joyous ecstasy, Jones gives no hint that his reinvention is anything less than a legitimate bid for salvation—artistic, personal, and even eternal.

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Tom Jones' 'Praise & Blame' - LA Times 4/4* Review

Tom Jones turned 70 in June and one listen to "Praise & Blame" leaves no doubt that he's finally decided it's time to stop kidding around. Musically, he's checked out of Vegas and set up shop in Memphis, or maybe Muscle Shoals, for a revivifying excursion through American gospel and blues. Comparisons will be drawn to Johnny Cash's teaming with Rick Rubin on his series of "American" albums, and Jones and his producer, Ethan Johns, need make no apologies for charting a parallel path that brings out the best in this veteran singer's artistry.

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London Evening Standard: CD of the Week 4* Review

I must confess at the outset that Tom Jones has always been a figure of fun in my life. This dates back to the Sixties when my mother and I watched the then unknown Tom gyrate his way through It's Not Unusual on Top of the Pops. My mother starting laughing first and then I joined in, quite unable to resist. It was as if someone had liberally sprinkled itching powder inside his tight strides. PJ Proby may have split his trousers but Tom Jones always looked as if his might disintegrate or spontaneously combust.Perhaps that was how the knicker-throwing started. I'm not laughing any more because Tom has made an album that befits his age (70) and suits his voice. Praise & Blame is a collection of cover versions, featuring lesser-known songs from way back when (plus Bob Dylan's more recent What Good Am I) and taking in spirituals, the blues and good old rock 'n' roll. Producer Ethan Johns brings a stripped-down sound to the party and Tom sings the songs with warmth and not a trace of bombast, notably on ballads such as Did Trouble Me and If I Give My Soul. That the itching powder has not entirely been expunged from his slacks is proved by the guitar-propelled Lord Help and the splendid reworking of John Lee Hooker's Burning Hell.Apparently, someone at Jones's record label has made rude noises about this album. He needs a hearing aid. Pete Clark

Prasie & Blame: NPR Audio Review

"What Good Am I," the opening song on Tom Jones' new album Praise and Blame, is a cover of Bob Dylan's "What Good Am I?" The song showcases a strong and subtle vocal instrument, making it pretty clear that the 70-year-old Jones is still good for crooning with a pleasingly rough edge. In this country, Jones has always been a figure of some ambivalence. He became a star here for pop hits such as "It's Not Unusual" and "What's New Pussycat," but when we first got a load of him on TV, he was a Welshman's variation on Elvis Presley — all swiveling hips, tight pants and growled menace. And in America, being an Elvis variation always means taking a sucker's bet — you can't win.

Sure enough, Jones settled into middle age as a Middle American star, mostly on TV variety shows and in Las Vegas. He made occasional stabs at retro-relevance, such as his surprisingly witty cover of the Prince song "Kiss" some years ago. Praise and Blame takes a familiar strategy for aging pop stars — hook up with a hip producer, in this case Ethan Johns, who's produced albums for everyone from Kings of Leon to Rufus Wainwright — and try to go the sincerity route.

"Burning Hell," the first single released from Praise and Blame is a cover of the John Lee Hooker song of the same name. It's possible that the idea behind singing this song may spring from a dubious motive — roughly stated, the authenticity of Hooker's blues gives Jones a splash of authenticity-by-association. But it still sounds really good. Even as a knock-off of the 1950s American singers who originally inspired him, Jones has always had his moments.

On the other side of the pond, Praise and Blame got a publicity boost when an email from Jones' British record-label vice president was leaked expressing surprise at Jones' song choices. Actually, the quote was, "I have just listened to the album in its entirety and want to know if this is some sick joke," followed by four question marks.

Offended, Jones received an apology. The thing is, you know what this guy, David Sharpe, means — his company lured Jones away from his longtime label, expecting to get hits out of him. This is something Jones did as recently as last year, when his version of The Bee Gees' "Islands in the Stream" went to No. 1 in England. But the first record he turns in under his new contract is a bunch of blues and gospel covers? How disoriented this man Sharpe felt. How wily Tom Jones is.

This odd, fun, faux-hipster-roots move on the part of Tom Jones is unlikely to be a big success here — it's too far over the horizon of the American pop landscape. But that's almost irrelevant to the musician Tom Jones is at the moment. He's managed to make himself something highly unusual for a man at this stage of his career: unclassifiable. Unpredictable. He's the Lady Gaga of Elvis impersonators, at once of the moment and eternal, disposable and persistently present. And, to address that record executive's four question marks, Tom Jones is no joke.

