Tom Jones – Union Chapel - The Line of Best Fit Review

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Tom Jones has seen a lot in his long career, from early shows in Welsh working men’s clubs, to playing with Elvis in Las Vegas. A renowned showman, over the years he has played massive shows around the world, most recently appearing at Twickenham as part of the Help for Heroes concert. Yet, this evening’s show is a little different, and saw Jones stripping back the drama and bombast to play latest album Praise and Blame in it’s entirety [see TLOBF review here].

Shrouded in smoke and blue light, Jones cut a sharp figure as he took the stage to perform Dylan cover ‘What Good Am I’. The Union Chapel frequently brings the best out of performers, and Jones is no exception. As he observed, it is an appropriate location to be performing his latest album-the ideal forum for tales of regret and troubled souls and minds. Jones’ deep, rich croon suits the slower songs well, and is at it’s brooding best during his rendition of ‘Nobody’s Fault But  Mine’, the band falling away leaving Jones to murmur the melody and end with an almost Waits-ian growl that silences the room for a second.

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Shorn of the responsibility of playing up to the character of Tom Jones, the 70 year old Welshman seemed relaxed as he joked with the crowd about being a “naughty boy”, as well as telling stories about his reasons for chosing some of the songs. Encore ‘Run On’ was a song that Jones used to sing with Elvis after shows in Vegas, he explained. While some of the more upbeat tracks strayed close to boogie-woogie territory at times, for the most part they acted as an uplifting and joyful counterpoint to the slow burning and emotionally open tracks delivered elsewhere.

While it remains to be seen if Praise and Blame truly marks a re-invention for Jones in the long term, tonights intimate and personal performance showcased the album perfectly. Putting in a little trademark “Huh” and a hipthrust into the second performance of the evening of ‘Didn’t It Rain’, Jones allowed his inner entertainer to come out for a quick appearance. As acknowledgment to his long term fans it was a nice gesture, but this show more than proved that his talent can hold its own without the gimmicks that have characterised much of the later part of his career.

Read the review here

Tom Jones Union Chapel - 4* Telegraph Review

jones_1679487c Having stopped trying so hard to be down with the kids, Jones is making music as hot and heavy as the hippest indie band. Rating: * * * *

Tom Jones is not normally someone you would expect to find singing in a church, what with his reputation for testosterone-fuelled, bare-torso lustiness and knicker-throwing fans. But here he was, astride the altar, beneath beautiful stained glass, performing his new, spiritually themed album, ’Praise And Blame’, in its entirety. And giving it loads, it must be said. The Union Chapel is a gorgeous venue that frequently brings out a certain quality of reverence in performer and audience. I’ve seen a lot of stripped-back, acoustic-flavoured gigs here characterised by a kind of hushed intimacy, as if rock and roll ought to whisper in the presence of God. There was none of that for Mr Jones, who seemed to be having far more fun than you are supposed to in an English place of worship.

Smiling, joking and wielding his remarkable voice with a lusty, tangible pleasure, he brought the joyousness of a southern gospel Baptist meeting to the occasion. His chosen material appropriately places more emphasis on acknowledging the faults of the sinner than the glory of God. “If you’re gonna take the praise, you gotta take the blame,” he joked. Backed by a red-hot band really riding on slinky, rocking blues grooves, Jones singing shifted from an ominous bass growl to a raw, pleading tenor, digging into the torment and redemption of such rich, old material as Lord Help, Strange Things, Don’t Knock and Nobody’s Fault But Mine. It is great to see Jones performing to a more musically organic backing, neither blasting it with a big band nor chasing contemporary pop fashions. You can tell he really loves this material. He’s got history here, even if it is not the history the public associates with him. “Elvis Presley was a very good friend of mine and he loved gospel music over everything else he did. We used to sing this song together after the shows we did in Las Vegas,” he announced, introducing an uplifting, hand-clapping tumble through ’Run On’, guitar lines snaking through the vocals, his two female backing singers waving their arms like a couple of over-excitable cheerleaders. Such was Jones’s cheerful informality, the audience became encouraged to shout out comments. “Play some rock ’n’ roll!” yelled one misguided man. “What do you think that was?” retorted Jones. “That’s where rock’ n ’roll came from. Spiritual music. You just have to change the words a bit!” Then he delivered a version of ’Burning Hell’ with just a fuzzed-up electric slide guitar and pounding drumming that echoed the elemental power of the White Stripes. It is perhaps ironic that, having stopped trying so hard to be down with the kids, Jones is making music as hot and heavy as the hippest indie band. “So that’s where rock ’n’ roll comes from,” he told his heckler. “If you didn’t know, you do now.” That’s telling them.

