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Sometimes Feels Like Heaven

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on May 1, 2007 by Steve ThompsonMay 1, 2007

This song, featured in the musical STEEL TOWN and captures the desperation of families living with the threat of unemployment. Their source of employment, Consett Steel Works, closed in September, 1980.ìSometimes feels like heaven is pouring tears down on me.î

sorry no folk version yet – below is an alternative version

rehearsal recording

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Posted in Folk Songs | Leave a reply

Steel Town

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on May 1, 2007 by Steve ThompsonMay 1, 2007

The title track of the STEEL TOWN musical. Consett moved from a hard working town, ìRaising hell in this frontier townî as its fame grew. The same story could apply to the industrial heartlands in Europe and the USA.

sorry no folk version yet but here is an alternative version preceded by a story from a Steelworker (my uncle Gilbert)

and a version from a show rehearsal

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Posted in Folk Songs | Leave a reply

Like My Fathers Father

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on May 1, 2007 by Steve ThompsonMay 1, 2007

The north-east was at the forefront of the Industrial Revolution, sons followed fathers and grandfathers into the Pits, Steel Works and Shipyards.
ëMy Father’s Father’ remembers, commemorates and celebrates that world

sorry no folk version yet. Alternative version below.

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Don’t Try This At Home

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on April 21, 2007 by Steve ThompsonApril 21, 2007

See yonder ladder up tree. Branch is mostly sawn through. Rope is tied to branch and slung over pegoda.

Noose in end of rope lynch mob style. Stevie the lumberjack climbs into noose and applies his not inconsiderable weight.

Sounds of creaking branch. Branch breaks and sails though the air towards the overweight chap swinging on the other end of the rope. Oh shiiiiit !!!! Survived with just inches to spare.

Posted in Musings | Leave a reply

It’ll End In Tears

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on March 4, 2007 by Steve ThompsonMarch 4, 2007

Consett made steel for one hundred and forty years. The Blackpool Tower was built with Consett steel as were bridges throughout the world. Making steel was a way of life. It gave the town fame and its identity. When the Steel Works closed the entire site was demolished and today there is little evidence of where it once proudly stood.ìIt’ll all end in tears, when They tear down the townî.

sorry no folk arrangement uploaded yet. below are somealternative arrangements.

Studio Version

Accoustic Version from the show

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When You Close Your Eyes (Who Do You See)

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on January 19, 2007 by Steve ThompsonAugust 9, 2015

Oh No
Something aint right
You don’t wanna talk
And I don’t wanna fight
You seem so close
Yet so far away
The truth will come out
In the light of day
Are you there at all
When I take you in my loving arms

When you close your eyes
Who do you see
When you’re here in my arms
When you close your eyes
Are you with me
When you close your eyes
Where do you go

Oh no
What can it be
How can I fight
What I cannot see
I know it’s there
Your Love is not real
Am I a stone
That I should not feel
While you’re here in my arms
Someone else is walking through your dreams

Repeat chorus

Are you there at all
When I take you in my loving arms

Repeat chorus

Listen to Tanya Rowlands Version

Posted in Lyrics | Leave a reply

You Were There

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on January 19, 2007 by Steve ThompsonJanuary 19, 2007

I WAS SO AFRAID I’D RUN AGROUND
AND NEVER GET TO SHARE THE THINGS I’D FOUND
LOOKING BACK I SEE IT NOW
I WAS NEVER ALONE
MAYBE I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN

because……..

YOU WERE THERE
LOOKING THROUGH MY EYES
YOU WERE THERE
SEEING THE SAME SKIES
AND WHENEVER WE’RE APART
WHEN I LOOK INTO MY HEART
YOU’LL BE THERE

WHEN I THINK OF ALL THE THINGS I’D SEEN
WAS IT IN THE WORLD OR IN A DREAM
IS IT MAKING SENSE AT ALL
I WAS SO FAR FROM HOME
BUT I WAS NEVER ALONE

because……….

YOU WERE THERE
LOOKING THROUGH MY EYES
YOU WERE THERE
SEEING THE SAME SKIES
AND WHENEVER WE’RE APART
WHEN I LOOK INTO MY HEART
YOU’LL BE THERE

With you in my heart
Just where you belong
Like A Part Of Me
Together we we are so strong

Posted in Lyrics | Leave a reply

The “Voices” Exhibition

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on January 5, 2007 by Steve ThompsonJanuary 5, 2007
I had a great time over the past two days with my fellow artists from the WMDJ Voices project. This is a multi media project with Photographer, Peter Dixon and poet, Tom Kelly. Click here for more information. The WMDJ ìbandî pictured right (click image to enlarge) spent the last two days working on the upcoming exhibition, exploring and gathering extra material in Teesside and County Durham We also visited the first two venues of the tour and laid some ideas and plans as it will be slightly different in every venue. Several other North East venues are interested in having the exhibition. Today Tom recorded the voice/poem for a piece called ìThe Last Dayî and this was done on the very location of the subject matter, the exit of the workforce on the last day of Consett Iron Works. Here it is ñ click here ñ in the raw and you can hear the wind howling from that bleak location. Click here to watch WMDJ – The Story. (Youtube Video)

Click image to enlarge

Posted in News & Stories | Leave a reply

Silent Stone

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on November 11, 2006 by Steve ThompsonNovember 11, 2006

By Earsdon Church I saw one day
as I was walking home
a sad and lonely place
where stands a silent stone
This silent stone it told to me
a tale of working men
but how could these be miners
when some were only ten