Tom Jones: Praise And Blame 4* American Songwriter Review

By Rick Moore on July 13th, 2010Tom Jones Praise And Blame Lost Highway Rating: ****51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_

It may seem a little weird to compare Tom Jones to Johnny Cash. But about ten seconds into Jones’s new Praise and Blame CD, that comparison just happens. On this excellent collection of songs examining the human condition, Jones confronts the issues of heaven and hell in a way that Cash did for much of his life, especially toward the end of it. That’s the first basis for comparison. The second basis is that, on this album, Jones and producer Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon, Ray LaMontagne) have discovered what producer Rick Rubin figured out with Cash’s American recordings, which is that less really is more. While Praise and Blame is more produced than the drumless Cash series, Johns (himself the guitar player) and Jones have stripped it down to a small group setting instead of the often hyperbolic productions that were Jones’s hallmark for years. Songs like Bob Dylan’s “What Good Am I,” Billy Joe Shaver’s “If I Give My Soul” and John Lee Hooker’s “Burning Hell” are just three of the excellent song choices on this CD that examine the life and post-life choices that we all deal with, especially as we get closer to Jones’s age (he’s 70 now, and looks as good as ever). And the final Cash comparison comes with Jones’s powerful version of “Run On,” the traditional folk spiritual that Cash cut under the title “God’s Gonna Cut You Down” on the posthumous American V recording. While Jones’s version is influenced by Chicago blues and Cash’s was acoustic guitar with an anvil sample, both performances are delivered from the gut and don’t disappear from the jukebox of the brain very soon. A lot of guys his age might seem desperate, making an album with a producer whose work is usually aimed at the college crowd. But Jones manages to sound just as current as Johns’s other clients, and could teach most of them a thing or two vocally. Jones hasn’t been this vital since he screamed “why, why, why” at Delilah over three decades ago. And with guest artists like ’60s organmeister Booker T. and Americana legends Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings, Jones and Johns have made a real statement in the same way that Rubin, and of course T Bone Burnett, do almost every time they produce an album. That statement is that the same people who set the bar decades ago for so many of today’s acts to measure up to are still making a lot of today’s best music. Praise and Blame raises that bar just a little higher.

http://www.americansongwriter.com/2010/07/tom-jones-praise-and-blame/

Tom Jones Goes Gospel for New Album - Billboard

image006A French expression best describes the latest news from a Welsh phenomenon-Tom Jones has gone au naturel, and not just by finally letting his grey hair show. Just weeks after his 70th birthday, the legendary singer adds another page to his résumé with the release of his gospel-flavored album "Praise & Blame." Released July 27 in North America on Lost Highway, and a day earlier internationally on Island, the record launches Jones' new worldwide deal with Universal and is, by his own description, the most back-to-basics recording he's ever made.

"Praise & Blame" was produced by Ethan Johns, who secured guest appearances from Booker T. Jones and Gillian Welch for the sessions, recorded at Real World, near Bath in England's west country.

"I've never worked that live before," Jones says approvingly. "There was no separation between the musicians. They just brought in these tape machines and we did it all in the one [room]. It was like rehearsing something and then taping it, and there's some on there that are only one take."

The end result is a big departure from Jones' more familiar pop-soul sound, last heard on 2008's "24 Hours" (Parlophone/EMI), which reached No. 105 on the Billboard 200 and sold 54,000 U.S. copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan. A regular on the Billboard Hot 100 since the '60s, Jones' U.S. album sales during the SoundScan era total 2.5 million. "24 Hours" peaked at No. 32 in the United Kingdom, where Jones last hit the top 10 with "Tom Jones & Jools Holland" (Warner), a collaboration with the English musician and host of BBC TV's long-running live music series "Later."

The new album sees Jones interpreting the likes of John Lee Hooker, the Staple Singers and Mahalia Jackson in a rootsy style that's clearly close to his heart as well as his R&B musical roots.

"We wanted it to be of a gospel nature, but an earthy gospel," he says. "So we listened to a lot of gospel records, the Staples Singers and Elvis, of course, but I wanted to take it somewhere else. The idea was to do a live, honest type of thing, but songs that meant something. There's some on there I feel that will stop you in your tracks."

Jones introduced the album with a version of Bob Dylan's "What Good Am I?" on "Later" in May during which, he says, "you could hear a pin drop-which is always a good indication."

That song was then serviced to U.K. radio alongside the Hooker cover "Burning Hell," with the latter being playlisted by the country's most listened-to station, AC-formatted BBC Radio 2. A second U.K. double-sided release, featuring the Susan Werner-penned "Did Trouble Me" and "Don't Knock," previously recorded by country star Don Gibson, is due July 27.

