Listen to Tom Jones on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs

Kirsty Young's castaway is the singer Sir Tom Jones. In a career spanning fifty years he's sold 150 million albums and his hits have included It's Not Unusual, What's New Pussycat? and Delilah. As a child it was assumed he'd follow in his father's footsteps and become a miner. But he developed TB when he was twelve and doctors warned his parents against sending their only son to the pit; they said his lungs were too weak. Now aged seventy, he has no plans to retire. "Singing's like breathing to me", he says, "my voice drives me, it tells me that I have to do it".

Music played

  1. Jerry Lee Lewis Jerry Lee Lewis A Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On

    Jerry Lee Lewis: the EP Collection, See for Miles
  2. Vaughn Monroe Riders in the Sky

    The History of Country Music: The Forties: Vol.1, Kenwest
  3. Mahalia Jackson The Old Rugged Cross

    Mahalia Jackson sings the Best-loved Hymns of Dr Martin Luther King Jr., CBS
  4. Bill Haley Rock Around the Clock

    24 Jukebox Hits Of The 50s, Black Tulip
  5. Spike Jones and His City Slickers Der Fuehrer’s Face

    The Best of Spike Jones and his City Slickers., RCA
  6. Aretha Franklin Aretha Franklin I never Loved a Man

    Aretha Franklin: 30 Greatest Hits, Atlantic
  7. Big Bill Broonzy Big Bill Broonzy Black Brown and White

    Black Brown and White, Mercury
  8. Humphrey Lyttelton Humphrey Lyttelton Bad Penny Blues

    Time to Remember 1956, EMI

Listen to the programme on the BBC iplayer here

It’s Not Unusual to be Loved by Everyone - Tribune Magazine Review

Tom JonesUnion Chapel, London

by Cary Gee Saturday, September 25th, 2010

When Island Records heard that new signing Tom Jones was going to release an “album of hymns” one record company bean counter described the project as “a cruel joke”. This sorry individual should prepare himself for a mountain of beans. Jones’ first release for Island, Praise & Blame, which the septuagenarian Jones performed in full at the Union Chapel last week, is by far the singer’s finest release in years.

And while the songs, here stripped down to the basics, deal with temptation and ultimately redemption, this is most definitely not hymn singing. If it were, then churches across the land would be packed to the rafters.

Backed by a four-piece blues band, Jones growled and roared his way through a track list that began with Bob Dylan’s meditative “What Good Am I?” and included songs by Sister Rossetta Sharp and gospel queen Mahalia Jackson.

Saint or sinner, up close the power of Jones’ tenor is quite astonishing. There were moments during “Run On” when I half expected the gorgeous stained glass window above Jones’ head to shatter, such was the response from the congregation squeezed into the narrow wooden pews.

As Jones worked his way through the album, it became clear that Praise & Blame has been a lifetime in the making. Like Johnny Cash before him, and even his good pal Elvis Presley, who “loved gospel music over everything else he did”, Jones has finally managed, in the latter stages of his career, to make the album he always wanted to. His love for and appreciation of the songs he sings tonight is tangible – so much so that when one punter heckles: “Play some rock ’n’ roll”, Jones retorts: “What do you think that was?” By this stage, the chapel is certainly rocking.

As if to prove his point, Jones then sings John Lee Hooker’s “Burning Hell”. The lights above the stage turn hellfire red, but the temperature seems to drop by several degrees as Jones silences his critics. This is an elemental, bone-chilling plea for forgiveness and seems momentarily to stun the audience. On “Did Trouble Me”, complete with banjo which sounds like it is being plucked with bleeding fingers, Jones pleads with the Lord to “make me human, make me whole”.

Never one to dwell on things that might have been, Jones gives us a song he used to sing, backstage with Elvis, in Las Vegas. Billy Joe Shavers’ “If I Give My Soul” is a country-coloured reflection on the passing of the years. During those years, Jones has tried his hand at just about everything, reinventing himself in the 1990s after years in the Nevada Desert with his version of Prince’s “Kiss”, before aiming for – and missing badly – the club generation with “Sex Bomb”. Ironically, throughout this time hipper-than-thou singers of a younger generation have lined up to duet with Jones in a symbiotic (and parasitical) grab for credibility. Jones needn’t have bothered.