By Neil McCormick

Read the review here

Gospel inspires Tom Jones to finally act his age - Evening Standard Review

tomjones16_415 As a man reaches his twilight, he tends to embrace the things that really matter. At 70, Tom Jones is no exception. Having spent too much of his career chasing youth — the Las Vegas years; the ghastly Sex Bomb; the threat to “bum-rush the door” on 2002’s Younger Days — he has returned to the music of his youth: rock ’n’ roll-tinged gospel.

There were no hits last night, not even The Young New Mexican Puppeteer, which would enhance any occasion, just Jones’s current Praise And Blame album in its entirety, including Didn’t It Rain which, for reasons far from clear, was played twice in the final three songs. Jones may well be the only man on earth who can legitimately claim to count both Robbie Williams and Elvis Presley among his “good friends” but while he’s clearly seeking the late-career revitalisation and credibility accorded to Neil Diamond and Johnny Cash, Praise And Blame is exactly the album Elvis would be making were he still in the building.

“This is gospel music, uplifting music, spiritual music,” he purred. It was also Tom Jones finally acting his age and so at ease at not having to pretend to be sexy any more that he could even quip “what’s that?” when someone suggested a lozenge he was popping might have been viagra.

The lighting was sombre; the voice deep, rich and almost a sub-human growl on Nobody’s Fault But Mine; while the music, brimming with rue and regret as much as fire and brimstone, was as Gothic as the setting.

Not the most mobile of performers these days, Jones carried the up-tempo Lord Help and Strange Things by power of voice alone, but when he worked his spine-tingling magic on the soul-baring Did Trouble Me and If I Give My Soul, you could almost weep for his wasted years.

Still, this was an evening of joy and one that promised uplift: here is a man who has finally found himself.

By John Aizlewood

Read the review here

Tom Jones Upcoming UK Radio Appearances!

Tom Jones will be a guest on 3 radio shows over the next 2 weeks! Starting tomorrow, Tuesday 14th September, Tom will be a guest on The Radcliffe and Maconie Show at 8pm BBC Radio 2. Tom will chat to Mark about his new album 'Praise & Blame' and perform three tracks from the album.

On Saturday 25th September Tom will join Dermot O'Leary on his BBC Radio 2 show at 3pm.Tom will chat to Dermot about the new album and play another 3 tracks from 'Praise & Blame'

Sunday 26th September Tom will be the featured guest on Desert island Discs on BBC Radio 4. Tune in to find out what eight records he would take with him to a desert island!

Listen to Tom Jones' Performance at Elvis Forever! on BBC Radio 2

In the year that the King of Rock 'n' Roll would have turned 75, Chris Evans presents a concert of Elvis' best loved and most popular songs, live from London's Hyde Park. Listen to Tom Jones perform 'Run On', 'Tryin' To Get To You' and 'One Night' via BBC iplayer. Click here to be taken to BBC.com (listen at 2 hours 21 minutes for Tom Jones)

Tom Jones Announced for Help For Heros Concert on September 12th

a0bdef2e-123d-4949-865a-826cee8abcf0 A true British legend has been added to the already amazing line up for the Heroes Concert at Twickenham Stadium on September 12th.

Sir Tom Jones has quite simply been THE voice of British music since the 1960s. Constantly challenging himself by taking on the demands of a remarkable range of repertoire, he recently released the acclaimed album Praise & Blame, a return to his gospel and blues roots.

His Twickenham performance promises to draw on both traditions – the classic Tom Jones entertainer and the raw, emotional journey of Praise & Blame.

Tom is really pleased to have the chance to participate in the Heroes Concert: “It’s great to be able to do something for our troops, and it’s pretty rare to get the chance to do something fun and uplifting on home soil. Not only will this event help us understand what these brave men and women in service do for us, it will also help raise enough funds to really make a difference in their recovery. I’m proud to be able to help in any way I can”.

The cream of the nation’s entertainment industry have signed up for the gig, names as diverse as Jason Manford, Plan B, Jack Dee, The Saturdays, Katherine Jenkins, James Blunt, Alesha Dixon, latin star Enrique Iglesias and the UK’s latest Number 1 boy band The Wanted.

Due to phenomenal demand, organisers have acquired special permission for Twickenham Stadium to hold an extra 5,000 fans and troops, taking the concert capacity up to 60,000 for the very first time.

The show will be hosted by the best of the UK’s comedy talent - John Bishop, Kevin Bridges, Jack Dee, Rhod Gilbert, Peter Kay, Jason Manford and Michael McIntyre have all pledged their support.

All proceeds go straight to Help for Heroes to raise money to help fund further rehabilitation centres around the country.

The spectacular event will be broadcast on BBC One and around the world to military bases through British Forces Broadcasting (BFBS).

