Three More Summer Dates Added!!

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Today we are announcing three more summer dates!

Live at the Marquee in Cork, Ireland on Sunday 19th June 2011.Tickets go on sale for this event on Thursday 10th March at 9am at ticketmaster.ie

Haydock Racecourse in Merseyside on Saturday 18th June 2011. Click here for tickets

And Newmarket Racecourse Friday 12th August 2011.

Stephen Wallis, Newmarket Racecourses Managing Director, said: “We are delighted to be announcing Tom Jones for this year’s line-up. He is a sensational performer and I am sure his array of hits will be very popular with the Newmarket audience." Stephen continued: “As in previous years, tickets for this year’s Nights are selling phenomenally fast and so I would urge people to book early in order to ensure their ticket.”

Tickets for Newmarket Nights with Tom Jones, Friday 12th August are now on sale. Click here to purchase tickets to this event

Tom Jones Playing At The Henley Festival

Tom Jones will headlining on the opening night of the Henley Festival on Wednesday 6th July. He will be performing on the Floating Stage with a programme that includes classic hits, special selections, and songs from his acclaimed latest work, Praise & Blame. Henley Festival is an extraordinary and elegant mix of music, art, culture, dining and location – the most magical summer event in the United Kingdom. Coming the week after the Regatta and lasting 5 nights, audiences are treated to an event full of contrasting performances on whichever night they attend - the best in classical music, jazz, opera, comedy, dance, street theatre, rock and firework spectaculars like you've never experienced them before.

One ticket gives access to up to six timetabled events each night (as well as the visual art galleries and ad hoc street theatre fun) and access to a choice of bars, eateries and a wide range of top quality catering concessions.

Sipping champagne overlooking the water whilst enjoying the Festival's sights and sounds - designer evening wear, banks of flowers, extraordinary sculptures, swirling lights and the sight of a hundred candle lit dinner parties taking place on the boats on the river will provide lasting memories.

Taking place between 6 and 10 July 2011, this glorious Black Tie event is now one of the biggest, best-established and best-loved Arts Festivals in the country.

With its wonderful range of entertainment in a breathtaking setting on the banks of the River Thames and with some of the best wining and dining seen at any Festival, Henley Festival makes for a highly glamorous party not to be missed, with stars on stage and in the audience, too!

You can buy tickets to the event at www.henleyfestival.co.uk

Tom to Play at Tatton Park this Summer

On the 31st July 2011 Tom Jones will take to the stage at one of the UK’s most popular heritage attractions, Tatton Park. Tatton Park has a history dating back to Bronze Age farming and has been home to herds of deer since the 13th century. In the late Tudor period Tatton was acquired by the Egerton family who owned the estate until the last Lord Egerton died without heirs in 1958. And now in 2011 Tom will perform an open aired concert under the stars.

Tickets for this event go on sale on Friday 25th February at www.tattonparkconcerts.com or call Ticketmaster on 0844 847 2457

Tom Jones to Perform at T In The Park!!

t-in-the-park_300x300_crop_le-300x300 The line-up for T In The Park has just been released and we are happy to announce that Tom Jones will be performing!!!

T In The Park takes place on Friday 8th - Sunday 10th of July in Balado, Kinross-shire. Other artists performing are Coldplay, The Arctic Monkeys, Foo Fighters, Plan B and many many more.

Tickets go on sale on Friday 25th February. We will update our tour dates section with ticket links on Friday.

Opportunity To Meet Tom Jones & Raise Money for Cancer Research UK

On the 24th February Tom Jones will be performing at Sound & Vision at Abbey Road Studios. Sound & Vision is Cancer Research UK’s unique heritage music event celebrating music, the people who make it and the imagery it inspires.

Tickets to this exclusive show are sold out but you can bid for the chance to meet Sir Tom himself by clicking here !!!

