|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Hand Of Kindness

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (57 ratings)
Hand Of Kindness album cover
01
Tear-Stained Letter
4:42 $0.99
02
How I Wanted To
5:12 $0.99
03
Both Ends Burning
3:51 $0.99
04
Poisoned Heart And A Twisted Memory
5:25 $0.69
05
Where The Wind Don't Whine
4:10 $0.69
06
Wrong Heartbeat
3:15 $0.99
07
Hand Of Kindness
6:04 $0.99
08
Devonside
4:47 $0.99
09
Two Left Feet
3:54 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 41:20

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

It's not the two albums on either side of it,but..

chickenfoof

...it's still very good. Between the resigned hairiness of Shoot Out of the Lights and the full-frontal hairiness Of Across a Crowded Room, this one's pretty understated in comparison. But lots of moments -- the title song, "How I Wanted To," "Devonside," even more "up" stuff like "Tear-Stained Letter." Richard Thompson pretty much doesn't know how to put out a bad album, and like the other reviewer suggested, this is one that deserves to be rescued from obscurity.

user avatar

hard-to-find classic

st.fabian

richard is as talented a player as clapton,yet he plays more diverse instruments. the trouble is,rarely is his material up to eric's.('lights' excepted) here it comes together for the full disc,it is a dark ride,but a rich trip. a too small label hindered this album's exposure.grab this one!

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Richard & Linda Thompson’s final album together, 1982′s Shoot Out the Lights, was widely seen as a document of their collapsing relationship, despite the fact that both of them strongly denied that was ever their intention, and when Richard Thompson released Hand of Kindness in 1983, it was similarly read as a sad and bitter letter from a lovelorn divorcee, conveniently ignoring the fact that Richard left Linda (not the other way around), and was already involved in a new (and happy) relationship by the time he cut the album. While Hand of Kindness is dominated by songs about unhappy relationships, the truth is most of Thompson’s albums are full of such songs; if you want to read an autobiographical slant into the album, Thompson’s well of anger (“Tear Stained Letter,” “A Poisoned Heart and a Twisted Memory”) and regret (“How I Wanted To,” “Hand of Kindness”) seem to run especially deep. But the album’s darkest track, “Devonside,” is a tragic tale of a dysfunctional relationship that clearly does not involve himself, and the album has a number of solid up-tempo rockers, such as the witty horse-racing tale “Both Ends Burning” and the rollicking, Cajun-flavored “Two Left Feet.” Thompson’s vocals and guitar work is in splendid shape throughout, and his band is particularly fine fettle, especially drummer Dave Mattacks and John Kirkpatrick on accordion. Hand of Kindness lacks a bit of the narrative depth and emotional push-and-pull that made Shoot Out the Lights an instant classic (and while “Both Ends Burning” and “Two Left Feet” are lots of fun, it’s a stretch to call them great songs), but it certainly confirmed that Richard Thompson had a more than interesting solo career ahead of him. – Mark Deming

more »