Acts Announced So far:

Robbie Williams

(Gary Barlow guest)

James Blunt

Alexandra Burke

Alesha Dixon

Enrique Iglesias

Katherine Jenkins

Tom Jones

Pixie Lott

Plan B

The Saturdays

The Wanted

John Bishop

Kevin Bridges

Jack Dee

Rhod Gilbert

Peter Kay

Jason Manford

Michael McIntyre

Bryn Parry, CEO Help for Heroes

“Help for Heroes is all about ordinary people doing their bit to support the men and women of our Armed Forces. We feel helpless when we hear about our young men and women being wounded and want to do what we can; with Help for Heroes we can make a difference. Over the last three years, hundreds of thousands have joined us in doing their bit and millions have been raised to improve the quality of life for some wonderfully brave people.

This concert is a fantastic example of a nation doing its bit for ‘the blokes’;

I am particularly grateful to all the acts and the organisers for their support and to Hesco Bastion, our lead sponsor. Music and humour can reach and lift those in the darkest of places, making life worth living and helping in recovery. Our boys and girls, both those operating in the remote patrol bases and those recovering from life changing injuries, will hear this concert and know that they are in the forefront of our minds. They are not forgotten, wherever they are.”

Richard Knight, Stadium Director for the Rugby Football Union

“It’s a privilege to be asked to host such an amazing day of entertainment for such a fantastic cause. We have a long history of supporting Help for Heroes starting with our charity game here at the stadium in 2008, which raised over £1.5 million for the charity. The chance to be a part of such a landmark concert is an honour and a testament to the role Twickenham Stadium now plays as an iconic concert venue. The pitch that has been graced by legends of rugby will now be graced by legends of music and comedy. A fitting tribute for our heroic armed forces.”

TICKETS ON SALE

Tickets:

Reserved Seating: £55

General Admission Pitch Standing: £55

Outer Gold Circle Standing: £70

Inner Gold Circle Standing: £80

Ticketmaster hotline - 0844 879 4376 (outside UK – 0161 637 2692)

Buy tickets online from www.livenation.co.uk, www.heroesconcert.com or www.ticketmaster.co.uk

To book disabled customer tickets, please call Ticketmaster’s access booking line - 0844 847 1655.

For disabled access information - email any enquiries to: access@heroesconcert.com or visit the website at www.heroesconcert.com for more information.

For VIP Hospitality or Golden Circle packages please visit www.livenationexperience.co.uk or telephone 0207 009 3484

All tickets are subject to booking fee

All revenue of Live Nation from the Event after deduction of Live Nation’s fee together with all costs and expenses directly relating to the hire of the venue and the staging of the Event will be paid directly to Help for Heroes (Registered Charity Number: 1120920) or to Help for Heroes Trading Limited in support of Help for Heroes. It is expected to be in the region of £750,000

Tom Jones Performs Praise & Blame At The Union Chapel!!!

It gives us great pleasure to announce what will be a very special show:
Tom Jones Performs Praise & Blame At The Union Chapel on Wednesday 15th September, Stage time 8pm.
The show will be Announced and is going onsale 9am tomorrow morning the 2nd September.
Union Chapel address: Compton Avenue, London N1 2XD
Tickets £30.00 (subject to booking fee) and available from www.livenation.co.uk

Following his incredible shows at Latitude festival this summer. This will be the first chance to see Sir Tom perform the critically acclaimed Praise & Blame.

Tom Jones Prepares New Single: 'Run On' / 'Didn't It Rain' - Clash Music

Welsh crooner Tom Jones has confirmed details of his new single 'Run On' backed with 'Didn't It Rain'. Tom Jones is busy defying expectations. The singer's image of a tanned lothario has been shattered on his raw, honest new album 'Praise & Blame' which returns the Welsh icon to his roots.

Inspired by American gospel, blues and country the album received almost instant acclaim. In the vein of the Johnny Cash series 'American Recordings' the album strips back public perceptions to find the true artist.

Produced by Ethan Johns, the album is steeped in ragged recordings by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Bob Dylan and Hank Williams. 'Praise & Blame' was promoted via some unusual shows, including a midnight set at Latitude.

Set to turn Gold over the next few weeks, Tom Jones is due to follow his new album with the double A-side 'Run On' / 'Didn't It Rain'. 'Run On' is a much covered gospel classic, with everyone from Moby to Elvis Presley having a crack at the song.

Tom Jones has given the track a rockin' treatment, turning it into a highlight of the new album. The Welsh singer realised the track was a challenge almost immediately: "…if we did it we realized we would really have to bring something special to it. Ethan and myself decided to kick up a rockier version, which is what we did and I'm happy to say it's more alive and earthy."

