| Richard Thompson |

Richard
Thompson at Fairport's Cropredy
Convention 2005
|
| Background information |
| Born |
3 April 1949 (1949-04-03) (age 58) |
| Origin |
Notting
Hill Gate, London |
| Genre(s) |
Rock, Folk rock, Electric
folk |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer, Songwriter, Guitarist |
| Years active |
1960s – present |
Associated
acts |
Fairport
Convention |
| Website |
richardthompson-music.com |
For other persons named
Richard Thompson, see Richard Thompson
(disambiguation).
Richard John Thompson (born 3 April 1949 in Notting
Hill Gate, West
London)
is a British musician, best
known for his guitar
playing and songwriting.
As a guitarist
Thompson is notable for the breadth of his influences — which range
from Buddy
Holly and James Burton via Les Paul and Django
Reinhardt to less likely influences such as pipe player Billy
Pigg — and for his penchant for improvising rather than
relying on worked out solos for each song.
Over a long career (he first recorded in 1967 as a member of Fairport
Convention), Thompson has received much acclaim from his peers and has
consistently been well-regarded by critics. While he has never become a
household name — even his best-known albums have enjoyed only limited
commercial success — he has earned a reputation as a skilled and
compelling live performer and a consistently vital recording artist. In
August 2003, Rolling Stone magazine listed Thompson
as #19 on its list of The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time.
He continues to write and record new material and plays many live shows
each year.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
and Career
- 1.1 Early
life and career (1949 to 1972)
- 1.2 Richard
and Linda Thompson (1973 to 1982)
- 1.3 Solo
(1983 to present)
- 1.4 Side
projects and collaborations
- 1.5 Retrospectives
and tributes
- 2 Thompson's
guitars
- 2.1 Electric
guitars
- 2.2 Acoustic
guitars
- 2.3 See
also
- 3 Discography
- 3.1 With
Fairport Convention
- 3.2 Solo
or with Linda Thompson
- 3.3 Richard
Thompson & Danny Thompson
- 3.4 The
GPs
- 3.5 French
Frith Kaiser Thompson
- 3.6 Philip
Pickett and Richard Thompson
- 3.7 The
Bunch
- 3.8 Soundtracks
- 3.9 Compilations
- 3.10 Fan
club and boutique label releases
- 3.11 DVDs
and videos
- 4 References
- 5 External
links
|
Biography and Career
Early life and career (1949 to
1972)
Richard John Thompson was born in Ladbroke Crescent, Notting
Hill, West London,
England.
He grew up in a household full of music and books. His father, a Scot, was an
amateur guitar player, and several other family members had played
music professionally. Whilst still at school, he formed his first band
"Emil and the Detectives" (named after a book and a movie by the
same name) along with fellow classmate Hugh
Cornwell on bass guitar, later lead singer and guitarist of The
Stranglers.
Although, like so many musicians of his generation, he was
exposed to and embraced rock and roll music at an early age,
he was also exposed to his father’s collection of jazz and traditional Scottish
music. All these various styles were to colour Thompson’s playing in
the years to come.
By the age of 18 Thompson was playing with the newly formed Fairport
Convention. It was Thompson’s guitar playing that caught the ear of
American producer Joe Boyd.
Largely on the strength of Thompson’s playing Boyd took them under his
wing and negotiated them a contract with Island
Records.
It was about this time that Thompson, already acquiring a
reputation as an outstanding guitar player, started writing songs
seriously. This seems to have been out of necessity — Fairport
Convention were essentially a cover band at first.
"I remember saying to Ashley after a gig, that I was kind of
embarrassed about doing the material we were doing, because it seemed
that we should have outgrown doing covers — even though it was only
1967 — it somehow wasn’t good enough and other bands were writing their
own stuff and we should too. I remember being angry and saying to
Ashley this isn’t good enough, we’ve got to get some original
material... and stuff started to trickle through."
By the time of Fairport’s second album, recorded and released
in early 1969, Thompson was starting to emerge as a songwriter of
distinction. As Fairport’s lineup and their sound evolved, Thompson
continued to grow in stature as a player and as a songwriter with
compositions like "Meet On The Ledge", "Genesis Hall" and "Crazy Man
Michael".
In January of 1971 Thompson announced that he was leaving
Fairport Convention. His decision seems to have been instinctive,
rather than a calculated career move.