In the absence of knicker-throwing Delilahs, show-biz flapdoodle and homage-paying “indie” darlings, Jones proves that the devil and Jesus really do conspire to produce the best music. Waiting for the bus outside the chapel, I heard one lad tell his mate: “Seeing Tom was on my list of things to do before I die.” His mate agreed, adding: “I’m glad I waited.” Me too.

Praise & Blame is out now on Island Records

Read the review here

Tom Jones to Appear on 3 US TV Shows this Week!!

Tom Jones will be performing on 3 great US television shows this week. The first being "Good Morning America" on Wednesday 22nd September at 7am. Then later that evening Tom will be a guest on "Late Night with David Letterman" with an interview and performance at 11:35pm (EDT,PDT). If that wasn't enough then you can catch him on The Early Show, CBS on Friday 24th September!!!

(More to be announced)

Wales's satin-shirted satyr drops the hip-grinding and takes up contrition for a full-throated, A to Z rendition, of his latest album - The Independant Review

Reviewed by Simon Price Even more gothic-looking than usual, the octagonal interior of the Union Chapel is tonight choked by a fog of smoke, the arches behind the pulpit lit a sepulchral shade of blue, switching to a demonic red the very moment Tom Jones takes to the stage. "Beautiful venue," he acknowledges after the opening "What Good Am I?", glancing around the packed pews. "Very fitting for the album ..."

A deconsecrated church? Indeed it is. Praise and Blame is the septuagenarian's back-to-roots foray down the now well-trodden Johnny Cash route: his "Welsh Recordings", if you wish. Consisting of aeons-old gospel, folk and blues songs by the likes of John Lee Hooker, Bob Dylan, Billy Joe Shaver and the ever-prolific "Trad", it's predominantly religious, or at least haunted by angels and demons, pride and guilt. "If you take the praise," he says tonight by way of explanation, "you've got to take the blame. People say 'Tom, he's got a lovely voice ... but he's a bit of a naughty boy.' You see?"

We see. Indeed, the well-documented misdemeanours of Tom Jones – satin-shirted satyr, serial shagger – are part of his appeal: charming the panties off the universal female, and giving her one for us. There's none of that hip-grinding sauce tonight, however, as the increasingly King Neptune-like Jones takes us through Praise and Blame, start to finish. He's on fine form vocally, and he's funny with it, contradicting one heckler by clarifying that the Vocalzone lozenge he pops in his mouth is not Viagra, and name-dropping "my good friend" Elvis Presley before a sweaty-browed rendition of "Run On", the song the pair used to sing in the Vegas years of the early Seventies.

It's impressively raw, tough-arsed, hard-knuckled blues-rock fare. "Nobody's Fault But Mine" would work in a particularly gritty Lynch/Tarantino/Coens scene, and the line "Lord, help the motherless children" in Jessie Mae Hemphill's delta blues standard almost works as a hip-hop cuss.

We sit politely, in anticipation of a hits encore. A publicist tells me that the single most frequently asked question she's fielded all day has been "Is he gonna play 'Sex Bomb'?", but I'd have settled for "Green Green Grass of Home" if he doesn't want to disrespect the surroundings with something so sleazily secular. Instead, we get the happy-clappy "Didn't It Rain" for the second time in one night.

There's been plenty to praise, but if anyone shuffles out of the aisles feeling a little let down, there's only one man to blame.

Read the review here

Soulful Side of A Pracher Man - Union Chapel Guardain Review

Tom-Jones-006 He has some very big pipes. It is a very small chapel. There are many reasons to be excited about septuagenarian superstar Sir Tom Jones's performance at an intimate north London church, but chief among them is the prospect of the Welsh soul man blowing this semi-sacred space wide open.