Backed with Mahalia Jackson's gospel classic 'Didn't It Rain' Tom Jones brings some special to these renditions. Much covered, his familiar voice at times cracks with emotion as he delivers a church eulogy.

As a special bonus for digital customers Tom Jones has made a new track available. 'Lord Help' is a deep and dirty slice of blues, completing a remarkable return for the 70 year old singer.

Tom Jones is due to release 'Run On' / 'Didn't It Rain' on September 20th.

Read the review at Clashmusic.com here

New Single Release: 'Run On' / 'Didn't It Rain'

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Tom Jones follows the phenomenal success of his recent  ‘Praise &  Blame’ album  - currently hitting gold status in the UK having spent the past month in the Top 10 - with news of  a brand new  AA  sided single  ‘Run On’ / ‘Didn’t It Rain’ on 20th September.

‘Praise & Blame’, a collection of songs culled from a wide ranging  Americana catalogue, has witnessed the coming together  of Tom Jones with visionary producer/musician Ethan Johns (Kings Of  Leon, Laura  Marling, Ray Lamontagne) and been  hailed by many as one of Sir Tom’s career highlights.

The fervent exhortation classic ‘Run On’ was a challenge from the outset. As Tom says “…if we did it we realized we would really have to bring something special to it. Ethan and myself decided to kick up a rockier version, which is what we did and I’m happy to say it’s more alive and earthy.”  Accompanied by Ethan on guitar, ‘Run On’ is one of the (many) highlights of the album and an urgent, climactic finish to an extraordinary body of work.

The tempo remains upbeat with a warm-hearted version of the Mahalia Jackson’s inspirational narrative ‘Didn’t It Rain’. Underpinned with boogie woogie piano and an outstanding gospel choir, here is a natural, heartfelt performance that presents evidence of the lad from Wales who throughout his life listened, knew and sang the repertoire that comprises much of ‘Praise & Blame’.

A bonus for digital consumers comes with the addition of ‘Lord Help’,  an imploring, rollicking blues  turn that completes what  is —at the age of 70— a triumphant return  for Sir  Tom Jones.

“An extraordinary achievement…Praise & Blame’ is clearly one of the best albums of Jones’s entire career.”

***** The Independent

“…A blistering album…at last Jones the artist is the match for Jones the entertainer.”

**** The Guardian

“The verdict? All Praise and no blame.”

****Sunday Times Culture

“This is the most gripping, honest and brave record that the great Tom has ever made.”

****1/2 The Sun

‘Run On’  / ‘Didn’t It Rain’  will be available as  a limited 7” single and digitally with the addition of extra track  ‘Lord Help’.

At 70, Singer Tom Jones Rocks The Blues - The Kansas City Star Review

By ROBERT TRUSSELLAnd so begins a new chapter in my love-hate relationship with the great Welsh singer Tom Jones.

I got to talk to Jones on the telephone in advance of an appearance at the Midland back in 1988. The show itself was vintage Jones nonsense — he sang medleys of his pop hits and worked some ill-fitting contemporary material by Michael Jackson and INXS into the lineup. And, of course, he worked up a sweat, prompting women to toss underwear on stage for him to mop his glistening brow.

But in the interview he described his roots as a teenage rocker in working-class bars and how he saw himself.

“I’m a blues singer,” he said matter-of-factly.

Jones, who turned 70 in June, was part of that Beatles-Rolling Stones generation of British musicians who were heavily influenced by American folk music. Skiffle bands proliferated, especially after Lonnie Donegan’s hit recording of “Rock Island Line” in 1955, and African-American bluesmen were feted as living gods when they toured the U.K.

That’s where Tom Jones came from. In all the years since that phone conversation, as he kept his career afloat as a perennial Vegas crooner, I couldn’t help but imagine what a Tom Jones straight blues album would sound like.

Now, as if to reclaim his roots, he gives us “Praise & Blame,” a lean, muscular, explosive recording that I can’t stop listening to. It’s more gospel than blues, but it’s a soulful, reflective record in which Jones roars and whispers and exhibits surprisingly good taste.

This collection of 11 tunes includes compositions by John Lee Hooker, Bob Dylan, Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Billy Joe Shaver. It’s stunning. Jones rocks, but with a refined sensibility, a delicacy that creates mesmerizing sound portraits. He’s still the bombastic singer he always was, but producer Ethan Johns has channeled the bombast into elemental songs that achieve beauty in their simplicity. The resulting vocal performances may, at times, bring to mind Big Joe Turner and other great blues shouters from long ago.

I have no idea what Jones’ religious leanings are — he could be a godless heathen like me who simply gets turned on by high-voltage gospel music — but this carefully selected group of songs has an eye on the big questions. They deal with sin, salvation, redemption and the unanswerable question of where we go when we die.

