indiepop.co.uk : music news and reviews
   

 
  OFFERS: Free Playstation PS3   
Music Menu


Main Menu
Adult Contemporary
Blues
Children's Music
Christmas Music
Classical
Compilations
Country
Dance & Electronic
Easy Listening
Hard Rock & Metal
Hip-Hop & Rap
Indie
Jazz
Miscellaneous
Pop
R&B and Soul
Reggae
Rock
Soundtracks
World & Folk


Other Sections Featuring this Product
Bestsellers
Bestsellers
Singer-songwriters
Folk Bestsellers

Reviews of: A Piece Of What You Need

by Teddy Thompson

ProductName

Title: A Piece Of What You Need
Artist: Teddy Thompson

Publisher: Universal
Label: Universal
EAN: 0602517797697
Release Date: 2008-08-25
 
Binding: Audio CD
Number of Discs: 1
 
List Price: £16.99
 

>> View Track Listing
Buy From AmazonA Piece Of What You Need
Teddy Thompson
£7.40 | View Offer


Product Description

Son of English folk-rock veterans Richard and Linda Thompson, Teddy Thompson has been blessed with a similar musical talent to his famous parents, yet his three albums to date have failed to break through into the mainstream. A Piece of What You Need however--his fourth album--has been helmed by Marius de Vries (Bjork, Madonna, Rufus Wainwright) and appears to have ‘commercial success’ written all over it. De Vries has given Thompson’s music a newfound confidence. The tunes here are upbeat and strutting, with cerebral lyrics that merge the heavier side of life--suicide, alcoholism, drugs--with wry looks at love and happiness. As on previous albums, Thompson mellifluously mixes together folk, pop, country and rock, with De Vries adding extra production flourishes that give the album a thoroughly contemporary edge. Sensibly, it was decided to leave Thompson’s silky vocals fully centre-stage, since it’s his voice more than anything else that draws the listener in and keeps him there. The trio of opening tracks--the introspective “The Things I Do,” the humorous “What’s This?” and recent single “In My Arms”--get the album off to a captivating start, and Thompson ensures standards don’t slip, following up with the Springsteen-esque rocker “Don’t Know What I Was Thinking” and the catchy country shuffle “Can’t Sing Straight”. Ballads like “Where To Go From Here” and “Slippery Slope” show the singer’s ability to be touching without turning up the kitsch, while “Turning The Gun On Myself” really is as gloomy as it sounds. Full of skilfully executed, well-crafted modern pop, this is arguably Thompson's best work to date. --Danny McKenna


Reviews


best so far- maybe mainstream soon but hopefully not

This has managed to take TT's melancholic style and lyrics and wrap them up in a more layered and upbeat musical style. Definitely his best album so far! Seen him in concert and hopefully this will mean bigger venues and maybe he can lighten up a bit. Yes Teddy you are good so don't be so serious.
2008-11-15

Wonderful stuff

This is a wonderful album, and one of my favourites of the year.

I was vaguely aware of Teddy through the Brokeback Mountain soundtrack, and have enjoyed some of his mum and dad's work, the legendary folkies Richard and Linda Thompson. But when I heard 'In My Arms' on Jonathan Ross's R2 show, I was sold. And went out and bought everything of his I could find.

Americana with an alt feel, beautiful love songs with wry, slightly subversive lyrics are his stock in trade but this album brings a new pop sensibility that the music wears extremely well.

I later read an interview with Teddy where he was suggesting that his frustration with not breaking through to a wider audience was beginning to make him doubt his future as a music maker. This album deserves to be that breakthrough.

Buy this album and make sure Teddy continues to make music for many many years to come. Looking forward to catching him live in Brighton in 2009!
2008-10-18

Album of the Year contender

I was put off this excellent example of songwriting by magazine reviewers love of altfolk and the folk gerontocracy (Waterson/Carthy/Thompson) but after I heard clips I havent stopped playing it. Its on the car CD, the PC and my ipod. Original twists on love ("In my arms" is just one example) life and the meaning of....whatever; no, seriously, its not that Thompson is a navelgazer anymore than Julian Dawson, Jackson Browne (with whom this album very favourably compares) or Teddy's daddy Richard, but he does write thoughtfully and his language is as mellifluous as his tunes. Too bad there's an unnecessary 10 minute gap until the hidden track "The Price of Love". After three okay albums, Teddy Thompson has demonstrated greatness as a singer/songwriter and I desperately hope he maintains his skill and craft on the next album.
2008-10-17

Nothing Special

Oh dear. Another bland album from a son-of-someone-famous. If Teddy Thompson was called Bert Morris and came from Glossop, he wouldn't have been given the time of day. Yet another offspring given a foot up when perhaps they don't deserve it. Sadly, Bert Morris from Glossop may be a true original, but Teddy Thompson, son of the the Bert Morris and Bertina Morris of the 1960s, isn't. Leave this one in TESCO where it belongs.

2008-10-11

Nice Album

Having been a fan of Richard and Linda Thomson in their early days, I decided to give this album a try. Boy was I surprised. It has a nice mix of up to date and retro music. Try the opening track for a start. You can see the influence of his mum and dad on some tracks but don't be fooled. He is very much his own man.
2008-09-30
You may also be interested in ....

Fleet Foxes
Fleet Foxes
Fleet Foxes

The Seldom Seen Kid
The Seldom Seen Kid
Elbow

I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too
I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too
Martha Wainwright

Meet Glen Campbell
Meet Glen Campbell
Glen Campbell

Separate Ways
Separate Ways
Teddy Thompson

 

Check out other sites in our network
Free Band Websites, Music Reviews, MP3 Players, Hi-Fi Separates, Gig Swap UK, Genealogy Books, Trusted Opinions
© indiepop.co.uk 2006