It never quite happens. But he comes tantalisingly close a few times, enough to count this one-off gig a success. The first tremors come two songs in. "Lord Help" is a secular hymn taken from Mississippi country blueswoman Jessie Mae Hemphill. As Jones's band set up a swinging blues and the lighting rig dyes the stained glass a sinful red, Jones invokes the Lord's help for "the poor and the needy".

Then comes the key change. Jones throws his head back a little, opens his hands and his throat. "And we all rise together!" he sings, a veteran roué turned preacher man. The cobwebs quiver. Any audience in the American south would have jumped to their feet, but the rather more British Union Chapel crowd remain stuck to their pews until the end.

Jones began this latest UK jaunt by popping into the Pontypridd YMCA the week before last, having played there in his youth. He then performed at the Help For Heroes servicemen's concert last Sunday (with "my mate Robbie Williams"). But he is here tonight to play Praise & Blame, his 38th studio album, in its entirety. We get all 11 tracks, one of them – "Didn't It Rain" – twice. If you squint your ears, "If I Give My Soul" is a story-song like "Green Green Grass Of Home". But otherwise, this is a "Delilah"-free zone, suggesting that Jones sees his new record as standing apart from his more famous body of work.

As its title suggests, Praise & Blame draws heavily on reverential roots music – so much so that the vice-president of Jones's record company, Island, is said to have complained volubly in an internal email, one that was subsequently leaked. "We did not invest a fortune in an established artist for him to deliver 12 tracks from the common book of prayer [sic]," ran part of David Sharpe's broadside.

Jones seemed sincerely incensed at the time. Genuine or not, the fact that Sharpe's email was leaked once the publicity campaign for Praise & Blame was well under way suggests some sharp-shooting in Island's marketing department. Was the row even necessary? The facts are plain: Johnny Cash underwent a career revival when he embarked on a series of covers albums, taking in roots music and more contemporary songs. Robert Plant won five Grammy awards for his album of country duets, Raising Sand; he has followed it up with another in similar vein. With songs drawn from blues and country, Jones is following a tried and tested road into continued relevance. And it's working. His previous live outing at this summer's Latitude festival was heavily oversubscribed; released in July, Praise & Blame has already been certified gold.

For a man so frequently baptised in moist knickers, Jones plays the part of church-raised devotee very well indeed tonight. "Did Trouble Me" begins as gospel tune, eventually settling into gently rollicking country music. Live, the song expands from the album version, with a banjo and female backing vocals floating to the fore.

What really resonates, however, is how contrite Jones – the glitziest of Vegas lounge lizards, the least apologetic of womanisers – appears. "When I raised my voice a little too loud," he croons, "my Lord did trouble me." Throughout his long career, Jones has always been ready with a nudge and a wink (or an unsubtle kick in the shins, like "Sex Bomb"). But this tiny shard of self-knowledge hangs elegantly in the air tonight.

Sin is never very far away. Jones's excellent, bawled version of John Lee Hooker's "Burning Hell" ponders the existence of heaven and hell with the aid of guitar and drums, like the White Stripes might have done it. Chatty and at ease, Jones guffaws his way through the set, sounding like he's about to tell a bawdy joke at any moment. "In order to take the praise, we also need to take the blame," he expounds on his album title. "You know: Tommy's got a lovely voice… but he's a bit of a naughty boy!" We learn that the little pill that Robbie Williams pops into his mouth before singing is called a Vocalzone, a lozenge used by opera singers; Jones then necks one gleefully.

It wouldn't be an audience with Tom Jones without an anecdote about Elvis, and so tonight's gig proves. But Jones delivers "Run On" – a tune he used to do with Presley after hours in Vegas – with such gusto that the rafters really seem to rattle. God-fearing might have been a sound business decision for Jones. And yet it's a testament to his prowess as an entertainer that he can pull it off with such aplomb.