The album opens with a quiet reading of Dylan’s “What Good Am I?” and wraps up with a pulsating version of the gospel standard “Run On,” in which Jones warns “long-tongue liars, midnight riders, ramblers, gamblers” and “back-biters” that “sooner or later God’s gonna cut you down.”

In between we find a raw version of Hooker’s “Burning Hell,” in which he proposes the possibility that there’s no afterlife, and an arresting rendition of Susan Werner’s lyrical “Did Trouble Me,” in which the singer tells us he “closed my eyes so I would not see” and “when I let things stand that should not be, My Lord did trouble me.”

In Shaver’s “If I Give My Soul,” a musician lost to drink wonders if he can be reunited with his wife and son if he gets right with Jesus. And in one of the CD’s most exciting cuts, Jones covers another gospel standard, “Didn’t It Rain,” in which the story of Noah and the flood gets the ’50s rock ’n’ roll treatment.

Jones is in fine voice, singing with passion and finely calibrated intensity, but in every case his voice is framed by unpredictable arrangements. Most of the basic tracks were reportedly cut live in the studio, but Johns laid in discreet overdubs from heavy-hitters such as Booker T (organ), Benmont Tench (piano) and Americana songwriters Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings. Their contributions are subtle if not imperceptible, but they add a bit of texture to songs that have been stripped down to their essence.

This album reminds us that gospel, blues and country all came from the same stewpot and are, to a large extent, old men’s music. It’s the music of experience, tempered by loss and peppered with disappointment, and Jones does that tradition justice.

Now, if you go on YouTube and look at some of the videos of Jones singing tunes from this recording, you’ll see a rather dapper fellow with a white goatee and a sense of style that is just a bit incongruous when juxtaposed against the content of these songs. Still, the music had to come from somewhere, and Jones wouldn’t have recorded these tunes unless he responded to them in some fundamental way.

So thanks, Mr. Jones. My only complaint: He should have recorded more than 11 songs. The CD grabs you by the lapels but is over before you know it. And so the only thing to do is listen to it again. And again.

Read the review here.

Tom Jones: Praise & Blame - CWG Magazine 3.5 Review

Long Live Tom Jones – Long Live the King – Tom Jones is a King. He’s a force of nature like a flood or a hurricane. If you could splice the DNA of Sinatra together with Elvis, Tom Jones would be the result.TJ’s musical career spans a few decades and a lot of material. It would be easier and shorter to list the musical styles he hasn’t mastered – Hmm… maybe opera? Tom’s new album, Praise & Blame, is filled with the rootsy, bluesy rock and roll material that he was meant to sing. Oh, throw in a heavy undercurrent of gospel, and this music runs soul deep. I’ve discussed in this column before that there are only two distinct kinds of music, ‘good’ and ‘bad,’ but what about a Welshman singing Black American music? Has he paid his dues enough to sing the Blues? Muddy Waters would have told you, and B. B. King can still tell you, that if you’ve lived it and you feel it, you become the blues and they become you. Everybody’s got em’, some people just sing em’ better. So has Tom still got it? Can he still deliver the mail/male? No-brainer here – Yes! What Praise & Blame really reminds me of is a dark, smoky little bar where the Saturday night band that plays the deepest, most soulful, down-home blues late into the early morning turns into the church band and choir after a little coffee and a shave. Come Sunday, there’s not a 7th or 9th note in earshot but the power of the Gospel makes the church windows bow in and out in time to the music.

The more perceptive listeners among you may find that Praise & Blame is not as accessible as a casual listener might like, even I had to spin this one a couple of times before it’s true power and meaning started to assert itself. Tom is in total control vocally here, and everything about this album must be viewed through that lens. The band exists only as a foundation for Tom’s singing and which allows him the freedom to take his time and really pick his shots. When Tom spins a tale as he sings, he really draws you in and forces you to take the time to really hear and understand the lyrics and their meaning. Better musical backup would have been a bonus, but maybe it would have clouded some important lyrical and vocal elements. Try listening to “ Burning Hell” and see what a distorted slide guitar and Tom can do. Follow that up with “ Lord Help” and you’ll be a witness to the Saturday night gospel, blues-rock I’m talking about. Testify Brothers and Sisters! Don’t knock, just walk right in, ‘cause there’s strange things happening every day – Just follow your ears. Rock Bottom Line: A surprising and strangely satisfying musical outing by a master vocalist still very much in command of his instrument and talent. CWG Rating 3.5 Guns