Guest DJ Tom Jones Shares His Favorite Love Songs on NPR

In this edition of All Songs Considered, Tom Jones joins host Bob Boilen to talk about some of the love songs Jones has loved most over the years, starting with the first he can remember singing to his grandmother as a child in Wales. He also includes gems from the raucous Jerry Lee Lewis and James brown, the seductive Barry White, George Jones, johnny Adams and, of course, Tom Jones himself. Please click here to listen to the show via the NPR site

The Mail on Sunday Tom Jones 14 Track CD

He's one of Britain’s best-known singers and has enjoyed an extraordinary career spanning six decades. His single It’s Not Unusual made No 1 in 1965 – and his 2010 studio album Praise And Blame hit No 2.Now, in a unique CD for Mail on Sunday readers – that will be FREE inside next week’s paper – Sir Tom Jones has selected 14 of his favourite numbers from across the years, including many of his biggest and best-loved hits. Here, he tells the stories behind these brilliant songs...

Watch Tom Jones Perform 'Burning Hell' & 'Didn't It Rain' Live at Celtic Connections Festival

Read a wonderful review and watch videos of Tom Jones performing 'Burning Hell' and 'Didn't It Rain' live at Celtic Connections Festival in Glasgow last month. You will be pleased to know that these videos from the BBC are also available for viewers outside of the UK.

Tom Jones American 'Praise & Blame' Tour

tom016 Our American fans will be pleased to know that Tom Jones is taking Praise & Blame Stateside with a handful of performances. We will be announcing the dates over the next couple of weeks so please keep checking for more dates to be added.

Dates already added:

The Philharmonic Center in Naples Florida on 25th April 2011.

Ruth Eckerd Hall, Clearwater Florida on 22nd April 2011. Tickets go on-sale on 11th February but are available to Ruth Eckerd Hall members from 7th February.

Hard Rock Live Orlando Florida on 23rd April 2011. Tickets go on-sale on 11th February.

Cobb Energy Centre on 27th April 2011. Tickets go on-sale on 11th February.

Hard Rock Live, Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino on 21st April 2011. Tickets go on-sale on 25th February.

Ryman Auditorium, Nashville Tennessee on 30th April 2011. Tickets go on-sale on 18th February.

One more date still do be added!

Tom Jones to Perform at The New Orleans Jazz Fest!!

Screen-shot-2011-01-19-at-10.23.16-PM1 The New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival presented by Shell today announced the music lineup for the 2011 Festival scheduled for April 29 - May 1 and May 5 - 8. And it's with great pleasure to announce that Tom Jones has been added to this stellar line-up which include, Arcade Fire, Bon Jovi, Jimmy Buffett, Sonny Rollins, Kid Rock, John Mellencamp, Wilco, Robert Plant, Ms. Lauryn Hill, Willie Nelson, The Strokes, John Legend & The Roots and hundreds of Louisiana greats.

With twelve stages of virtually every style of roots music, Jazz Fest presents one of the entertainment world’s most diverse music lineups, including its unparalleled showcase of Louisiana’s unique culture.  Hundreds of thousands of fans annually flock  to the seven-day event that has been called America’s best festival.

Quint Davis, producer/director of Jazz Fest said, "This lineup reminds us that the artists we grew up with are now the icons of today, and that today’s new heroes are tomorrow’s heritage.  We’re honored to be able to once again celebrate the soul of America as only New Orleans and the Jazz Fest can.”

Randy Phillips, president & CEO, AEG Live, which co-produces the Festival said, "Once again, Quint Davis and the Jazz Fest Team have been able to amass one of the largest and deepest musical lineups of any festival in the world today.  AEG Live is proud to play a major role in the production of this beloved event."

The 2011 Festival will also host the largest celebration of Haitian culture in the U.S. since the devastating earthquake one year ago.  New Orleans and Haiti have shared a deep cultural connection for over three hundred years and many of the local traditions and customs owe their roots to this complex Caribbean country.  The Jazz Fest is proud and honored to host the icons of Haitian music and culture including Wyclef Jean, Tabou Combo, RAM, Boukman Eksperyans, Emeline Michel, Djakout #1, DJA-Rara and Ti-Coca & Wanga Négès.  The many cultural connections will be illustrated throughout all aspects of this year’s Festival.  Some highlights include traditional Vodou drumming performances, folk crafts demonstrations led by visiting master artisans and rara band DJA-Rara parading throughout the Fair Grounds.   With the support of the Green Family Foundation, the program will also include a series of scholar-led panel discussions entitled Haiti & New Orleans: Cultural Crossroads as well as a listening station featuring excerpts from the Grammy nominated recordings of Dr. Alan Lomax made in Haiti for the Library of Congress in 1936-1937.