Read the review here

The New Tom Jones Album - The Perpetual Post Review

By Dave Tomar and Akie Bermiss AKIE BERMISS: Without a doubt, the very last place I expected to hear good new music was from someone like Tom Jones. When Dave told me it was a record I had to hear I was at first under the impression that he was joking. I mean we’re talking about Tom Jones here. You’ve got to be kidding me, right? The sex-bomb, the not-unusual, the tired cliche of a cliche of a cliche — Tom friggin’ Jones?! First of all, isn’t he like a billion years old? And secondly, what the hell is he doing making a record?

What the hell is that recording doing being so damned awesome?!

Listening to Praise & Blame – Jones’ new record — I’ve been forced to remember a few things. Firstly, though Jones is all kinds of cliche, he can sing a damned song if he wants to. Even at 70, when most singers’ instruments begin to go through the slow, inexorable decline of age, he’s got the same ear-rending voice he was always known for. The same rich baritone. The same semi-wide very masculine vibrato (some where between Dean Martin — on the low end — and Tony Bennet — on the high end). And, most of all, the same precision of pitch and diction. Yes, there is a bit more roughness to the singing (which is usually a sign of age) but you get the sense that the slight rasp is somehow a deliberate affectation. Maybe its something Jones always kept in reserve for the right occasion.

Secondly, I must admit that I’m no expert on the details of Jones’ past. I know him as the Unforgettable guy — that’s about it. I’ve saw a documentary about him a few years back and I’ve heard a good deal of his music (mostly against my wishes or in the kind of poor circumstance where you’re choosing between Tom Jones, Paul Anka, or the Boston Pops Orchestra’s Greatest Hits). And while, in comparison to what I might think of as real, serious artists he’s something a light-weight as far as content is concerned, Jones is no lightweight in the singing department. He can sing his ass off, really. There’s no two ways about it.

Indeed, a lightweight in times gone by and a lightweight today are two very different people. Jones sang pop music. He was Inglebert Humperdink on steroids, as far as I’m concerned. You think of middle-aged women throwing huge panties on stage when you think of Tom Jones.

Then again, if you go back and listen to some “classic” Tom Jones whatever you may feel about the material — he usually sings it well.

And thirdly, there is something to be said for someone who’s been in the business for something like 50+ years making a record like this at a time like this. We all grow up and get older and start to wonder what is going to happen to us when we die. Sometimes, we have to face that when we’re younger (for a variety of reasons). It is the desperate unknowable gulf of human existence… that is where the artist is most effective at his work. Even a mediocre talent, when faced with answering the greater questions or dwelling in the deeper waters of human experience, can rise to the occasion and make fine, fine art. Imagine what can happen when a great talent takes up the cause.

Jones is in an enviable position. He’s already made it. He’s famous. He’s been successful. He doesn’t need to make a name for himself. And so he can sing whatever the hell he wants. And, in Praise & Blame: he does just that. Listen to the terrified conviction of “Burnin’ Hell” or the quiet reflection of “Did Trouble Me.” This isn’t an “experimental” record. This is a reflection of the things within the soul of the artist. I feel ridiculous just saying this sort of thing about Tom Jones, but this is a beautiful record. It is unsettling, touching, and inspiring.

In fact, so well-made is this record it reminds me of the renaissance that Gil Scott-Heron pulled up just last year with I’m New Here. The records are very similar in their directness. The elderly men who are remaking themselves to cut through all the dross and detritus of this electronic age. You take Praise & Blame and you listen to the full 40-minutes straight through — you’ll not be disappointed. In point of fact, it really doesn’t matter who made this record — just that it was made.

Is that not the highest aspiration of the artist? To create a piece of work that, instead of seeming a fabrication of the artist’s conceit, seems like a creation decreed by the universe. On the simple opening cut, “What Good Am I?” Jones seems like a man who has entered a sacred space and begins the motions of prayer. He seems to say, I have been flawed, have I not. Do we not often acknowledge our mortality, first thing, when we approach the creator? (ask Rilke, but I bet I’m right) And by the final awesome tracks, “Ain’t No Grave” and “Run On”, we’re in the full-on ecstatic with Jones. Here he celebrates the uncertainty, the imperfection, the on-coming darkness.