"I left Fairport as a gut reaction and didn't really know
what I was doing, except writing. I was writing stuff and it seemed
interesting and I thought it would be fun to make a record. And at the
same time — 70-71 — I was doing a lot of session
work as a way of avoiding any serious ideas about a career."
In April of 1972 he released his first solo album Henry
the Human Fly. The album sold poorly and was
panned by the press, especially the influential Melody
Maker magazine. With time "Henry" has come to be more highly regarded,
but at the time the critics' response hurt both Thompson and his career.
By this time Thompson had struck up a relationship with the
singer Linda Peters, who
had sung on Henry the Human Fly. In October 1972
the couple were married, and Thompson, with Linda now effectively his
front woman, regrouped for his next album and the next phase of his
career.
Richard and Linda Thompson (1973
to 1982)
The first Richard and Linda Thompson
album, I Want to
See the Bright Lights Tonight was recorded in
May 1973 in short time and on a small budget. Largely because of the
petrol shortage in Britain and its impact on the availability of vinyl
for records, "Bright Lights" was held back by Island Records for nearly
a year before being released in April of 1974. The album was well
received by the critics, though sales were less than stellar. The
record is now regarded as one of the highlights of Thompson’s career
and a masterpiece of English folk rock.
Thompson’s lyrics expressed a rather dismal world view, and it
has been suggested that the bleak subject matter of his songs helped to
keep his recordings off the hit parade. A more likely explanation was
given by ex-Island A&R
man Richard Williams in the BBC TV documentary A Solitary Life
— Thompson was just not interested in fame and its trappings.
The Thompsons recorded two more albums — Hokey
Pokey and Pour
Down Like Silver, both released in 1975 —
before Richard Thompson decided to leave the music business and the
couple moved to a Sufi
commune in East
Anglia.
It was not apparent from their records at first, but the
Thompsons had embraced the esoteric sufi strand of Islam in early 1974.
I Want To See the Bright Lights Tonight was recorded
before this conversion, but released sometime afterwards. The songs for
the second Richard and Linda album, Hokey Pokey
were similarly written some time ahead of the album's recording and
eventual release. It was Pour Down Like Silver,
with its cover photo of a turbaned Richard Thompson gazing out at the
world, that tipped the public off to the Thompsons' growing
preoccupation with their faith. Their son Teddy
Thompson, who also became a singer-songwriter, was born in
1976.
The trilogy of albums released either side of his sojourn in
the commune was heavily influenced by Thompson's beliefs and by Sufi scripture, but in
the long run his spiritual interests (he remains a committed Muslim) have not
notably influenced his work — or at least, not to the extent they have
in the case of Cat Stevens who initially
renounced secular music altogether after adopting the Muslim faith.
Thompson's religion manifests itself more obliquely in his work — for
example, one of the most striking songs off 2003’s The
Old Kit Bag is "Outside of the Inside", a
sarcastic post-9/11 critique of the fundamentalist mindset, which
Thompson usually introduces in concert as "a Taliban's view of the
world".
In 1978, Thompson decided to take his family out of the
commune and go back to their old home in Hampstead.
He also decided to return to making music, partly because, as he
commented at the time, he'd come to realise "that [he] wasn't really
any good at anything else".
Joe
Boyd had already invited Richard Thompson to play on Julie
Covington’s debut album. With studio time and the American session
musicians hired to work on the Covington album available, the Thompsons
went back into the studio to record under their own name for the first
time in three years.
The resulting album, First
Light was warmly received by the critics but
did not sell particularly well. Neither did its follow up, 1979's
harder-edged and more cynical Sunnyvista.
Chrysalis Records did not take up
their option to renew the contract, and the Thompsons found themselves
without a contract, but not without admirers.
Gerry Rafferty had booked
the Thompsons as the support act for his 1980 tour, and had also used
Richard as a session player on his Night Owl album.
Rafferty generously offered to finance the recording of a new Richard
and Linda Thompson album which he would then use to secure a contract
for the Thompsons. Richard Thompson fell out with Rafferty during this
project and was not happy with the finished product. Nevertheless
Rafferty kept his side of the bargain and presented the album to
several record companies — none of which expressed interest in signing
the Thompsons. Rafferty did not recover his investment.
About a year later Joe Boyd signed the Thompsons to his small
Hannibal label and a new album was recorded. Shoot
Out the Lights included new recordings of many
of the songs recorded in 1980, and was clearly a very strong album.
