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New Single & A Gold Record; Another Terrific New “P & B” Review

According to tj.com and several news outlets, a “double A-side” release of Run On / Didn’t It Rain is set to come out in the UK on 20th September through Island Records and will be available as a limited 7″ single and digital download, which comes with the added bonus track of Lord Help. No word on any US release yet.

The site also said that Praise and Blame has reached gold status. In the UK, a record is certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) when it has shipped (not “sold”) 100,000 units; a platinum, 300,000 units. (In the US, Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)-certified gold status means 500,000 shipped; platinum, 1,000,000 units shipped.

Mazel tov, Sir Tom!

You will absolutely want to read the review posted below! It says, at the top, “Jones is aging with Paul Newman’s elegance and grace. Amazing grace, as it happens; Jones’ new release, Praise & Blame, his latest in a catalog exceeding 60 studio, live and greatest hits albums, is a raw, raucous, Gospel-drenched, Soul-infused marvel.” And it gets better from there!

Tom Jones: Praise & Blame

By Brian Baker/CityBeat.com (Cincinnati, Ohio) / August 17, 2010

If there was any justice, the panties thrown at Tom Jones these days would be the size of parachutes, but the fact is that Jones, who turned 70 in June, has built an audience populated with the granddaughters of his original fans. He covered Prince’s Kiss with Art of Noise in 1988, and his 1999 album Reload was a set of hip cover duets with the likes of the Cardigans, Portishead and the Stereophonics. Jones is aging with Paul Newman’s elegance and grace. Amazing grace, as it happens; Jones’ new release, Praise & Blame, his latest in a catalog exceeding 60 studio, live and greatest hits albums, is a raw, raucous, Gospel-drenched, Soul-infused marvel.

Jones has long claimed Mahalia Jackson as an early influence and he proves it conclusively on Praise & Blame, a collection of traditional and contemporary songs concerning the search for salvation. Jones opens with a reflective acoustic take on Bob Dylan’s What Good Am I, his extraordinary voice exhibiting equal measures of restraint and power over the track’s tribal pulse, followed by Lord Help, an explosion of snarling Blues electricity. Jones goes pure Gospel on Did Trouble, swings with chapel-rattling force on Sister Rosetta Tharpe’s Strange Things Happen Every Day and tears into John Lee Hooker’s Burning Hell with a visceral glee, while his robust and defiant take on Ain’t No Grave stands in stark contrast to Johnny Cash’s end-of-life resignation.

Praise & Blame easily stands among Jones’ best work. If he and producer Ethan Johns translate this vibe into his next Pop album (Rick Rubin and T Bone Burnett must be kicking themselves that they didn’t pull this assignment), Tom Jones’ triumphant return to the top of the charts will be assured.

4 Responses to “New Single & A Gold Record; Another Terrific New “P & B” Review”

  1. Pat Lowndes Says:

    That is great news .Well done Tom and everyone who worked with you on the album. “It’s been a long time coming but worth the wait”. It’s time Tom was recognized for his voice. Brilliant

  2. m joost Says:

    Praise and Blame is Jones’ best work. Amen.

  3. Barb Says:

    It certainy is time that Tom is recognized for his VOICE!

  4. TJ Says:

    Why does every reviewer have to begun with a panties reference? I mean it’s SO PREDICTABLE. Do they not realise how lazy they are being? Drives me crazy.

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