I’d never have guessed it would turn out like this — but who ever knows how it’ll be? But here is Tom Jones… leading us in the great unknown. A sort of musical philosopher and prophet. Consumed in righteousness. The music and the musician are one. And both are transformed.

Praise and blame, indeed, Tom. Praise and Blame, indeed.

DAVE TOMAR:  I have always liked Tom Jones.  I think most people do.  I respect anybody who can perform with such flagrant sexual aplomb while being rained down upon by granny panties.  Really, with the unimaginable amount of bacteria in which he has been knee-deep, his longevity is astounding.

Until only recently though, my appreciation for Tom Jones has been strictly ironic.  He’s hilarious.  The bulge in his leather pants.  The silk shirt unbuttoned to his navel.  The style of ultra-swank that he seems to have virtually invented.  The Welsh choogler is almost a caricature of rock and roll, reveling for decades in its excess and frequently dispensing of its substance in favor of its sexuality.  He is all the raunchiness and comedic value of a mid-coital facial expression.

Perhaps, though, not a musical force.

So imagine my surprise when I was overtaken by the compulsion to play his new record a dozen times the first week I heard it.  Praise and Blame is an old man’s legacy presented for reconsideration.  Released this summer to general acclaim, this album is not ironic, it is not funny and it doesn’t seem very interested in sex.  At his age, this would be a grotesque charade.

This record is not a fleeting moment of orgasmic emptiness.  It is a terminal stage reflection on the grave.

Hooray for Tom Jones.  70 years old and he decided to make a Johnny Cash-I’m-probably-dying-soon-better-say-something-that-matters record.  It won’t change the way most people think of him.  He is still the Sex Bomb.  Most people won’t hear this record.  It doesn’t have the clubland appeal of 1999’s Reload, in which Tom Jones partners with the likes of the Cardigans and dabbles playfully with material like Iggy Pop’s “Lust for Life.”  This was an awfully good record, if you catch my draft.

But Praise and Blame is a dark, charging record, clearly conceived in the spirit of Johnny Cash’s Rick Rubin productions.   Producer Ethan Johns has paired Jones with an old-as-dirt songbook and the match is remarkable.  The Tom Jones audience has always overlapped with middle-of-the-road figures like Neil Diamond and the Monkees.  But there is nothing on this record for these listeners.

On standards like “Nobody’s Fault But Mine” and “Ain’t No Grave,” Jones is a much closer approximation to Son House.  On Bob Dylan’s “What Good Am I,” Jones is pensive and filled with remorse.  On John Lee Hooker’s “Burning Hell,” he is defiant and menacing.  His voice is hoarse, forceful and convicted.  The production is spare and respectful to the material.

Simply stated, the record is a tremendous accomplishment, channeling the ravages of aging into an artistic statement.  And if in reflection on his career this is hardly representative of who Tom Jones is, it is a statement representative of rock music itself.  For all of its bloat and superficiality, it remains a medium capable of producing the rare but devastatingly profound statement.

Read the review here

Tom Jones – Union Chapel - The Line of Best Fit Review

Tom-Jones-2

Tom Jones has seen a lot in his long career, from early shows in Welsh working men’s clubs, to playing with Elvis in Las Vegas. A renowned showman, over the years he has played massive shows around the world, most recently appearing at Twickenham as part of the Help for Heroes concert. Yet, this evening’s show is a little different, and saw Jones stripping back the drama and bombast to play latest album Praise and Blame in it’s entirety [see TLOBF review here].

Shrouded in smoke and blue light, Jones cut a sharp figure as he took the stage to perform Dylan cover ‘What Good Am I’. The Union Chapel frequently brings the best out of performers, and Jones is no exception. As he observed, it is an appropriate location to be performing his latest album-the ideal forum for tales of regret and troubled souls and minds. Jones’ deep, rich croon suits the slower songs well, and is at it’s brooding best during his rendition of ‘Nobody’s Fault But  Mine’, the band falling away leaving Jones to murmur the melody and end with an almost Waits-ian growl that silences the room for a second.