Tickets for the Festival, which takes place at the Fair Grounds Race Course, went on sale today.  A limited number of discount ticket packages including tickets to each day of a particular weekend of the Festival will be offered. Ticket packages purchased for all three days of the first weekend (April 29, 30 & May 1) will be $120 ($40 per day), while second weekend packages purchased for all four festival days (May 5, 6, 7, & 8 ) will be $160 ($40 per day). (Tickets included in each package are day-specific.)  Advance single day Jazz Fest tickets are only $45; the gate price is $60. Children’s tickets (ages 2 - 10) are still only $5 and are available at the gate only.  Single day tickets to Jazz Fest are on sale by specific weekend, with each ticket valid for a single day’s attendance.

Tickets are available at www.nojazzfest.com and www.ticketmaster.com, at all Ticketmaster outlets or by calling (+1) (800) 745-3000. Tickets can be purchased in person at the Jazz Fest ticket office located at the New Orleans Arena Box Office. All Jazz Fest tickets are subject to additional service fees and handling charges.

Tom Jones will be performing on Sunday May 1st, for a detailed line-up and festival information please go to www.nojazzfest.com

Gig Review: Tom Jones at Celtic Connections

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IT'S Blue Monday, scientifically calculated to be the most depressing day of the year, but Tom Jones is in town to cheer us all up with a swivel of the hips and his lusty, mischief-making holler. Right?

Not exactly. Tom Jones has got The Blues and he's spreading them around the pristine environs of the Concert Hall, in a righteous coup for Celtic Connections. While the festival regularly attracts folk heavyweights and world music superstars, this concert felt different, even bizarrely exotic. Jones the Voice has been booked to perform his latest album, Praise & Blame, a comparatively sober interpretation of gospel, blues and country standards which, he informed the crowd, was all Elvis Presley's idea in the first place.

Uncharacteristically for a Jones show, the atmosphere was muted as he took the stage, but his funereal version of Dylan's What Good Am I? hardly invited wild participation. And it would be plain inappropriate to throw undergarments at a man contemplating the very core of his being.

After this sombre opening, Jones let rip on the meaty blues strut of Lord Help. He got gruff and grizzly on the low-slung Nobody's Fault But Mine and hit the depths of his vocal range on Burning Hell, accompanied by some blistering guitar work. On the side of the angels, he summoned a testifying spirit on Strange Things, displayed celebratory gospel gumption on Pops Staples' Don't Knock and rocked the rhythm of a revival meeting on Didn't It Rain.

The country confessional If I Give My Soul sounded like something he might have cut back in the 60s, along with his encore of Green, Green Grass Of Home. But in rounding off with the unabashed cheese of It's Not Unusual it felt like Jones was throwing the fans a bone rather than keeping the courage of his convictions.

By Fiona Shepherd

Picture: Robert Perry

Click here to read the review at The Scotsman

Praise & Blame Tops Albums of 2010

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In 2010 we saw the release of 'Praise & Blame' which contributed to a great year in the Tom Jones camp.

Continuing the critical acclaim throughout the year we are delighted to be featured in some "Reviews of the Year".

After our post on reaching Number 5 in the LA Times writers top 10, we thought we would share some more with you.

Jeff Spevak at the Democrat and Chronicle, chose 'Praise & Blame' as his number 1 album of the  year.