Jones performed a well-received London showcase June 3, attended by international executives and media.

"Everyone was blown away by the amazing performance," Universal Music U.K. international director of marketing Chris Dwyer says, "which explained more about the record than any words could."

Now both Island and Lost Highway are pinpointing the right promotional vehicles-but they're likely to be different from Jones' usual mainstream slots, with the singer already making a June 1 appearance on alternative network BBC 6 Music.

"We're being careful to choose media appearances that will preserve the integrity of the record," Dwyer says, although she says major TV appearances will follow in the fall.

"We've kept stuff open on purpose," Jones says. "I've got to do two weeks in [Las] Vegas in August, because I've got a contract there, but now we've got to work to [choose shows that will] present the album properly."

Kim Buie, Nashville-based VP of A&R for Lost Highway, says the U.S. label is also in the process of sifting through media opportunities. "Burning Hell" was serviced to triple A and noncommercial stations as well as alternative specialty shows the week of June 14, before an impact date during the first week of July. But while the new record seems likely to have more media credibility than Jones' '60s pop output, Buie is convinced the album will still have mainstream appeal.

"When you hear 'Tom Jones gospel,' that's going to give a different impression to 'Rev. Franklin gospel,' " Buie says. "It has impact when people hear it because there are genuine roots there."

"I've got the ability, I know that," Jones says of his new direction. "And I love trying things."

www.billboard.com

Review: Tom Jones- Praise and Blame - No Depression

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_ Posted by Adam Sheets on July 7, 2010 at 4:30pm

In 1969, when Elvis Presley made his return to live performing at Las Vegas's International Hotel (later to be renamed the Las Vegas Hilton) his goal was to create a musical experience that contained all of the great forms of American music: folk, pop, rock, country, blues, R&B, gospel. His Vegas period is often thought of as the worst point in his career and is lampooned by critics, music fans, and impersonators alike. Elvis himself even became fed up with performing there after a while. Yet, at least during the first few years, he succeeded in his goal musically.

The entire career of Welsh singer Tom Jones invites comparisons to Presley's Vegas period. In fact, the two men were good friends who often attended one another's shows (during one particularly interesting show, Jones introduced Elvis to the audience and asked him to perform a song. He declined, deciding to entertain the audience with a 20-minute karate demonstration instead. It was 1974 and he acted weird on stage quite often that year) and Elvis was even inspired to record "Green, Green Grass of Home" after hearing Jones' take on the song. The similarities don't end there though: both share a unique and powerful voice and an excellent taste in material to record. However, Jones did not have the groundbreaking string of classic music that Elvis did from 1954-1958, so critics let him get away with far less. Thus, as Jones' reputation as an extraordinary entertainer grew with every pair of panties thrown onto a Las Vegas stage, his estimation in the minds of music fans and critics lessened.

"Lost Highway to release Tom Jones", I read here a few months back. I was aware of only a few of Jones' pop hits, his phenomenal vocal chords, and his reputation for being an entertainer above anything else. I was unaware that he had recorded a string of country albums back in the '70s and '80s, so my first thought was that the label was attempting to cash in on the stripped-down successes of other aging artists in recent years: Johnny Cash, Robert Plant, Neil Diamond, etc. Then I heard the first single.

I'll tell you about that in a few minutes, but first I will share with you another similar experience. A couple of years ago I watched a film entitled Reign Over Me. The star of the film was Adam Sandler and I had always enjoyed him as an entertainer and a comedian. I wasn't expecting a masterpiece, just a few laughs at the end of a long day. But as I watched Sandler's character sitting in the lobby of a psychiatrist's office weeping as he told of his family who had been killed in the September 11th attacks, I began to respect him as an actor. By the time the credits rolled, I was amazed at what I felt, and still feel, to be an Oscar-worthy performance. Fast forward to a few weeks ago. I sat listening to Tom Jones' take on the blues standard "Burning Hell," half expecting to be amused by the entire thing. Instead my image of Tom Jones changed from a set of vocal chords ready to please a crowd of old ladies to a serious recording artist. (I ask that long-time fans of Jones not be too hard on me. After all, I'm sure that there were some people unaware of the musical genius that is Neil Diamond prior to 12 Songs.)

"What good am I if I'm like all the rest?" the 70-year-old singer nearly whispers to open the album. Is the question rhetorical? Is he talking to himself? The performance, a cover of a somewhat obscure Dylan tune where Jones is backed up by only a sparse rhythm section, is almost prayer-like in its gentle quietness and with its heartfelt vocals. Yet no answer is given to this or Jones' other questions throughout the song, leaving the listener to ponder the answers and making it a quite haunting piece of music.