Tom-Jones

Shorn of the responsibility of playing up to the character of Tom Jones, the 70 year old Welshman seemed relaxed as he joked with the crowd about being a “naughty boy”, as well as telling stories about his reasons for chosing some of the songs. Encore ‘Run On’ was a song that Jones used to sing with Elvis after shows in Vegas, he explained. While some of the more upbeat tracks strayed close to boogie-woogie territory at times, for the most part they acted as an uplifting and joyful counterpoint to the slow burning and emotionally open tracks delivered elsewhere.

While it remains to be seen if Praise and Blame truly marks a re-invention for Jones in the long term, tonights intimate and personal performance showcased the album perfectly. Putting in a little trademark “Huh” and a hipthrust into the second performance of the evening of ‘Didn’t It Rain’, Jones allowed his inner entertainer to come out for a quick appearance. As acknowledgment to his long term fans it was a nice gesture, but this show more than proved that his talent can hold its own without the gimmicks that have characterised much of the later part of his career.

Read the review here

Tom Jones Union Chapel - 4* Telegraph Review

jones_1679487c Having stopped trying so hard to be down with the kids, Jones is making music as hot and heavy as the hippest indie band. Rating: * * * *

Tom Jones is not normally someone you would expect to find singing in a church, what with his reputation for testosterone-fuelled, bare-torso lustiness and knicker-throwing fans. But here he was, astride the altar, beneath beautiful stained glass, performing his new, spiritually themed album, ’Praise And Blame’, in its entirety. And giving it loads, it must be said. The Union Chapel is a gorgeous venue that frequently brings out a certain quality of reverence in performer and audience. I’ve seen a lot of stripped-back, acoustic-flavoured gigs here characterised by a kind of hushed intimacy, as if rock and roll ought to whisper in the presence of God. There was none of that for Mr Jones, who seemed to be having far more fun than you are supposed to in an English place of worship.

Smiling, joking and wielding his remarkable voice with a lusty, tangible pleasure, he brought the joyousness of a southern gospel Baptist meeting to the occasion. His chosen material appropriately places more emphasis on acknowledging the faults of the sinner than the glory of God. “If you’re gonna take the praise, you gotta take the blame,” he joked. Backed by a red-hot band really riding on slinky, rocking blues grooves, Jones singing shifted from an ominous bass growl to a raw, pleading tenor, digging into the torment and redemption of such rich, old material as Lord Help, Strange Things, Don’t Knock and Nobody’s Fault But Mine. It is great to see Jones performing to a more musically organic backing, neither blasting it with a big band nor chasing contemporary pop fashions. You can tell he really loves this material. He’s got history here, even if it is not the history the public associates with him. “Elvis Presley was a very good friend of mine and he loved gospel music over everything else he did. We used to sing this song together after the shows we did in Las Vegas,” he announced, introducing an uplifting, hand-clapping tumble through ’Run On’, guitar lines snaking through the vocals, his two female backing singers waving their arms like a couple of over-excitable cheerleaders. Such was Jones’s cheerful informality, the audience became encouraged to shout out comments. “Play some rock ’n’ roll!” yelled one misguided man. “What do you think that was?” retorted Jones. “That’s where rock’ n ’roll came from. Spiritual music. You just have to change the words a bit!” Then he delivered a version of ’Burning Hell’ with just a fuzzed-up electric slide guitar and pounding drumming that echoed the elemental power of the White Stripes. It is perhaps ironic that, having stopped trying so hard to be down with the kids, Jones is making music as hot and heavy as the hippest indie band. “So that’s where rock ’n’ roll comes from,” he told his heckler. “If you didn’t know, you do now.” That’s telling them.