Linda Thompson was pregnant at the time of the recording, and so the
album’s release was delayed until they could tour behind the album.
Linda's pregnancy also meant that she did not sing on all of the songs
she had sung on the original Gerry Rafferty
recordings of songs.
As an interim measure, Richard Thompson decided to arrange for
a low-key tour of the USA.
This tour was set up by Nancy Covey who had been in UK
in 1981 trying to sign Thompson to play at the famous McCabe’s guitar
shop in Santa
Monica. During this tour Thompson and Covey began an affair, and in
December of 1981 Richard and Linda Thompson separated.
On its release in 1982, Shoot Out the Lights
was lauded by critics and sold quite well — especially in the USA. The Thompsons, now
a couple for professional purposes only, toured the USA to support the album
and then went their separate ways. Both the album and their live shows
were well received by the American media, and Shoot Out the
Lights effectively relaunched their career — just as their
marriage was falling apart. In spite of the relative success of the
tour, tensions were high between the Thompsons; during one performance,
in the midst of one of Richard's guitar solos, Linda walked up to him
and kicked him in the shin for no obvious reason.
Richard Thompson at Fairport's Cropredy
Convention 2005
Solo (1983 to present)
After a stormy tour of the USA the Thompsons separated professionally.
Richard Thompson continued recording as a solo artist. His 1983 album Hand
Of Kindness saw him working with Boyd again,
but the album was startlingly different from Shoot Out The
Lights — swaggering and extrovert where the previous album
had been dark and angst-ridden.
With his separation from Linda finalised, Richard Thompson
began to commute between twin bases in London and Los Angeles and began to tour regularly
in the USA. Encouraged by the success of his solo shows in late 1981
and early 1982 he began to perform solo with increasing frequency as
well as continuing to tour with a band. In 1983 and 1984 he toured the
USA and Europe with the Richard Thompson Big Band
the included two saxophone players in addition to the more
usual rhythm section, second guitar and accordion. Set lists included
covers of classic rock 'n roll songs and jazz standards such as Tuxedo
Junction.
In 1985 Thompson returned to the big league when he signed
with Polygram
and received a sizable advance. He also married Nancy Covey and moved
his home and his working base to California. Across
A Crowded Room was his last album to be
recorded in England
and the last to have Boyd as producer.
After sales failed to match the critics’ praises Thompson was
under some pressure to repay Polygram’s investment with a hit album. In
1986 he released Daring Adventures
which was recorded in Los Angeles and produced by Mitchell
Froom. Daring Adventures, with its rich sound,
markedly different production and use of American session
players was perceived by some as evidence of Thompson’s increasing
"Americanisation". Perhaps more significantly the album continued the
trend, begun with Across A Crowded Room, of
Thompson’s songs moving away from the seemingly personal and towards
the character sketches and narratives for which he has since become
famous. Froom and Polygram had
plans to target college and the growing "alternative" markets with Daring
Adventures. Sales improved, but not by enough.
Polygram
declined an option to renew the contract. Thompson’s management
negotiated a new deal with Capitol Records and Thompson
released a string of albums between 1988 and 1996 with Froom in the
producer's chair.
For a short while a late career commercial breakthrough, like
that enjoyed by Bonnie Raitt, seemed likely. The Grammy nominated
1991 album Rumor And Sigh
sold well and a single, "I Feel So Good," achieved some chart success.
The song "1952 Vincent Black
Lightning" from Rumor and Sigh remains the most
requested song on National Public Radio
. Unfortunately, a boardroom shake-up at Capitol
saw Thompson fan and champion Hale Milgrim replaced by Garry Gersh;
Thompson's next album Mirror
Blue was held back for almost a year before
being released; and Rumor And Sigh's success was
not capitalised on.
Mirror Blue was released in 1994, and
Thompson took a band on the road to promote the album. This band was
the smallest that Thompson had put together so far. He was joined by Dave
Mattacks on drums,
Danny
Thompson on double bass, and Pete Zorn on acoustic
guitar, backing vocals, mandolin and various wind
instruments. This lineup toured with Thompson the following two years,
and all subsequent Richard Thompson Band lineups
have been built around Zorn and Danny Thompson.
Richard Thompson at the Cambridge Folk Festival, 2006
Thompson continued recording for Capitol
until 1999, when Mock Tudor
was recorded and released. In addition Thompson modified his deal with Capitol
so that he could release and directly market live,
limited-quantity, not-for-retail albums. The first of these was Live
At Crawley, released in 1995. These "authorised
bootlegs" are well-regarded by
Thompson fans.
