Front Parlour Ballads

Front Parlour Ballads
Studio album by Richard Thompson
Released August 2005
Recorded 2004 at Trellis Sound, Pacific Palisades, California
Genre Contemporary folk
Length 46:47
Label Cooking Vinyl
Producer Richard Thompson and Simon Tassano
Richard Thompson chronology

Live from Austin, TX
(2005)
Front Parlour Ballads
(2005)
Grizzly Man
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Rolling Stone [1]
Allmusic [2]

Front Parlour Ballads is the eleventh studio album by Richard Thompson, released in 2005.

His 2005 release on the Cooking Vinyl label was a literally homemade album. Thompson's aim was to create an album that sounded small and intimate. Front Parlour Ballads has been hailed as his first solo, all acoustic album since 1981 but strictly speaking it's neither of those things - percussionist Debra Dobkin plays on two tracks, Let It Blow and My Soul, My Soul and Thompson himself adds electric guitar to the same two tracks.

Thompson had a small studio built in his garage at home and recorded the tracks onto his laptop computer, adding overdubs as he deemed necessary. Even Dobkin's contributions were recorded in the same way.

Thompson did not expect to sell many copies of Front Parlour Ballads. The critics, as usual, acclaimed the new release, but rather more surprising were strong early sales in both the U.S. and Britain, and Front Parlour Ballads debuted in the indie charts on both sides of the atlantic.

Track listing

All songs written by Richard Thompson

  1. "Let It Blow"
  2. "For Whose Sake?"
  3. "Miss Patsy"
  4. "Old Thames Side"
  5. "How Does Your Garden Grow?"
  6. "My Soul, My Soul"
  7. "Cressida"
  8. "Row, Boys Row"
  9. "The Boys Of Mutton Street"
  10. "Precious One"
  11. "A Solitary Life"
  12. "Should I Betray?"
  13. "When We Were Boys At School"

Personnel

References

  1. Ringen, Jonathan. "Richard Thompson: Front Parlour Ballads : Music Reviews : Rolling Stone". rollingstone.com. Archived from the original on 2008-04-21. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  2. Deming, Mark. Front Parlour Ballads at AllMusic. Retrieved 1 September 2011.