Brand: Mobile Fidelity

Richard Thompson - Rumor and Sigh (Limited to 3,000, Numbered 180g Vinyl 2LP Set)

Availability: In Stock
This item is in stock and ready to ship. Depending on the time of day when you place your order, it will ship same day or next business day.
SKU:
LMF476
California customers: Please click here for
your Proposition 65 warning.
Richard Thompson - Rumor and Sigh (Limited to 3,000, Numbered 180g Vinyl 2LP Set)

Richard Thompson - Rumor and Sigh (Limited to 3,000, Numbered 180g Vinyl 2LP Set)

Availability:
Description

The Most Cohesive and Accessible Album of Richard Thompson's Career: Brilliantly Diverse, Savagely Witty Rumor and Sigh Includes All TIME 100 Song "1952 Vincent Black Lightning"  

Mastered from the Original Master Tapes, Pressed at RTI, and Strictly Limited to 3,000 Numbered Copies: Rumor and Sigh on 180g 33RPM Vinyl 2LP for the First Time 

1/2" / 30 IPS / Dolby SR analog master to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe

Richard Thompson manages all of his usual superhuman feats on Rumor and Sigh. Rippled, vibrant guitar lines that sound like they're coming from four guitars? Check. Lyrics that expose the delicate quirks of human behavior in witty, truthful manners? Here. Engaging vocals that arrive as if they are sung only to you, the words doubling as whispered thoughts in your own head? Yep. But Rumor and Sigh goes further by featuring astute, lively production and well-planned arrangements that turn the 1991 album into one of the – if not the – most cohesive and accessible efforts of Thompson's storied career. And now, courtesy of Mobile Fidelity, it's his best-sounding record.

Mastered from the original master tapes, pressed at RTI, strictly limited to 3,000 numbered copies, and on 180g vinyl 2LP for the first time ever to provide needed groove space, Mobile Fidelity's reissue breathes with an effervescent openness that makes the music emerge with a livelier sheen, standout dynamics, and unstoppable energy. The dead-quiet pressing makes it immediately evident Rumor and Sigh endures as a very special album – a cohesive, varied, and fun set spiked with some of Thompson's finest compositions and an exoticism that extends to the modest use of the hurdy-gurdy, mandolin, concertina, and crumhorn.

Casual fans will likely even recognize the Mitchell Froom-produced release includes the incomparable "1952 Vincent Black Lightning," a motorcycle-based tale of desire, love, and death rightly recognized by TIME magazine as one of its All TIME 100 songs. It, and the other 13 tracks, takes on newfound radiance that showcases the brilliant range of Thompson's instrumentation and tone.

So is the diversity of the album's sonic signatures and themes. Opener "Read About Love" provides an electric-start jolt, its upbeat tempos, shimmering accents, and massive hooks framing Thompson's amusing story of an inexperienced introvert that applies pop-culture ideas of romance to the real thing. The master wordsmith finds similar ironies in the mischievous intent of "I Feel So Good," a Celtic-flavored tune whose uplifting emotions contrast with the character's out-of-control desires. Humor further wriggles in the jaunty "Psycho Street" and spirited "Don't Sit on My Jimmy Shands," an enduring tribute to the Scottish accordionist and the pursuit of collecting rare 78 records.

The singer-songwriter's knack for accentuating biting contrast – and for delving into darker regions where jealousy, bitterness, and self-deprecation reside – pervades Rumor and Sigh in the same manner his band shades his every move with narrative skill. Just listen to the faint keyboard cues on "I Misunderstood" or Jim Keltner's crisp, hi-hat cracks on "You Dream Too Much." Of course, everyone stands aside for the folk-leaning "1952 Vincent Black Lightning," a solo tour de force of musicianship and lyricism that confirms Rumor and Sigh survives not only as one of the finest records of the 1990s – but one of the best platters of the last three decades. 

“MoFi’s two-LP Original Master Recordings reissue takes the digital edge off the 1991 CD sound, widens and deepens the soundstage, and arrays the instruments more cleanly.”
The Absolute Sound

  1. Read About Love
  2. I Feel So Good
  3. I Misunderstood
  4. Grey Walls
  5. You Dream Too Much
  6. Why Must I Plead
  7. 1952 Vincent Black Lightning
  8. Backlash Love Affair
  9. Mystery Wind
  10. Don't Sit on My Jimmy Shands
  11. Keep Your Distance
  12. Mother Knows Best
  13. God Loves a Drunk
  14. Psycho Street
Related Videos
How We Pack Your Records At Music Direct