By Neil McCormick

Read the review here

Gospel inspires Tom Jones to finally act his age - Evening Standard Review

tomjones16_415 As a man reaches his twilight, he tends to embrace the things that really matter. At 70, Tom Jones is no exception. Having spent too much of his career chasing youth — the Las Vegas years; the ghastly Sex Bomb; the threat to “bum-rush the door” on 2002’s Younger Days — he has returned to the music of his youth: rock ’n’ roll-tinged gospel.

There were no hits last night, not even The Young New Mexican Puppeteer, which would enhance any occasion, just Jones’s current Praise And Blame album in its entirety, including Didn’t It Rain which, for reasons far from clear, was played twice in the final three songs. Jones may well be the only man on earth who can legitimately claim to count both Robbie Williams and Elvis Presley among his “good friends” but while he’s clearly seeking the late-career revitalisation and credibility accorded to Neil Diamond and Johnny Cash, Praise And Blame is exactly the album Elvis would be making were he still in the building.

“This is gospel music, uplifting music, spiritual music,” he purred. It was also Tom Jones finally acting his age and so at ease at not having to pretend to be sexy any more that he could even quip “what’s that?” when someone suggested a lozenge he was popping might have been viagra.

The lighting was sombre; the voice deep, rich and almost a sub-human growl on Nobody’s Fault But Mine; while the music, brimming with rue and regret as much as fire and brimstone, was as Gothic as the setting.

Not the most mobile of performers these days, Jones carried the up-tempo Lord Help and Strange Things by power of voice alone, but when he worked his spine-tingling magic on the soul-baring Did Trouble Me and If I Give My Soul, you could almost weep for his wasted years.

Still, this was an evening of joy and one that promised uplift: here is a man who has finally found himself.

By John Aizlewood

Read the review here

Tom Jones Upcoming UK Radio Appearances!

Tom Jones will be a guest on 3 radio shows over the next 2 weeks! Starting tomorrow, Tuesday 14th September, Tom will be a guest on The Radcliffe and Maconie Show at 8pm BBC Radio 2. Tom will chat to Mark about his new album 'Praise & Blame' and perform three tracks from the album.

On Saturday 25th September Tom will join Dermot O'Leary on his BBC Radio 2 show at 3pm.Tom will chat to Dermot about the new album and play another 3 tracks from 'Praise & Blame'

Sunday 26th September Tom will be the featured guest on Desert island Discs on BBC Radio 4. Tune in to find out what eight records he would take with him to a desert island!

Listen to Tom Jones' Performance at Elvis Forever! on BBC Radio 2

In the year that the King of Rock 'n' Roll would have turned 75, Chris Evans presents a concert of Elvis' best loved and most popular songs, live from London's Hyde Park. Listen to Tom Jones perform 'Run On', 'Tryin' To Get To You' and 'One Night' via BBC iplayer. Click here to be taken to BBC.com (listen at 2 hours 21 minutes for Tom Jones)

Tom Jones Announced for Help For Heros Concert on September 12th

a0bdef2e-123d-4949-865a-826cee8abcf0 A true British legend has been added to the already amazing line up for the Heroes Concert at Twickenham Stadium on September 12th.

Sir Tom Jones has quite simply been THE voice of British music since the 1960s. Constantly challenging himself by taking on the demands of a remarkable range of repertoire, he recently released the acclaimed album Praise & Blame, a return to his gospel and blues roots.

His Twickenham performance promises to draw on both traditions – the classic Tom Jones entertainer and the raw, emotional journey of Praise & Blame.

Tom is really pleased to have the chance to participate in the Heroes Concert: “It’s great to be able to do something for our troops, and it’s pretty rare to get the chance to do something fun and uplifting on home soil. Not only will this event help us understand what these brave men and women in service do for us, it will also help raise enough funds to really make a difference in their recovery. I’m proud to be able to help in any way I can”.

The cream of the nation’s entertainment industry have signed up for the gig, names as diverse as Jason Manford, Plan B, Jack Dee, The Saturdays, Katherine Jenkins, James Blunt, Alesha Dixon, latin star Enrique Iglesias and the UK’s latest Number 1 boy band The Wanted.