Jeff says: "The No. 1 album surfaces not out of the urgency of the word, but because, whenever I put on the CD, guests would invariably ask, "What is this?" This is Tom Jones — with the record of his life.....When I last saw Tom Jones singing live, in 2006, one of the highlights was a bluesy take on the old traditional, "St. James Infirmary." He's continued that deep musical journey here with songs celebrating the roots of American music. There's no "What's New, Pussycat" kitsch. His aching, restrained take on Dylan's "What Good Am I?" is followed by a soul-rocking version of Jessie Mae Hemphill's "Lord, Help the Poor and Needy." At 70, Jones' voice still rises to the occasion, booming its way through the gospel of Sister Rosetta Tharpe's "Strange Things," while he and the guitars are a gritty match on John Lee Hooker's "Burning Hell." And Billy Joe Shaver's "If I Give My Soul" will shake you up. All I can say is, wow ... good work." Click here to read the full article

St. Cloud Times reviewer Karl Leslie, rates Praise & Blame at number 5 in his top ten.

Karl says: "Tom Jones, “Praise & Blame:” Yes. Tom Jones. After duping you with a melancholy cover of Dylan’s “What Good Am I?,” Jones proceeds to lay down the R&B comeback album of the year." Click here to read the full article

And at The Dallas Morning NewsMario Tarradells rates Praise & Blame at number 9 in his top ten albums of 2010.

Mario says: "From the opening note, Jones' robust voice rattles the bones. It's like you've never heard him, singing gospel, blues and rockabilly tunes with so much power and zest that he probably peeled the paint right off the recording-studio walls." Click here to read the full article

Read Americymru's Excellent Review of 'Praise & Blame'

No one is a bigger fan of Sir Tom Jones than I am. I know, I know. That’s bold and clichéd talk, especially from a 38 year old American guy who’s never hurled any form of undergarment at the man (several Welsh Flags, yes. . . but panties? No.) But suffice it to say that I was beyond excited to learn late this past summer that Sir Tom, now 70, was releasing his 39th studio album, mysteriously titled “Praise & Blame.” As I waited in line (ok, it was just me), I was already relishing the long drive home, and rockin’ out at embarrassingly high volume levels, to a whole new slate of poppy, upbeat, feel-good tunes from “the Voice.” I have never been so glad – to be so wrong. Sir Tom’s latest effort is unexpected . . . and unexpectedly brilliant. And I don’t mean that as a slight to his storied catalogue of work (after all, I sing in a tribute band to the man – told you I was a big fan). I guess I was expecting a continuation of his previous, and well-received, effort “24 Hours” (released Nov. 2008), which was a modern pop album full of fun, and brass. However, right from the start, you know “Praise & Blame” reveals a more soulful, mature “Voice.” This is a ‘different Tom,’ one we’ve not heard before.

“Praise & Blame” was recorded live in the studio, old school style – and you can tell. In homage to his former peers, and the masters of his era (Sinatra, for example, always preferred to record this way, with the band alongside him, in the studio), each track easily moves and breathes, almost organically. Sir Tom’s interplay with the (stellar) musicians and backing vocalists is natural, and apparent. This recording style yields a tangible honesty to the tracks that meshes perfectly with Sir Tom’s raw, graceful vocals throughout. But let’s jump in and tackle the rest of “P&B” track by track . . . .

“What Good Am I?” – track one immediately grabs you with its soft, slow, deliberate tones. Sir Tom introduces you to “P&B” ’s soulful journey with this Bob Dylan cover, in almost a confessional whisper, asking the title question with a prayer-like quietness. It is gently haunting, and yet powerful in its self-introspective honesty.

“Lord Help” – Sir Tom picks up the pace here, in this blues-rock spiritual. One of a very few flat out rockin’ numbers on the album, here Sir Tom sends a prayer for help to all the world’s sinners, gamblers, and “war-torn people of this land.” On this one, I was able to seriously crank up the volume and rock out, on that long drive home. Sir Tom really shows off his range here, belting out the highs in the chorus, harkening back to piercing notes of yester-year hits like ‘Thunderball,’ and ‘Till’, that only “the Voice” can pull off.

“Did Trouble Me” – the third track here, really cements the tone for the rest of “P&B” as the main attraction is not the heart-wrenching vocals, but the intense, exposed emotional honesty of the lyrics, as Sir Tom reminds us that his God “in the whisper of the wind, in the rhythm of song . . . . will trouble me with a word or sign, like the ringing of a bell in the back of my mind.” This is an utterly beautiful, soulful ballad, and I never thought I’d say that of song that so prominently features a banjo, but there it is.