Things speed up a lot on "Lord Help", a blues-rock spiritual where Jones shouts a request to the Lord to help the poor and needy, the sinners, the fatherless children, and the war-torn people of this land. The band is especially brilliant here with blistering electric guitar and organ. This track is almost Hendrix-like in a way.

"Did Trouble Me" is the third track and it sounds as if it was recorded inside of a church confessional. "When I let things stand that should not be," he pleadingly sings, "My Lord did trouble me/When I held my head too high, too proud, my Lord did trouble me/When I raised my voice a little too loud, my Lord did trouble me." The main attraction here is not the excellent voice, but rather the emotion and heart behind it. It is peculiar to say this of a track by a white Welsh singer known for playing Las Vegas, especially of a track that prominently features the banjo, but this is soul music at its best.

"Strange Things" is another traditional spiritual, this time given a rockabilly arrangement. The band really is smoking here and Jones manages to sound half his age.

"Burning Hell" is the first track I heard from the album and it is still one of the best. This version of the John Lee Hooker classic could almost be described as hard rock or Zepplinesque. Jones defiantly bellows "Maybe there ain't no Heaven, no burning Hell" as if taunting Satan himself before quietly speaking the line "When I die where will I go?" in a way that would make ZZ Top green with envy.

"If I Give My Soul" is perhaps my favorite track here. Written by Billy Joe Shaver, with this truly heartbreaking rendition Jones gives the definitive reading of it and, although I am admittedly in no position to make a statement like this, possibly the best recording of his career. He sings the tune as if he is telling his own life story. Maybe he is. When he speaks of "playing music, traveling with the Devil's band", the voice in my head immediately screamed "Sin City" and when he talks about making his peace with Jesus as a way to gain back the love of his wife and child, I felt sorry for him. The emotion here is all real and it is really the only time on the album where Jones sounds anywhere near 70.

"Don't Knock" is a spiritual done in the style of Jerry Lee Lewis or Little Richard. Jones' passionate singing is equaled by the musicianship of the band and the call-and-response vocals with the gospel choir are excellent although it is a relatively minor track here.

"Nobody's Fault but Mine" is a deep south blues tune, delivered here with an atmosphere somewhat similar to the work of Tom Waits. The deeply spiritual tune finds Jones admitting that "If I died and my soul be lost, it's nobody's fault but mine" before a Creedence-like guitar solo takes over.

"Didn't It Rain" is a traditional upbeat gospel number and this version perhaps is the best display of Jones' vocals as well as the instrumental prowess of the piano player.

"Ain't No Grave" is given an arrangement very similar to the version by Johnny Cash. This is not the definitive version of the song, nor the best performance on the album although there are really no problems with it.

"Run On" is the album's final track and it has been recorded by countless singers including Elvis and Johhny Cash (as "God's Gonna Cut You Down"). So what is amazing is the fact that Jones and producer Ethan Johns managed to give it their own incredible twist, complete with a Jimmy Reed guitar riff.

I hadn't really intended to write a review of this album so soon. It doesn't even come out for another two weeks. I had simply sat down to write down a few initial thoughts and began writing the review anyway. In closing, you should know that not everybody is a fan of this album. In fact, David Sharpe, the VP of the album's distributor Island Records publicly made an ass of himself upon hearing the album for the first time (follow that link if you want to know, in a nutshell, everything that is wrong with the music business). His own label is against him, which must be a strange feeling for a man who has tried for the better part of five decades to please everybody. But as a wise man once said on a classic record, "You can't please everyone, so you got to please yourself". Tom Jones made this album for himself, but I think you will enjoy it as well if you just give it a chance. So what if his voice would lend itself just as well to a Broadway musical as it does to these old gospel numbers? We can't all be Bob Dylan.

http://www.nodepression.com/profiles/blog/show?id=2342817%3ABlogPost%3A171107&commentId=2342817%3AComment%3A171305&xg_source=activity

4/5 The Fly Magazine Review - Tom Jones 'Praise and Blame'

There's something slightly odd yet wonderfully right about 'Praise and Blame', the record where Tom Jones - he of Sex Bomb - finds God through gospel and blues. As from the surprisingly brilliant and sombre opening of Bob Dylan's 'What Good Am I? Jones - with the help of Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon and Laura Marling's producer) - reminds the word what the voice can do. The result is striking, tender and such is the case with his renditionof John Lee Hooker's 'Burning Hell', exhilarating. Just like Johnny Cash before him, it could be enough to warrant a revival of cool, no easy feat for a 70- year-old man used to being hit with underwear.

