From Medieval Madrigals to Britney Spears
Richard Thompson’s history lesson
When singer/songwriter Richard Thompson brings his “1,000 Years of Popular Music” tour to the Pabst Theater on Feb. 7, his fans may be surprised to learn that none of the British folk-rocker’s own music will factor into the program. According to Thompson, who has recorded more than 50 albums in varying musical combinations, including four film soundtracks and 10 with his group Fairport Convention, this omission is completely by design.
“It
would be really pretentious of me to say, ‘Here’s 1,000 years of really
great songs and, by the way, here are a few of mine as well,’” Thompson
said in a recent interview from his home in Santa Monica, Calif.
Undoubtedly,
fans of Thompson’s songwriting would disagree. The musician has earned
the Ivor Novello Award for songwriting, a Lifetime Achievement Award
from the BBC and the ardent admiration of fellow musicians Bonnie
Raitt, Elvis Costello, Linda Ronstadt and David Byrne, all of whom have
recorded Thompson’s compositions. Thompson even placed 19th in Rolling Stone’s “100
Greatest Guitarists of All Time,” right behind Red Hot Chili Peppers’
John Frusciante and just ahead of jazz legend James Burton.
At least the
musician’s guitar playing, much of it on his familiar Fender
Stratocaster, will loom large on a stage populated by only three
performers. Thompson is joined by vocalist Judith Owen, described by
one critic as a “chanteused-out version of Tori Amos without the
suicidal tendencies,” and vocalist/percussionist Debra Dobkin.
The
trio works very hard to replicate the sounds of everything from
Medieval madrigals to Gilbert & Sullivan to Prince, sometimes with
varying degrees of success, but always through unique interpretation.
“It’s an ambitious, pretentious rediscovery of music,” Thompson said.
“We try to tackle everything written between 1000 A.D. and 2000 A.D.
We’re not skilled in all areas, but no one else is, either.”
The show’s concept was prompted by a 1999 letter from Playboy magazine asking numerous musicians, Thompson included, to identify the 10 greatest songs of the last millennium. Playboy’s editors,
of course, were thinking of songs dating back to the 1950s, when the
magazine’s first issue was published. Thompson, however, took them at
their word, submitting a list dating back to the 11th century.
Needless to say, Playboy didn’t
publish Thompson’s list. However, the letter did give the musician the
idea for his current show, first performed at Los Angeles’ J. Paul
Getty Museum in 2000. Thompson has been periodically touring with the
program ever since.
“It’s been very interesting to explore
different areas of music with which I wasn’t familiar,” Thompson said.
“What I found are a lot of similarities among popular styles of music
over the centuries, a lot of consistency among both musical and lyrical
threads.”
One of the most consistent characteristics has been music al simplicity and the presence of melody lines over what
Thompson called a rhythmic “drone,” not unlike bagpipe music, which
establishes one chord or a series of chords, then weaves melodies in
and around those chords. Consistent themes also dominate a thousand
years’ worth of lyrics, he said. Chivalry, love and moralization are
fairly constant lyrical themes, as are political commentary and attacks
against social injustice.
“There’s also a lot of ‘going-away’
in musical styles and fashions,” Thompson explained. “Good ideas often
get thrown out with the bath water, so to speak, and some never come
back. “The collective improvisation in early New Orleans jazz,
including syncopation on the offbeat, disappeared completely and
necessarily as jazz evolved into swing,” he added. “There are some
really interesting lost musical ideas that someone could incorporate
into the music of the future.”
Such elements will be threaded
throughout Thompson’s performance, which will progress from Middle
Ages’ reels to what has been described as a very interesting turn on
Britney Spears’ “Oops!… I Did It Again.” The works of the Beatles and
Hoagy Carmichael, snatches of opera and other surprises will pepper the
song list, which changes nightly based on the mood of both the
musicians and audience. It’s an approach with which the 58-year-old
Thompson, who still maintains an extensive touring schedule, is very
comfortable.
“With Fairport [Convention], we tried to revive
British traditional music by blending it with rock music,” Thompson
said. “I’m still looking for that synthesis and with this program I’ve
found some very fertile ground.”
Richard Thompson plays the Pabst Theater on Thursday, Feb. 7, at 8 p.m.



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