Read the review here

Croon on, suave gorilla - National Post Review

Dave Bidini, National Post · Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2010 He was like a lot of what was conjured in those times: seeing the neighbours drunk at a block party; stripmall Chinese food; plywood basement wet bars; Penthouse Letters found mud-splatched near the creek and the guy who wrote in to tell how he liked to sit naked and masturbate on a pizza; Bobby Orr's clothing ads in the Gardens' programs; acres of purple velour; The Tonight Show; designer trousers and chest hair bramble; cool Britannia losing its way; The Parallax View, which we saw in a shopping centre theatre on holidays, and which yielded Paula Prentiss's flouncing bosom and Sean Connery's sharkish leer; Charlie O and Joe Rudi, and Catfish, too; fuzz bass and Tiki chic; K-Tel records, maybe some Dobie Gray or Incredible Bongo Band; camel toes and pornography on Super 8 reels; and, filmed in Sensurround, the strange life of the modern man, whose fantasy was some chick in a sheer blouse sitting cross-legged in the lobby of Howard Johnson's.

Lording above all of this from his mossy peak at the epicentre of our suburban gomorrah was the Welsh pop star, Tom Jones. Rough velvet. Expert panty thief. The hands of a miner and the phallus of a satyr. Friends of mine once recorded with the suave gorilla in the early 2000s, and he was angry during most of the session, though not petulant, as one might have expected. Instead, he was frustrated that his voice -- a hirsute bedroom growl also capable of choirboy cascades and waterfall bellow -- was no longer capable of rising to his immediate demands. Back in the dirty '70s, he could punch out the damned thing and it would ask to be hit harder, but the years had worn down his vocal chords. After a few hours of warming up, he felt good enough to try. One take later, he was in a cab headed for the Wild Honey on St. George Street, or maybe Sheba's, where the Lebanese girls still swooned after the weary mist of his cologne.

Rock 'n' roll loves comebacks -- it's the industry that resists them at first, not the art -- and, with the fine, estimable Praise and Blame, it's Jones who finds himself walking in the shadows of Johnny Cash and Elvis, although there's a little bit of Neil Young in there, too, seeing that

Jones never quite left the world of contemporary music, appearing vibrant even when standing still. But better than American Recordings or Elvis in '68, Praise and Blame doesn't feel or sound as much like a producer capturing magic in a bottle as it does an artist devoting time to make sure that his final lasting record -- his musical epitaph -- is as profound and epic as all that came before it.

The album's first track, What Good Am I?, is the sonic equivalent of a film by John Cassavetes. The singer finds himself as the shell of the former modern man, the 905 Lothario sobbing into his forearm as he questions all of his worst decisions, which, in his twilight, he sees affecting the ones he cared about most. For all of the leonine vocals that established Jones' reputation as a great singer, it's his weakening vibrato at the end of the line -- "If I shut myself off / so I can't hear you cry" -- that possesses as much raw emotion as anything he's ever done. God bless the week's middleweight belt holder, Win Butler, but seasoned artists who find it in themselves to push their hands deep into their guts and pull up small devils tassled to their soul are more rare these days than indie kings attempting to hold form. One of Praise and Blame's calling cards is the sound of an artist making music without having to worry about cementing his legacy or answering, as Butler does, to a fickle generation tied to his music. After all, those whose lives were defined by It's Not Unusual or She's a Lady are now old and Viagra'ed, and, even though they've got the best stories, it's hard to get them off the couch, which is why Jones's music is as important as any new quaking band's. On Billy Joe Shaver's If I Give My Soul, Jones sings about being "a foolish man," sounding like a repentant playboy whose wife has gone and whose children have left him. The singer's La-Z-Boy is torn and weathered, and his TV has to be hit with a stick to work. In this song, you can glean as much about the suburbs as anything by Arcade Fire.

Praise and Blame is a gift to the ears partly because it's the sound of an artist making music for no one other than himself. The irony is that, like Nick Lowe's fiftysomething triumph, The Convincer, or Elvis Costello's The Delivery Man or, really, anything by Loudon Wainwright, it's unlikely that zoomer radio will find time for Praise and Blame, the medium being burdened, as it is, by light classical, Carrie Underwood or the best of Clay Aiken. Still, Praise and Blame reminds us that it's not only music made by young people that pulls us together, and it shouldn't take some hackneyed '60s revue or Eagles reunion to make this sort of thing happen. If you know someone who is closer to the end than you are to the beginning, it's a record they should own. It's also something that both of you should probably hear.