In 2001
it was Thompson who refused the option to renew a contract, and he
parted ways with Capitol. Hereafter Thompson would
fund the recording of his own albums and have them distributed and
marketed by smaller independent labels.
Ironically the move away from big labels and big budgets
brought a bigger marketing push and healthier sales. Thompson's first
two self-funded releases, 2003's The
Old Kit Bag and 2005’s Front
Parlour Ballads, did well in the indie
charts on both sides of the Atlantic.
Two new releases are schedued for 2007. Sweet Warrior,
a collection of new songs recorded in Los
Angeles will be released towards the end of May on Proper Records in
the UK and on Shout! Factory elsewhere. In early August Island
Records will release a live Richard and Linda Thompson album compiled
from recordings made during the November 1975 tour to promote the Pour
Down Like Silver album.
Side projects and collaborations
Over the years Thompson has participated in many projects with
other musicians. Often these projects allow him to participate in music
and experiments that would not fit well on his own albums.
In between leaving Fairport Convention in early
1971 and releasing his debut solo album in 1972 he undertook a large
amount of session work, most notably on
albums by John Martyn, Al
Stewart, Matthews Southern Comfort,
Sandy
Denny and Nick Drake.
During the same period he also worked on two collaborative
projects. Morris On was
recorded with Ashley Hutchings, John
Kirkpatrick, Dave Mattacks and Barry
Dransfield, and was a collection of English traditional tunes arranged
for electric instruments. “The Bunch” were almost the reverse
conceptually – a grouping of English folk rock musicians (including Sandy
Denny, Linda Peters and
members of Fairport Convention) recording a
selection of classic rock and roll tunes.
Thompson has continued to guest on albums by an array of
artists, from Crowded House and Bonnie
Raitt to Norma Waterson and Beausoleil
and folk artists like Cathal McConnell and Bob Davenport.
Richard Thompson with Fairport Convention's
Dave
Pegg at Cropredy, 2005.
Since the early 1980s Thompson has appeared at Fairport
Convention's annual Cropredy Festival, both in his own
right and as a participant in sets with current and previous Fairport
members (He once joked that Fairport Convention are a bit like the Hotel
California: "you can check out any time you
like, but you can never leave"). These sets are seldom confined to
performances of songs out of the Thompson or Fairport Convention
canons, and in recent years some surprise offerings have included the
soul classic "I Heard It Through the Grapevine" (with Thompson backed
by the Roy
Wood Big Band), The Beatles's "I'm Down" and
even "The Lady Is a Tramp".
Thompson has displayed a penchant for the avant
garde as well, working with former Pere
Ubu singer David Thomas's grouping The
Pedestrians on two albums in 1981 and 1982, respectively. In the 1980s,
he was associated with a loose-fitting group called The Golden
Palominos, who were led by drummer Anton Fier and included at times on stage
and on record Jack Bruce, Michael
Stipe, Carla
Bley, John
Lydon, Bill Laswell and others. He has worked
with experimental guitarist Henry Kaiser, most notably
as part of the ad hoc aggregation French Frith Kaiser
Thompson with whom he recorded two albums. In 1997 he worked with
long-time friend and band member Danny
Thompson to record a concept album Industry
that dealt with the decline of British industry. A year later he worked
with early
music expert Philip Pickett on the acclaimed Bones
of All Men which fused renaissance tunes with contemporary
music.
In recent years Thompson has devised and toured his show 1000 Years of Popular
Music. The inspiration for this came when Playboy magazine
asked Thompson (and many other music industry figures) in 1999 for
their suggestions for the "top ten songs of the millennium". Correctly
guessing that Playboy expected most people's lists to start at around
1950, Thompson took them at their word and presented a list of songs
from the 11th century to the present day. Perhaps not surprisingly,
Playboy didn't use his list, but the exercise gave him the idea for a
show which takes a chronological trip through popular music across the
ages. Thompson acknowledges that this is an ambitious undertaking,
partly because he reckons that he is "technically unqualified to sing
ninety per cent of the material", and partly because of the spare
musical setting he restricts himself to: besides his acoustic guitar,
he's backed by singer/pianist Judith Owen and a percussionist. A
typical performance would start with a medieval round, progress via a Purcell aria,
Victorian music-hall and Hoagy Carmichael and climax with
Thompson's unique take on the Britney Spears hit "Oops!... I Did It
Again."
