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Richard Thompson

Front Parlour Ballads (Cooking Vinyl)

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By Lee Zimmerman

Published on September 07, 2005

Singer/guitarist Richard Thompson's songs of darkness and despair aren't an easy listen, given his doleful vocals, tangled and turbulent melodies, and observational narratives that strike a not-so-delicate balance between irony and invective. Nevertheless, as a founder of Fairport Convention, the '60s band at the center of Britain's folk-rock fusion, Thompson is still revered for his ability to tap into the traditional. That's evident on the all-acoustic Front Parlour Ballads, which draws on early-twentieth-century musical forms in its downcast tales of lovers, losers and lechers. "Let It Blow," with its driving refrain, is the most riveting of the bunch, though the tender "Precious One" and the rousing "The Boys of Mutton Street" are also excellent. Elsewhere, though, the doom, gloom and bittersweet circumstances become so ponderous that they actually impede the proceedings. But despite their sometimes skewed perspective, these songs mark another triumph for Thompson.