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One More Review — “…Jones was always more than he seemed.”
“NoDepression.com is a very interesting music site that began life in 1995 as an alternative country music quarterly. Here is their review of 24 Hours — another very good review from a US outlet that seems to have the respect of the industry.

Tom Jones doesn’t get enough credit. Older than most
pop singers of the late 1960s, Jones was seen as the guy trying to connect with
the young and hip crowds while appealing to a much older demographic at the same
time. The fact that his concerts became known for the tossing of women’s
undergarments made it hard for many music fans to take him seriously.
But Jones was always more than he seemed. His music fit right at the
intersection of soul, pop, country and rock, and he was obviously in love with
all of it. DVDs of his late-’60s TV variety program display his range of
interests and his delight in watching other performers.
His singing was bold, brassy, defiantly machismo, and, at age 68, it still is.
For this, his first new release in almost ten years, Jones hooks up with a young
English production team called Future Cut. The first half-dozen songs are
retro-soul club anthems that could keep the dance floor moving in sequence with
Joss Stone or Amy Winehouse.
After a goofy attempt by Bono and the Edge of U2 to force Jones to tell us he’s
still sexy when we’ve obviously caught on just by listening, the second half of
the record is filled with deeper, more nuanced character songs.
Need (Moderator’s Note: Think he
means Never), one of many
originals Jones co-wrote with his producers, is an impassioned plea to a lover
moving away. On The Hitter, a
nearly-forgotten gem from Bruce Springsteen’s 2005 album Devils & Dust, he pulls
out all the stops, as Jones embodies in turn pride, regret, shame, passion,
love, hope, and resignation. You can hear him feeling every emotion in this
complex song, the tour de force of a man who has more music in him than most
everyone thinks. —Steve Pick