In 2004 Thompson was asked to create the soundtrack music for
the Werner
Herzog documentary Grizzly Man. The
score, which was recorded over a two-day period in December, 2004,
brought Thompson together with a group of improvisational musicians,
mostly from the San Francisco Bay area; video
footage from the sessions was edited into a mini-documentary, In
the Edges, which was included with the DVD release of Grizzly
Man.
Retrospectives and tributes
Thompson has been well-served by compilers of retrospective
collections. These are partly aimed at curious new listeners who are
interested in hearing more of him, but are also essential purchases for
more committed fans, since they contain material which is unavailable
elsewhere. 1976's (guitar, vocal) was a collection of
unreleased material from the previous eight years of Thompson's
appearances on the Island label. The 3-CD set Watching
The Dark is a generous combination of his better-known songs and
previously unreleased live and studio tracks. Action
Packed is a compilation of tracks from his Capitol releases, plus three
hard-to-find songs. Finally, in 2006, the independent label Free Reed
released RT - The
Life and Music of Richard Thompson, a 5-CD box set consisting almost
entirely of previously unreleased performances of songs from throughout
Thompson's long career.
Thompson's songs have been extensively covered; for example,
"Dimming Of The Day" has been performed by artists such as Bonnie
Raitt, Emmylou Harris, David
Gilmour, The Five Blind Boys From Alabama, and The Corrs.
There have been several tribute compilations of other artists'
interpretations of his work, including: Capitol's Beat
The Retreat: Songs By Richard Thompson and Green
Linnet's The
World Is A Wonderful Place: The Songs Of Richard Thompson, both
released in 1994.
Thompson's guitars
Electric guitars
Thompson is often associated with the Fender Stratocaster
guitar, having been seen using such a guitar in concert since his days
with Fairport Convention. More generally he has long been a user of
guitars with single coil pickups, preferring the
sound of such guitars to those equipped with humbucking
pickups.
When Fairport Convention signed their first recording contract
in 1967
Thompson was playing a Gibson ES-175.
He soon changed this guitar for another Gibson, a gold top Les Paul with P-90 pickups - a move
to the thinner, more biting single-coil sound. This guitar later passed
into the ownership of John Martyn.
By the time of his exit from Fairport Thompson was playing a
late 1960s Stratocaster. This was soon changed for an earlier 1950's
model. He was closely associated with this guitar for many years. This
particular Stratocaster is not currently servicable.
Thompson still uses a Stratocaster, an early 60's example
, in concert and in the studio, but is most often seen with a
light-blue solid-body guitar custom built by luthier Danny
Ferrington. This has a Gibson P-90 pickup in the neck position, a Stratocaster
Alnico pickup in the middle position, and a Fender
Broadcaster pickup in the bridge position. This guitar has three volume
controls (one for each pickup), no tone controls and strat-style 5-way
pickup selector switch.
Other electric guitars that Thompson is known to own or have
made significant use of are
- A blonde solid body guitar custom-built by Danny
Ferrington. This guitar originally had two pickups. A third pickup was
added later.
Photos of Thompson with this guitar in its two pickup guise appeared in
the booklet accompanying the 1993 Watching The Dark
compilation. The guitar, with the extra pickup, was used during the
1999 Mock Tudor tour and can be seen in the closing
scenes of the 2003 BBC documentary.
- A powder blue Danelectro U2. Sometimes seen in
publicity photos and used during the recording of the Mock
Tudor and The
Old Kit Bag albums. .
- Fender Telecaster. Some early photos of Richard
and Linda Thompson show a Telecaster in use. There are photos of
Thompson playing a Telecaster at the Cropredy
Festival in the mid-80s.
- A Kellycaster Blackguard. This is A Telecaster copy made by
Kelly Guitars, with a third pickup added by Thompson's Guitar
technician Bobby Eichorn.
This guitar has been used in concert since 2003 and was used for the
photo for the front cover of the Front Parlour Ballads
album.
- An Eastman Uptown AR805-CE. This is a
semi-acoustic, arch-top guitar with a single
pickup. This guitar was used for some photos for the Front
Parlour Ballads album.