The story now was fading
in nineteen ninety nine
I decided then that I must make
a journey back in time

And so I climbed aboard a ship
and down the years I flew
landed in New Hartley in 1862

At this point there is a monalogue written by Tom Kelly

The miners marched along this road
Their coffins passed all day
My eyes could take no more of this
And so I turned away

By Earsdon Church I came again
And standing all alone
A sad and lonely place
Beside a silent stone

Beside a silent stone

Click here to hear this song performed by the Steve Thompson band recorded live at the Customs House South Shields (UK)

The Silent Stone

The Story Behind This Song

Earsdon is a picturesque village in North Tyneside close to Whitley Bay. The church at Earsdon, St Albans creates a typically English scene of a church on a hilltop, surrounded by trees and is a sight that can be seen for miles around. (see above)

Tucked away behind the church, under a leafy canopy and surrounded by thorns and brambles, is a memorial to the 204 miners who lost their lives in the 1862 disaster at Hartley Pit. This is a very quiet place and the visit is made even more poignant when you notice that the youngest names on the monument are those of miners only 10 years old! There are others of 11 and 12 and many have the same name so possibly father and son(s) of many families were killed. I have heard that the funeral procession through Earson Village took many hours to pass. The pictures below may give you an indication of the atmosphere at this memorial.

I posted a web page with pictures about this and have since been contacted by many people who have some connection with the story. One man, Mike Kirkup had written a book about mining in which there was a journalist of the day’s account of teh 10 days of teh unfolding dister. This book became my “time machine” by which I travelled in order to write this song.

The “Time Machine”

Please respect my copyright. I am aware that lyrics are all over the Internet so if you do reprint any of these please at least credit me with my full name and a link back to this site.

Posted in Lyrics | Leave a reply

Music by the Yard

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on November 5, 2006 by Steve ThompsonNovember 5, 2006
I once worked with an (Irish) sound engineer who was often required to supply pices of music for advertising jingles. He would take a piece of library music and recortd it to quarter inch tape. Since this machine ran at 15 i.p.s. (Inches per second) he could now measure out the required piece with a tape measure. So for a 30 sec commercial he needed 37 feet 6 inches and when the appropriate point was reached, out came the razor blade and, snip, the appropriate lenght of music was handed over to the commercial producers: no regard for musical form or beats.

Posted in Musings | Leave a reply

Paris By Air

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on October 27, 2006 by Steve ThompsonOctober 27, 2006

I walk down the street
With time on my hands
The signs on the walls
Show far off lands
But I don’t know a soul
In this neighbourhood
Can afford the fair
They’re stuck here for good

The only way
I’ll ever see the world
Is if I can become
A rich mans girl
Use my body
To twist his mind
Steal his money
And leave him behind

Paris by Air
Such a beautiful sight
There’s nothing can compare
With Paris by night
Paris by air
The signpost said
I’d love to be there
But I don’t have the bread

Well who could be happy
With what they’ve got
When the signs in the street
Show them what they have not
Paris by Air
Try it and see
But the common people
Will never be free

And growing up
Can be such a pain
Cos you never have things
So easy again
You realise
What it’s all about
You’re in prison
And you can’t break out

note – the lyrics here are the originals as sung by Toni Haliday. I changed them slightly to work for a male singer.

Recorded by The Tygers Of Pan Tang

Recorded by Toni Haliday

Please respect my copyright. I am aware that lyrics are all over the Internet so if you do reprint any of these please at least credit me with my full name and a link back to this site.

Posted in Lyrics | 1 Reply

My First Publisher

The Steve Thompson Band Posted on October 27, 2006 by Steve ThompsonOctober 27, 2006

Through the wonders of T’internet my very first publisher Brian Oliver made contact recently. I’d had songs published and recorded before this was the first time I’d had a relationship with a publisher that to my mind is how it should work. Brian was constanly enthusiastic but equal in his criticism and commendation of my work. He was forever making suggestions for new songs and calling for re-writes and re-workings of material.

We’re just starting out on a new partnership and after some 25 years I find his enthusiasm and his demands for re-writes and more, more, more material have not waned at all. This is proving to be a very exciting time.

Way back in those days Brian used to be always calling for re-writes. He called me up one day and said “you’ve just written a hit”. He then went on to say that it was the verse of one song and the chorus of another and could I sort of just “join them together”. Of course I did so and the resulting song was a minor hit single and went Gold on a compilation album. You will find that song HERE

Another time we were sat in a pub in London and he declared that I coudl take my titles for songs from absolutely anywhere. He pointed to a sign on the wall and said, “for instance you could write a song called The Prince of Wales“. My eyes aligted on the sign below this and I declared that I would write a song on that title instead. I described the story that the title evoked and I went home the next day and wrote it. This too became a hit. CLICK HERE

Another fruitful suggestion by Brian led to some most interesting situations. I had recoded a multitude of songs and many of them were sung by The Caffrey Brothers, three real brothers with a great harmony blend. Brian suggested I form a band around the brothers and told me I had to be in it (I had at that time retired from performing) He then trouped up a series of record companies and producers to the North East that finally resulted in THIS

Brians latest publishing venture is called “Heart2Heart Music”., Watch this space!

[edited to add] Met with Brian recently in a London pub. We discussed our strategy for our latest onslaught on the pop music world. Later we noticed to our horror that the pub wasn’t sporting a single discernable song title on it’s walls. Sign of the times? Shortly aftwards he’s at it again asking for the verse of one song to be added to the chorus of another. Some things never change.

Posted in News & Stories | Leave a reply

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