8/10 Clash Magazine Review - Tom Jones 'Praise and Blame'

Seventy-year-old Jones has finally matured, delving into his musical heritage, and delivering a stunning album. With Ethan Johns as the Rick Rubin to his Johnny Cash, Jones presents stripped down cover songs that enriched him - from Dylan, John Lee Hooker, Staple Singers and more - anchored by a voice that sounds more impassioned and diginified than ever. Poignant at times, exhilarating at others, 'Praise And Blame' marks an exciting new direction from a national treasure. 8/10 Simon Harper, August 2010

**** Mojo Review - "Pontypridd's Boyo Heads Back to Basics"

"What good am I, if I'm like all the rest?" emotes Tom Jones on his highly personalised version of Dylan's What Good Am I. No problem there. Few singers with a popular background are going to emerge with an album as remarkable as this during 2010. Recorded live, with no overdubs, and no horn or string trappings, the songs all stem from exemplary sources - culled from memories of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Marie Knight, Mahalia Jackson, John Lee Hooker, Jesse Mae Hemphill and such like and delivered with due reverence, turning on the power when required but never edging into showbiz. The presence of Ethan Johns, producer of Kings of Leon, Laura Marling etc, not only provides Jones with a dynamic sound but, backed by drummer Jeremy Stacy, bassist Dave Bronze and a sprinkling of knowing guests, donates some of the most aggressive yet agreeable guitar licks likely to bend ears this year. **** Fred Dellar, Mojo, Aug 2010

Tom Jones at 70

MusicOMH Review - Posted by Michael Hubbard on 07 June 2010 at 11:27 PM Sir Tom Jones turned 70 years of age today (7th June) but, as we witnessed in the atmospheric surroundings of One Mayfair last week, he's far from gracefully retiring with a pipe and slippers. The Welsh warbler showcased his upcoming new album Praise & Blame, and was on fine form.

John Murphy reviews the album here, while Ben Hogwood fills us in on the showcase event...

It is some achievement to be an artist for as long as Tom Jones and to still find a new direction to pull out of the locker. Yet even by his standards this is quite an about turn for the Welsh crooner, and crucially it feels like it involves music very close to his heart.

The change will inevitably open up comparisons with Johnny Cash and his vocal epiphany, and also draws parallels with the career direction taken by another vocal heavyweight, Robert Plant.

Yet as Sir Tom performed his new record in its entirety for the first time in One Mayfair its rawness was immediately evident. The newness was emphasised by the occasional memory slip from the singer, but otherwise he was the consummate showman, with near-faultless vocals.

More importantly, they were shot through with almost dangerous levels of emotion, unravelling over the ominously slow tread of a marching bass drum. Bob Dylan's What Good Am I explored a rare vulnerability in Jones' make-up, while in John Lee Hooker's Burning Hell he bellowed forth as if singing for his life, rattling the venue's very foundations.

"We're going to sing something a little more emotional," he told the rattled crowd, sporting that big bear smile. For all the world he looked like a cross between a stage star and a near relative of Ernest Hemingway - a parallel not lost throughout this musical exploration.

As the rest of the album unfolded it was clear we were at the very least witnessing something unusual - and at times, something pretty special. In releasing a covers album to mark his 70th birthday, Sir Tom Jones may well have shown us the most vivid glimpse of his soul to date.

Tom Jones' album Praise & Blame is released on 24th July 2010 through Island Records.