Read the review here

Tom Jones - ‘Praise & Blame’ - 9/10 Yahoo Music Review

51-v1AbOBnL._SL500_AA300_Having been to the intoxicating heights of panty-throwing Vegas indulgences with old running mates Sinatra and Elvis, we assume Tom Jones is well aware that the Devil does indeed have the best tunes. Yet the man justifiably known as ‘The Voice' also possesses a set of lungs that could rival God's for earth-shattering reverberations; we've found that any top-volume spin of ‘Delilah' can still crack safes at 30 paces. Like a kind of Snoop Dogg of theology, then, with ‘Praise & Blame' Jones unites the secular and spiritual gangs in a way which, on the likes of ‘Lord Help' - as it threatens to run into Yeah Yeah Yeahs' debut EP territory in the fade, having just blasted along on a gothic Americana boogie - sounds like Jones wants to soundtrack an episode of ‘True Blood'. Calling upon the Lord to help the poor, needy, gambling and sinning, he seems equals parts in prayer for and admonishing those he's watching over.

Remember ‘Green, Green Grass Of Home', ‘What's New Pussycat?', ‘You Can Leave Your Hat On'? Even 2008's long-player ‘24 Hours'? Forgot about it. Instead of expansive string arrangements we get low-key embellishments from Gillian Welch and Dave Rawlings; swampy, atmospheric keyboard runs from Booker T; sparingly but perfectly used sassy interjections from a small female chorale; and raw, earthy production from Ethan Johns.

Recorded live, it does for Jones what the ‘American' recordings did for Johnny Cash - a parallel borne out by ‘If I Give My Soul', where Jones wonders: "If I give my soul, will he stop my hands from shaking? / Will my son love me again? / Will she take me back again?" It could easily have come in cracked beauty from ‘The Man In Black''s late output; and though, at 70, Jones' voice is in far greater shape than Cash's, for him to make such benign sentimentality sound as though his life's blood depends on it is no small feat.

As its title suggests, this record is no endless stream of religious doctrine. With the likes of ‘Did Trouble Me', ‘Ain't No Grave', ‘Run On' and a cover of Bob Dylan's ‘What Good Am I?' the songs have been carefully selected to tease different nuances out of a system of complexities built on judgement, forgiveness, supplication and fear. That Jones has done it so essentially and convincingly is exactly why he deserves to be known as ‘The Voice'. Take those hats off and launch them into the air for one of the most uplifting, career-topping albums anyone could have released, regardless of age.

9/10

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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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Tom Jones: A new peak for the voice of the valleys

His record company doubted him. But this pop legend hasn’t stayed at the top for 45 years without understanding what his fans want By Ian Burrell

My, my, my, Tom the Voice, at the age of 70, is set to return to No 1 in the British album charts with a record which was described as "some sick joke" by one of the executives on his own label.

When Jones first heard of the scathing email in which David Sharpe, vice-president at Island Records, demanded of colleagues that they "pull back this project immediately or get my money back", he was said to be bristling with indignation.

"I've never met the fellow," he said dismissively. Now, as he prepares to stand, hips swinging and trousers tight, astride the hit parade once more, the Welsh warbler might consider toasting Mr Sharpe with one of his favourite vodka martinis.

Maybe it was all one big publicity stunt. Leaked to the press, the email ridiculed the gospel-influenced tone of Praise & Blame, which Jones has described as his "Johnny Cash album", exploring themes of faith and redemption. "What are you thinking when he went all spiritual," snapped Mr Sharpe. Intrigued, thousands went to listen to, and indeed buy, a record that is vying with Eminem for top spot in tomorrow's chart. Perhaps in years to come, schools of public relations will be citing the "sick joke" routine as a prime example of a successful campaign, up there with the frenzy of support generated for the BBC 6 Music radio station by an apparent threat to close it down.

It's unlikely. The probable truth is that Mr Sharpe just didn't get Tom Jones. He didn't realise the authentic appeal of a singer who learned his chops in a Presbyterian chapel in Pontypridd singing songs such as "Lord, Help the Poor and Needy" by the blues artist Jessie Mae Hemphill. Nor that someone who would stay up late in his Las Vegas hotel suite with his friend Elvis Presley singing evangelist gospel songs such as "The Old Rugged Cross" might have an innate feel for John Lee Hooker's "Burning Hell".

But the public saw the light, sure enough. Especially when Jones went on the penultimate edition of BBC1's Friday Night with Jonathan Ross and performed that Hooker number with all the presence of an artist who was once a fixture at Caesars Palace and had his own networked show on ABC, performing duets with the likes of Little Richard and Ray Charles. Jones found more believers at the arty Latitude Festival in Suffolk earlier this month where he caused crowd chaos by turning up at one of the smaller stages and performing Praise & Blame in its entirety.

This would be Sir Tom's first No 1 album for 11 years, since Reload, a collection of cover duets mostly with young artists, such as the Cardigans and Natalie Imbruglia. In that sense, Praise & Blame is a comeback moment, though a very different one from his resurgence at the end of the 1980s when his son Mark became his manager and helped him to emerge from a period in which he had gone more than a decade without a British hit.

