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Linda Thompson (singer) |
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| Linda Thompson | ||
|---|---|---|
| Background information | ||
| Birth name | Linda Pettifer | |
| Also known as | Linda Peters | |
| Born | 1948 | |
| Origin | London, England |
|
| Genre(s) | British Folk Rock | |
| Years active | 1972-present | |
| Associated acts |
Richard Thompson | |
Linda Thompson (b. 1948 in London, England) is a British
singer. Born Linda Pettifer in the London Borough
of
Contents
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When Linda Pettifer was six, her family moved to a rough
district of Glasgow.
In about 1966
she started singing in folk clubs, and in 1967 began studying modern languages at London
University, but quit the latter after 4 months. She changed her name
to Linda Peters. By day she sang advertising jingles, including one
with Manfred
Mann. By night she sang folk songs in coffee houses, meeting up with
key members of the folk scene including Sandy
Denny. During 1970
she had an affair with Martin Carthy, and was Joe Boyd's
girlfriend in the early 1970s. Linda met Richard
Thompson in 1969
but they did not record together until 1972. By then she had recorded the Bob Dylan
song "You Ain't Going Nowhere", released as an MGM single in 1972 by
"Paul and Linda". The Paul mentioned is Paul McNeill - another friend
of Sandy Denny's and
Her reputation led to her being invited to join The Bunch, a
loose supergroup of folk rock luminaries including former Fairport
Convention members Sandy Denny, Richard
Thompson, and Ashley Hutchings that
recorded an album called
After leaving Fairport Convention, Richard
teamed up with Simon Nicol and Linda Peters.
Calling themselves "Hokey Pokey," they toured as a trio. Linda and
Richard married in 1972. Richard's first solo album, also recorded in
1972, sold extremely poorly. The next album,
Their come-back album was called
"Shoot Out The Lights" was surprisingly successful in America, and the Thompsons, despite the fractured state of their relationship, were offered a long and lucrative tour of the USA. Simon Nicol described the final tour, in the summer of 1982, as "like walking on a tightrope", and that as a result the first thing he did on stage was "look for the exit". The couple were barely speaking to each other, and Linda would occasionally try and trip Richard up as he walked on stage.
Despite the emotional problems, however, the music they shared was reputedly astonishing, and hearing this their record company arranged a mobile recording studio to record dates for a live album. The recording could not be arranged before the last date of the tour. The penultimate date of the tour was in Los Angeles (where Richard's new lover lived). Linda reportedly performed the greatest show of her life, then went to stay with her friend Linda Ronstadt. The tapes have never been released, although a version of "Walking On A Wire" from earlier in the tour is on the Free Reed "RT" boxed set.
When Richard left Linda, she was pregnant with their third child, Kamila.
Linda lost her voice for the next two years. Heroically, she
made a new start in 1984,
singing with "The Home Service" at the National Theatre's production of
medieval mystery plays and in 1985 she released her solo album One
Clear Moment, then fell silent for eleven years. One song
from the album, called "Telling Me Lies", written with
Unlike Richard, Linda has no love of religion. Her new-found determination to sing is stoic in nature.
Richard and Linda Thompson
Solo albums
Singles - Richard and Linda Thompson
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