“Strange Things” – the fourth track is a traditional spiritual in a sort of rockabilly arrangement – I warned you that this album wasn’t a mod version of “what’s new pussycat?”! More upbeat, the band is great here, but (unbiasedly) not as great as “the Voice.”

“Burning Hell” – this cover of the Johnny Lee Hooker classic was the only song I’d heard before purchasing the cd (which I actually bought twice, as my brother stole my cd, so I bought it again on iTunes . . . you’re welcome, Sir Tom.) It’s one of the standout, rockin’ and best tracks on the album, and the one Sir Tom has most often selected to perform in promoting “P&B” on the daytime, and late night TV circuit in recent months. In true blues’ style, Sir Tom grittily belts out “maybe there ain’t no Heaven / maybe there ain’t no Hell,” accompanied only by the drums and a loud, sexy, skuzzy guitar sound. The “rock-out” quotient is high here, as well. The spiritual introspection on “Burning Hell” also continues as Sir Tom asks, “when I die, where will I go? . . . somebody please tell me.” As the journey through the rest of the tracks on “P&B” continues, the quest for an answer to this question continues . . . .

“If I Give My Soul” – this cover of a Billy Joe Shaver song, is my favorite track here. Sir Tom (perhaps a little too) perfectly captures the tortured soul of a man, at the end of his life, replete with regret, standing before Jesus literally with his “hat clutched in my hand.” Only in this track are you reminded that Sir Tom is anywhere near 70 years old, as he fills this song with the heart-breaking, soulful delivery of a man who’s wasted days and loves that he’s begging his Lord to restore. The emotion here is real, and when he sings “if I give my soul, will my son love me again?” . . . well, if that doesn’t bring a tear, or at least move you even a little bit, then please report to the nearest emergency room immediately.

“Don’t Knock” – Sir Tom lifts the mood here, and gives your box of Kleenex a break, with a lively spiritual track that Jerry Lee Lewis would’ve been proud of. The musicianship, and choral backing are first rate.

“Nobody’s Fault But Mine” – this track is more quintessentially bluesy, and is spiritually akin to the tones of “If I Give My Soul,” as Sir Tom’s tells us that if he loses his soul, it ain’t “nobody’s fault but mine”, as he “had good lovin’ in my home,” and “I gotta Bible in my home,” etc. Sir Tom credibly continues “P&B” ‘s spiritual confessional here, in this stripped-down blues number.

“Didn’t It Rain” – one of the better examples of the exposed beauty that is “the Voice” at 70. His interpretation and delivery of the ‘Noah-esque’ lyrics is characteristically unique, and moving.

“Ain’t No Grave” – no disrespect to the late, great Johnny Cash, but Sir Tom’s version here – although in a similar arrangement – is far superior. Not the best track on the album, but very well done and maintains the spiritual continuity of “P&B.”

“Run On” – the 11th and final track on “P&B” is a straight-up, undeniably catchy blues song (also previously covered by the likes of Johnny Cash, Elvis, and many others). When Sir Tom cuts lose in an early chorus and belts out the sinners’ warning, tell “the rambler, the gambler, the back-biter, tell ‘em God Almighty’s gonna cut you down ,” you can’t help but feel the sheer joy and power in “the Voice.” Yeah, he’s still got it, and then some.

At this stage of his career, Sir Tom’s voice lends itself perfectly to the selections on “P&B,” showing he’s still got a knack for picking winners, and is wise enough to play to his strengths. His still-powerful voice rumbles at the lower registers with a credibility and gravitas unmatched by anyone in the ‘biz’ today – maybe ever. And when you match this with the soul-piercingly-deep and introspective spirituality that the lyrics on “P&B” offers, then you just might have Sir Tom’s best album ever. I know, I know. . . that’s bold talk for a 38 year old American guy, who can’t even read music. . . but it’s definitely worth your time and a listen. You might just discover a whole new “Voice.”

Read the review here at americymru.com