In 1988 he scored a massive hit and captured a new generation of admirers by recording Prince's "Kiss", produced by the avant-garde Art of Noise. Soon afterwards he was performing for a younger audience at the Glastonbury festival and signing in 1993 to Interscope Records, the same label as Snoop Dogg.

It seems that Mr Sharpe was hoping for something with a contemporary feel after Island poached Jones from EMI in October last year for £1.5m. "Having lured him from EMI, the deal was that you would deliver a record of upbeat tracks along the lines of 'Sex Bomb' and 'Mama Told Me [Not to Come]'," he railed, referring to hits from the Reload album that Jones had enjoyed with house DJ Mousse T and Welsh rockers the Stereophonics respectively.

Perhaps he should have taken a closer look at the singer's appearance lately. The dyed jet-black thatch and goatee beard have gone, replaced by a natural grey. "I like the colour of my hair now," Jones said recently. "Before, when I didn't dye it, it was a salt and pepper colour but the last time I left it, it came out white and I thought, 'Well, that's good'." In every sense Jones is going back to his roots.

There has been great diversity in Jones's 47-year professional career. He has had hit records in almost every genre, and even when he went through a period of being unfashionable in Britain, during the late 1970s and 1980s, he had a successful career as a country singer in America.

From the age of six, Thomas Woodward, as he was christened, was tugging at his mother's skirt asking to be allowed to sing at family events. He would have followed his father down the mines but for the intervention of tuberculosis, which struck him down at the age of 13 to the extent that his ambition in life was once to walk as far as the lamp-post at the end of his street.

"The doctor said to my parents, 'Whatever you do, you can't put this boy in a coalmine because he has weak lungs'," Jones told an interviewer two years ago, enjoying the delicious irony of the diagnosis.

He has demonstrated extraordinary endurance, and his energy is unflagging even as a septuagenarian. "Once you pass 50 you're bullet proof. You're still performing and doing it, and kids like it," he said in 2002 of his youthful new audience.

There was always a bit of kitsch to Jones's 1990s appeal; the medallion man of hairy chest and open shirt hanging out with the young things. The famously jovial Welshman will surely have no regrets, yet there is something more organic about his latest reconnection with the soulful sounds that inspired him when he started out in the 1960s with a love of American rhythm and blues. "It was ... like when I had my band in Wales," he said of the experience of recording Praise & Blame.

After moving to London, Jones adopted his mother's maiden name, which enhanced his image as the Voice of the Valleys. He had his first No 1 in 1965 with "It's Not Unusual", a song that would later be covered by the Supremes. Mary Wilson, one of the singers in that Motown group, has claimed to have had an affair with Welshman, who has been married to his childhood sweetheart Linda for more than half a century. Countless other women who have pelted Jones with their underwear at his concerts down the years have doubtless dreamed of their own liaisons.

Jones is still best known for his 1960s hits, such as "Delilah", a passionate story of infidelity, jealousy and revenge, and the Peter Sellers film theme tune "What's New Pussycat?". Both have become karaoke classics. The plaintive "Green, Green Grass of Home", which was a No 1 for Jones in 1966, took on new significance recently when the Welshman indicated that having moved to Los Angeles in 1974, partly for tax reasons, he was considering moving back to Britain. In 2005 his wealth was estimated at £175m.

Maybe Praise & Blame is a part of that process. A consummate entertainer, he is doing this one for himself as much as anyone. "I've been wanting to do this album for a long time, but it's hard to get a record company to go along with you because most of them want hit singles and pop music which I have been known to do," he told the BBC earlier this month.

Reading David Sharpe's now infamous email it's clear that's exactly what the Island executive had been after. But Jones has made his Johnny Cash album all the same. Now, 42 years after he first headed the album charts with Delilah, he is set to outdo Bob Dylan, who set a record by going to No 1 last year with Together Through Life at the age of 68. That's not such a bad set of lungs.

A life in brief

Born: Thomas Jones Woodward, 7 June 1940, in Pontypridd, South Wales.

Family: His father, Thomas Woodward, was a miner and his mother Freda a housewife. At 17 he married Linda Trenchard. A month later they had a son Mark, now his manager. In 2008 he acknowledged paternity of model Katherine Berkery's son, whom he has never met. He has two grandchildren.

Education: Left school at 16 with no qualifications.

Career: Since his first British No 1 in 1965 with "It's Not Unusual", Jones has been a regular feature on the British and American music charts. His ability to switch between genres and to collaborate with musicians from Van Morrison to Wyclef Jean has helped to continue this success. Jones has released 58 albums and sold about 150 million records, winning two Brit awards and receiving a knighthood in 1996.

He says: "I'll record as long as my voice works and as long as people want to hear me."

They said: "He's one of the greatest performers I've ever seen, and the greatest voice." Elvis Presley

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