After being given his walking papers by
Capitol Records in 2000,
Richard Thompson has taken a modest approach to his subsequent studio releases, 2003's
The Old Kit Bag (a purposefully spare trio set) and 2005's
Front Parlour Ballads (an acoustic collection recorded in
Thompson's home studio). But
Thompson seems to have relaxed a bit with 2007's
Sweet Warrior, which boasts a more expansive sound and ambitious reach than those two albums. Produced by
Thompson with his longtime aide de camp
Simon Tassano,
Sweet Warrior more clearly recalls 1991's
Rumor and Sigh than any of
Thompson's other albums; it lacks the high gloss of
Mitchell Froom's production on that disc, but the broad dynamic between upbeat and dour numbers and the thematic sweep of these 14 songs certainly suggest
Thompson was thinking big while making this album, and it suits him.
Thompson is able to play his traditional theme of romance on the rocks for laughs on this set with the witty
"Needle and Thread" and the droll but pointed
"Mr. Stupid," while the sax-infused
"Bad Monkey" is downright rollicking and the
ska-influenced offbeat of
"Francesca" is slinky and sensual. At the same time,
Thompson digs deep into more serious themes, especially on the striking
"Dad's Gonna Kill Me," a tense first-person tale of a soldier on patrol in Iraq, and while a very different sort of combat frames
"Guns Are the Tongues," its story of a dull-witted boy turned against his own interests is equally compelling; both songs show
Thompson's narrative skill and gift for wordplay are as strong as ever. Producer
Thompson gives guitarist
Thompson just the right amount of room to show off his estimable skills on these sessions, and the core band -- bassists
Danny Thompson and
Taras Prodaniuk, drummer
Michael Jerome, and rhythm guitarist
Michael Hays -- is as strong and versatile as one could hope for. At 68 minutes,
Sweet Warrior feels just a bit overstuffed, especially given the simplicity of its immediate predecessors, but there's a hefty portion of fine songs and masterful playing here, and no one who has ever succumbed to
Richard Thompson's magic should pass this up. ~ Mark Deming