http://blog.musicomh.com/musicomh/2010/06/tom-jones-at-70.html

The Q Music.com Review - Tom Jones debuts new god-fearing material

The Q Music.com Review - Tom Jones debuts new god-fearing material

The legendary Tom Jones has dabbled in more musical genres over his 35-year career than his native Wales has valleys, and to a small crowd at a Mayfair venue last night, he previewed his forthcoming album Praise And Blame; a body of work which draws on roots, gospel and the blues.
Produced by Ethan Johns (Past CV credits include Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Paolo Nutini) it's a collection of country interpretations, which pushes Jones into self-judgement, reflection and, above all, God territory. It may be of little coincidence that as the silver-haired lothario approaches the sobering age of 70, a lofty, converted church provides the perfect setting for him to atone for his Vegas sins on If I Give My Soul: "I have come in search of Jesus, hoping he will understand". Taking to the pulpit beneath a stained glass window of the holy trinity in a sand-coloured linen suit and appearing to have borrowed a leaf out of Robert Plant's Raising Sands book - all airs of showbiz, glitz and glamour forgotten - one asks: does Tom Jones's biblical verse really extend beyond the tale of Delilah? Could Pontypridd's boyo actually be a God-fearing man?
Opening with his take on Bob Dylan's What Good Am I, the searching lyrics expose Jones to a level unseen. As his trembling voice, gravelly and booming, asks "what good am I if I say foolish things?" it's immediately clear his instrument was made for such soul-bearing, sermon-giving, fire-and-brimstone-calling fare. It also puts a dampener on anybody expectant of a frolicking Sexbomb reprise. Yet, in a bid to "get serious" on Susan Werner's Did Trouble Me, Jones has a senior moment: "If I get some words wrong then, hey!" With the aid of his pussycat smile and stage-side prompter it would seem then that the Lord doesn't trouble him too much.
From songs of such intimate redemption to the gospel honky tonk fever of Sister Rosetta Tharpe's Strange Things, the born entertainer shows no signs of slowing down as he's joined by Ethan Johns himself and a group of workmanlike players onstage; the E Street Band to Jones's Bruce Springsteen. For all the quiet conversations with the 'Man Upstairs' it's the devilish cheek of Don't Knock and John Lee Hooker's Burning Hell that sees Jones coming into his hell-raising element. His order (accompanied by some signature Jones moves) to "get down in the church house" is reminiscent of the Tom Jones we know and love with his never-ending ploy to keep up with the kids a little longer than he should.
As he turns up the heat in this church house, Jones signals the end: "We almost made it!" Pawing the sweat off his brow, he makes a deal with the Devil as he purrs, "When I die where will I go?" with Vincent Price Thriller-like doom. Whether God is on his side or not remains to be seen, but on this judgement day all non-omnipresent give him a resplendent thumbs
up.

The legendary Tom Jones has dabbled in more musical genres over his 35-year career than his native Wales has valleys, and to a small crowd at a Mayfair venue last night, he previewed his forthcoming album Praise And Blame; a body of work which draws on roots, gospel and the blues.

Produced by Ethan Johns (Past CV credits include Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Paolo Nutini) it's a collection of country interpretations, which pushes Jones into self-judgement, reflection and, above all, God territory. It may be of little coincidence that as the silver-haired lothario approaches the sobering age of 70, a lofty, converted church provides the perfect setting for him to atone for his Vegas sins on If I Give My Soul: "I have come in search of Jesus, hoping he will understand". Taking to the pulpit beneath a stained glass window of the holy trinity in a sand-coloured linen suit and appearing to have borrowed a leaf out of Robert Plant's Raising Sands book - all airs of showbiz, glitz and glamour forgotten - one asks: does Tom Jones's biblical verse really extend beyond the tale of Delilah? Could Pontypridd's boyo actually be a God-fearing man?

Opening with his take on Bob Dylan's What Good Am I, the searching lyrics expose Jones to a level unseen. As his trembling voice, gravelly and booming, asks "what good am I if I say foolish things?" it's immediately clear his instrument was made for such soul-bearing, sermon-giving, fire-and-brimstone-calling fare. It also puts a dampener on anybody expectant of a frolicking Sexbomb reprise. Yet, in a bid to "get serious" on Susan Werner's Did Trouble Me, Jones has a senior moment: "If I get some words wrong then, hey!" With the aid of his pussycat smile and stage-side prompter it would seem then that the Lord doesn't trouble him too much.

From songs of such intimate redemption to the gospel honky tonk fever of Sister Rosetta Tharpe's Strange Things, the born entertainer shows no signs of slowing down as he's joined by Ethan Johns himself and a group of workmanlike players onstage; the E Street Band to Jones's Bruce Springsteen. For all the quiet conversations with the 'Man Upstairs' it's the devilish cheek of Don't Knock and John Lee Hooker's Burning Hell that sees Jones coming into his hell-raising element. His order (accompanied by some signature Jones moves) to "get down in the church house" is reminiscent of the Tom Jones we know and love with his never-ending ploy to keep up with the kids a little longer than he should.

As he turns up the heat in this church house, Jones signals the end: "We almost made it!" Pawing the sweat off his brow, he makes a deal with the Devil as he purrs, "When I die where will I go?" with Vincent Price Thriller-like doom. Whether God is on his side or not remains to be seen, but on this judgement day all non-omnipresent give him a resplendent thumbs up.

Sir Tom Jones Unveils New Direction at Intimate London Gig

Spinner UK - Review - 4th Jun 2010 by Julian Marszalek There are few entertainers who are about to enter their seventies who manage to maintain any sense of dignity, but Sir Tom Jones proved on Thursday, June 3, his powerful voice remains intact. And he also showed a change in musical direction can never come too late in a singer's career.