Due to phenomenal demand, organisers have acquired special permission for Twickenham Stadium to hold an extra 5,000 fans and troops, taking the concert capacity up to 60,000 for the very first time.

The show will be hosted by the best of the UK’s comedy talent - John Bishop, Kevin Bridges, Jack Dee, Rhod Gilbert, Peter Kay, Jason Manford and Michael McIntyre have all pledged their support.

All proceeds go straight to Help for Heroes to raise money to help fund further rehabilitation centres around the country.

The spectacular event will be broadcast on BBC One and around the world to military bases through British Forces Broadcasting (BFBS).

Acts Announced So far:

Robbie Williams

(Gary Barlow guest)

James Blunt

Alexandra Burke

Alesha Dixon

Enrique Iglesias

Katherine Jenkins

Tom Jones

Pixie Lott

Plan B

The Saturdays

The Wanted

John Bishop

Kevin Bridges

Jack Dee

Rhod Gilbert

Peter Kay

Jason Manford

Michael McIntyre

Bryn Parry, CEO Help for Heroes

“Help for Heroes is all about ordinary people doing their bit to support the men and women of our Armed Forces. We feel helpless when we hear about our young men and women being wounded and want to do what we can; with Help for Heroes we can make a difference. Over the last three years, hundreds of thousands have joined us in doing their bit and millions have been raised to improve the quality of life for some wonderfully brave people.

This concert is a fantastic example of a nation doing its bit for ‘the blokes’;

I am particularly grateful to all the acts and the organisers for their support and to Hesco Bastion, our lead sponsor. Music and humour can reach and lift those in the darkest of places, making life worth living and helping in recovery. Our boys and girls, both those operating in the remote patrol bases and those recovering from life changing injuries, will hear this concert and know that they are in the forefront of our minds. They are not forgotten, wherever they are.”

Richard Knight, Stadium Director for the Rugby Football Union

“It’s a privilege to be asked to host such an amazing day of entertainment for such a fantastic cause. We have a long history of supporting Help for Heroes starting with our charity game here at the stadium in 2008, which raised over £1.5 million for the charity. The chance to be a part of such a landmark concert is an honour and a testament to the role Twickenham Stadium now plays as an iconic concert venue. The pitch that has been graced by legends of rugby will now be graced by legends of music and comedy. A fitting tribute for our heroic armed forces.”

TICKETS ON SALE

Tickets:

Reserved Seating: £55

General Admission Pitch Standing: £55

Outer Gold Circle Standing: £70

Inner Gold Circle Standing: £80

Ticketmaster hotline - 0844 879 4376 (outside UK – 0161 637 2692)

Buy tickets online from www.livenation.co.uk, www.heroesconcert.com or www.ticketmaster.co.uk

To book disabled customer tickets, please call Ticketmaster’s access booking line - 0844 847 1655.

For disabled access information - email any enquiries to: access@heroesconcert.com or visit the website at www.heroesconcert.com for more information.

For VIP Hospitality or Golden Circle packages please visit www.livenationexperience.co.uk or telephone 0207 009 3484

All tickets are subject to booking fee

All revenue of Live Nation from the Event after deduction of Live Nation’s fee together with all costs and expenses directly relating to the hire of the venue and the staging of the Event will be paid directly to Help for Heroes (Registered Charity Number: 1120920) or to Help for Heroes Trading Limited in support of Help for Heroes. It is expected to be in the region of £750,000

Tom Jones Performs Praise & Blame At The Union Chapel!!!

It gives us great pleasure to announce what will be a very special show:
Tom Jones Performs Praise & Blame At The Union Chapel on Wednesday 15th September, Stage time 8pm.
The show will be Announced and is going onsale 9am tomorrow morning the 2nd September.
Union Chapel address: Compton Avenue, London N1 2XD
Tickets £30.00 (subject to booking fee) and available from www.livenation.co.uk

Following his incredible shows at Latitude festival this summer. This will be the first chance to see Sir Tom perform the critically acclaimed Praise & Blame.