Tom To Be On PBS With Jerry Lee, But Not On Lewis’ New CD. Why?
Saturday, September 30th, 2006The PBS series Great Performances is going to do a program on Jerry Lee Lewis in December and Tom will be on it along with other greats, including Don Henley, Ron Wood, Nils Lofgren and Solomon Burke.
The show was taped September 28 and 29 in New York City.
They did duets of Green, Green Grass of Home, Jerry Lee’s End of the Road and, once again, as they did on This Is Tom Jones, sang Funny How Time Slips Away. From reports of people who were there, Tom was just thrilled to be doing this.
There’s a fan report on the tj.com forum and a comprehensive one on a Jerry Lee fansite.
PBS hasn’t announced air dates yet. We’ll let you know when they do.
The show was to celebrate Lewis’ 71st birthday and the release of a new album, Last Man Standing. The title comes from the fact that Lewis is, in fact, the last of the Sun Records so-called “Million Dollar Quartet,” made up of Sun artists Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, Lewis and Elvis (who had left Sun and was then with RCA). They happened to be in the studio together one day and the recordings that came from that casual session — a mix of rhythm and blues, rock ‘n roll and gospel — were preserved and ultimately released as, of course Million Dollar Quartet
Lewis’ new album has duets with Bruce, BB, Mick Jagger and Ron Wood, Jimmy Page, Neil Young, Robbie Robertson, John Fogerty, Ringo, Merle Haggard, Kid Rock, Rod Stewart, George Jones, Wilie Nelson, Toby Keith, Don Henley, Buddy Guy and Kris Kristofferson.
It’s a great recording. But you know our question: Where’s Tom? He’s got to be Lewis’ biggest fan and there’s no better voice around. He knows the material. He should have been there.
The woman in the summery dress stands on her seat, turns to face the audience and bends forward. As the cameras from the photographer pit flash in her direction, she flashes right back at them, shimmying out of her underwear so she can throw it at a 64-year-old Welshman. Fellow fans of live music, take note: this is not what you might call a regular audience, or a regular gig.
Today’s 

It was an unusual beginning for the boy who would grow up to be singer Tom Jones, a man more interesting on closer inspection than his cartoonish popular image as some singing gigolo in tight pants. He’s gotten more respect from peers and younger artists than from critics (note his close friendship with the late Elvis Presley and, in recent years, his collaborations with Wyclef Jean, Tori Amos, Portishead and Trevor Horn). And while he is a regular on the Las Vegas circuit, he’s shown a willingness to take risks that set him apart from Wayne Newton, Robert Goulet and other frozen-in-time fixtures on the Strip.