Sir Tom's forthcoming album, 'Praise and Blame,' finds the veteran singer working with producer Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon, Ryan Adams) as he comes full circle to embrace the gospel, blues and country music which inspired him in post-war Wales.

The setting of a delightfully ornate church bathed in beatific light in the middle of London's Mayfair proved to be an appropriate location as Jones took the stage with a stripped-down band of guitar, bass, drums and keyboards to deliver an almost fragile rendition of Bob Dylan's 'What Good am I?' Shorn of his usual big band accompaniment, this was Tom Jones as few of the specially invited audience had heard before. Yet here was also a man who displayed a winning blend of frailty as much as professionalism -- despite momentarily forgetting the words to his next scheduled single, 'Did Trouble Me,' Jones seamlessly eased himself back into the song with humour and grace.

But for every moment of tenderness there was one of raw, emotional power. John Lee Hooker's 'Burning Hell' saw Jones' rich voice locking horns with sliding guitar riffs, all the while evoking the consequences of a life of sin.

There's been much talk of Jones "doing a Johnny Cash" with 'Praise and Blame' but this is disingenuous at best. Whereas Cash and producer Rick Rubin tackled contemporary influences in the singer's own idiosyncratic style, Jones and Johns have gone back directly to the source material. Starkly honest and never less than gripping, this was Tom Jones in top flight in a guise that's perfectly suited to

his immense talentSpinner UK - Review - 4th Jun 2010 by

Julian Marszalek

There are few entertainers who are about to enter their seventies who manage to maintain any sense of dignity, but Sir Tom Jones proved on Thursday, June 3, his powerful voice remains intact. And he also showed a change in musical direction can never come too late in a singer's career.

Sir Tom's forthcoming album, 'Praise and Blame,' finds the veteran singer working with producer Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon, Ryan Adams) as he comes full circle to embrace the gospel, blues and country music which inspired him in post-war Wales.

The setting of a delightfully ornate church bathed in beatific light in the middle of London's Mayfair proved to be an appropriate location as Jones took the stage with a stripped-down band of guitar, bass, drums and keyboards to deliver an almost fragile rendition of Bob Dylan's 'What Good am I?' Shorn of his usual big band accompaniment, this was Tom Jones as few of the specially invited audience had heard before. Yet here was also a man who displayed a winning blend of frailty as much as professionalism -- despite momentarily forgetting the words to his next scheduled single, 'Did Trouble Me,' Jones seamlessly eased himself back into the song with humour and grace.

But for every moment of tenderness there was one of raw, emotional power. John Lee Hooker's 'Burning Hell' saw Jones' rich voice locking horns with sliding guitar riffs, all the while evoking the consequences of a life of sin.

There's been much talk of Jones "doing a Johnny Cash" with 'Praise and Blame' but this is disingenuous at best. Whereas Cash and producer Rick Rubin tackled contemporary influences in the singer's own idiosyncratic style, Jones and Johns have gone back directly to the source material. Starkly honest and never less than gripping, this was Tom Jones in top flight in a guise that's perfectly suited to his immense talent.

Tom Jones Live - Set for sixth decade of triumph

Live Posted by ClashMusic Fri, 04/06/2010
Tom Jones Live
One Mayfair, London
The Welsh knight of the realm launched his new album last night in an ornate Central London church. The intimate surroundings proved the perfect match to the rustic charms of the songs from ‘Praise And Blame’, which sees Sir Tom embrace his musical heritage and once again reinvent himself as an artist.
The pairing of Jones and producer Ethan Johns, whose previous credits include Kings Of Leon and Ryan Adams, heralded suggestions that Jones was taking influence from the seminal American recordings by Johnny Cash with Rick Rubin. Indeed, the bluesy acoustic feel of ‘Praise And Blame’, a collection of cover versions, is a genuine statement of intent from two serious musicologists who know what they like and know how to interpret it.
Tonight, eight of the album’s eleven tracks are played live for the first time - evident from Tom’s lyrical mishap in one - and he looks like he firmly believes in and enjoys what he’s doing now, passionately rendering these vintage tracks into his own style.
The expected sight of a perma-tanned crooner with an unnaturally jet-black do is confounded with the appearance of The Man In White - a silver haired (and bearded) gent with a white suit, looking every bit comfortable in his years, and debonair with it.
First up, ‘What Good Am I?’, the album opener and lead single, is miles away from its Bob Dylan original, and is a suitably spiritual introduction to tonight’s proceedings. Picking up the pace, John Lee Hooker’s ‘Burning Hell’ becomes a glimpse of what Jack White should aspire to when he is knocking seventy. The gospel influence of Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s ‘Strange Things’ spreads into the invited crowd, whose call and response echoes and threatens to drown out the backing singers.
Known as a consummate showman and one-time contemporary of Elvis Presley, the king of rock and roll, Tom Jones was hugely endearing during ‘Did Trouble Me’, a slow and poignant gospel hymn, when he missed his cue, and had to call for a prompt from side of stage.
As an insight into the musical loves of Sir Tom Jones, ‘Praise And Blame’ is further proof that while rock and roll may be a young man’s game, those who have been there and done that know to dig deeper to find brighter jewels. After the twilight success of Johnny Cash, not to mention the recent Grammy glories for Robert Plant with Alison Krauss, this new direction looks set to propel Jones into his sixth decade of triumph.