Thompson has made intermittent use of Roland's
GK-1 pickup and GL-2 synthesizer over the years. He made use of these
devices on 1979's Sunnyvista album and has
occasionally used them in concert.
Acoustic guitars
Since the early 1990s Thompson has made extensive use of Lowden
acoustic guitars for both live and studio work.
For live work these guitars are fitted with Sunrise pickups. The signal
from the pickup is fed through a pre-amplifier and some effects pedals
(typically a delay pedal and a UniVibe) before being passed into the mixing
desk.
Lowden released a Richard Thompson signature model
in 2007.
During the time he worked with then-wife Linda, and for some
years thereafter, Thompson used a Martin 000-18. Thompson still owns
this guitar, but says that it is not servicable and needs repair.
Thompson also owns a few unusual acoustic guitars made by
Danny Ferrington. An example of these guitars can be seen on the cover
of the Small Town Romance and Hand Of
Kindness albums. In the 2003 BBC documentary he can be seen
playing an acoustic Ferrington baritone guitar in his office whilst
working on a new composition.
In 2006 Thompson auctioned a Rick
Turner RS6 acoustic guitar. He had occasionally used this guitar in
concert. The proceeds from this sale were donated to charity.
See also
The "gear and tunings" FAQ on Thompson's web
site.
Discography
-
For more
details on this topic, see Richard Thompson
discography.
With Fairport
Convention
- Fairport Convention
(1968)
- What We Did On Our
Holidays (1969)
- Unhalfbricking
(1969)
- Liege & Lief
(1969)
- Full House
(1970)
- Live At The LA Troubadour
(1970)
- House Full (1970)
- Heyday:BBC
Radio Sessions (BBC 1968-69) (1987)
- The
History of Fairport Convention
- Live at the BBC
(2007)
Solo or with Linda Thompson
- Henry the Human Fly
(1972)
- I Want to
See the Bright Lights Tonight (1974) *
- Hokey Pokey
(1975) *
- Pour Down Like Silver
(1975) *
- (guitar, vocal)
(1976)
- First Light
(1978) *
- Sunnyvista (1979)
*
- Shoot Out the Lights
(1982) *
- Live! (more or less)
(1976)
- Strict Tempo!
(1981)
- Hand Of Kindness
(1983)
- Small Town Romance
(1984)
- Across A Crowded Room
(1985)
- Daring Adventures
(1986)
- Amnesia
(1988)
- Rumor And Sigh
(1991)
- Watching The Dark
(1993) | 3-CD retrospective
- Mirror Blue
(1994)
- you? me? us?
(1996)
- Mock Tudor
(1999)
- The
Best Of Richard & Linda Thompson: The Island Record Years
(2000) *
- Action Packed
(2001)
- The Old Kit Bag
(2003)
- Live
from Austin, TX (2005)
- Front Parlour Ballads
(2005)
- RT - The
Life and Music of Richard Thompson (2006) |
5-CD retrospective box set
- Sweet Warrior
(2007)
* = Credited to Richard and Linda Thompson
The GPs
- Saturday Rolling Around
(1991)
French Frith Kaiser
Thompson
- Live, Love, Larf &
Loaf (1987)
- Invisible Means
(1990)
Philip Pickett and Richard
Thompson
- The Bones of all Men
(1998)
The Bunch
Soundtracks
- The Marksman (Music From The BBC TV Series)
(1987)
- Hard Cash (1989)
- Sweet Talker
(1991)
- Grizzly Man (Music From the
Werner
Herzog documentary
(2005)
Compilations
- Rogues
Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs, and Chanteys
(2006)
Fan club and boutique label
releases
(these are not available in retail outlets but can be
purchased via Thompson's web site or at concerts)
- Doom And Gloom From The Tomb, volume 1
(1985)
- Doom & Gloom II (Over My Dead Body)
(1991)
- Live At Crawley
(with Danny Thompson) (1995)
- two letter words: live 1994
(1996)
- Celtschmerz: Live in the UK ‘98
(1998)
- Semi-Detached Mock Tudor
(2002)
- More Guitar
(2003)
- 1000 Years Of Popular
Music (2003)
- Ducknapped!
(2003)
- Faithless
(2004)
- The Chrono Show
(2004)
DVDs and videos
- Across A Crowded Room (video - 1985)
- Live in Providence (DVD - 2004)
- Live From Austin, TX (DVD - 2005)
- 1,000 Years of Popular Music (DVD+2CD -
2006)
References
External links