Live Posted by ClashMusic Fri, 04/06/2010

Tom Jones Live

One Mayfair, London

The Welsh knight of the realm launched his new album last night in an ornate Central London church. The intimate surroundings proved the perfect match to the rustic charms of the songs from ‘Praise And Blame’, which sees Sir Tom embrace his musical heritage and once again reinvent himself as an artist.

The pairing of Jones and producer Ethan Johns, whose previous credits include Kings Of Leon and Ryan Adams, heralded suggestions that Jones was taking influence from the seminal American recordings by Johnny Cash with Rick Rubin. Indeed, the bluesy acoustic feel of ‘Praise And Blame’, a collection of cover versions, is a genuine statement of intent from two serious musicologists who know what they like and know how to interpret it.

Tonight, eight of the album’s eleven tracks are played live for the first time - evident from Tom’s lyrical mishap in one - and he looks like he firmly believes in and enjoys what he’s doing now, passionately rendering these vintage tracks into his own style.

The expected sight of a perma-tanned crooner with an unnaturally jet-black do is confounded with the appearance of The Man In White - a silver haired (and bearded) gent with a white suit, looking every bit comfortable in his years, and debonair with it.

First up, ‘What Good Am I?’, the album opener and lead single, is miles away from its Bob Dylan original, and is a suitably spiritual introduction to tonight’s proceedings. Picking up the pace, John Lee Hooker’s ‘Burning Hell’ becomes a glimpse of what Jack White should aspire to when he is knocking seventy. The gospel influence of Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s ‘Strange Things’ spreads into the invited crowd, whose call and response echoes and threatens to drown out the backing singers.

Known as a consummate showman and one-time contemporary of Elvis Presley, the king of rock and roll, Tom Jones was hugely endearing during ‘Did Trouble Me’, a slow and poignant gospel hymn, when he missed his cue, and had to call for a prompt from side of stage.

As an insight into the musical loves of Sir Tom Jones, ‘Praise And Blame’ is further proof that while rock and roll may be a young man’s game, those who have been there and done that know to dig deeper to find brighter jewels. After the twilight success of Johnny Cash, not to mention the recent Grammy glories for Robert Plant with Alison Krauss, this new direction looks set to propel Jones into his sixth decade of triumph.

Drowned in Sound - Praise and Blame Review

Drowned in Sound- Praise and Blame Review 15.5.2010

We know as well as you do that Tom Jones is not among our standard fare of coverage but, we do try and be quite broad minded about these things. We were unsure ourselves until we actually heard the track in question. It's a cover of a Bob Dylan song, but honestly, it's super.
The man himself has a new album out, called Praise And Blame, a record he's been working on with Ethan Johns, whose CV is full of greatness, working most recently with Laura Marling. It's out on July 26 through Island and features reworkings of originals by John Lee Hooker, and the aforementioned Bob Dylan for the below 'What Good Am I'.
You can download and stream 'What Good Am I' down there. Click here for the direct download link. The single itself - along with a cover of JLH's 'Burning Hell' - comes out on June 7, which just so happens to be Tom's 70th birthday. Nice.

We know as well as you do that Tom Jones is not among our standard fare of coverage but, we do try and be quite broad minded about these things. We were unsure ourselves until we actually heard the track in question. It's a cover of a Bob Dylan song, but honestly, it's super.

The man himself has a new album out, called Praise And Blame, a record he's been working on with Ethan Johns, whose CV is full of greatness, working most recently with Laura Marling. It's out on July 26 through Island and features reworkings of originals by John Lee Hooker, and the aforementioned Bob Dylan for the below 'What Good Am I'.

You can download and stream 'What Good Am I' down there. Click here for the direct download link. The single itself - along with a cover of JLH's 'Burning Hell' - comes out on June 7, which just so happens to be Tom's 70th birthday. Nice.