Tom Baxter
Singer-Songwriter · GB · Active since 1973

Tom Baxter

Elegant, string-laden folk that feels like a quiet confession. Intimate acoustic guitar and soaring vocals for slow mornings and deep reflection.

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Tom Baxter crafts music that feels like a series of oil paintings rendered in sound. His approach is deeply rooted in the folk tradition of his parents, yet it reaches for a cinematic grandeur through lush orchestral arrangements and a sophisticated pop sensibility. The core of his sound is the interplay between his delicate fingerstyle guitar work and a voice that can shift from a grounded, earthy baritone to a glass-shattering, emotive falsetto in a single breath.

What sets Baxter apart is his refusal to rush. There is a profound patience in his songwriting, allowing melodies to unfurl naturally against backdrops of cello, violin, and warm piano. His production often favors an analog intimacy that makes the listener feel as though they are sitting in the room with him, yet the arrangements possess a scale that feels large enough to fill a cathedral. It is music that occupies the space between the private and the performative.

For those new to his catalog, Feather & Stone is the essential entry point. It captures the raw emotional honesty of his early residencies while introducing the sophisticated string arrangements that became his hallmark. It is the perfect companion for moments of quiet introspection or romantic vulnerability, offering a sound that is both timeless and deeply personal.

Thomas Baxter Gleave (born 29 October 1973) is a British singer-songwriter based in London. He was born in Ipswich, Suffolk, and grew up in Camborne, Cornwall, with his four siblings. The second son of Jeff and Julie Gleave (who were regulars on the folk music circuit in the late 1960s and early 1970s). Baxter and his siblings use their middle names as stage surnames. Baxter is the middle brother of Jo Spencer (the eldest), and his younger brother Charlie Winston, a successful songwriter based in France. The youngest sibling Vashti Anna was named after singer-songwriter Vashti Bunyan who is a family friend. By age 15, Baxter had picked up the guitar and started a rockabilly band with his elder brother after hearing 'The Elvis Sun Sessions'. He went on to attend art school at 17, specializing in Fine Art Painting. After moving to London at age 19 to attend music college to study a foundation course in Music & Performance at Brunel University, he graduated with a BA in Commercial Music at Westminster University. During this period he spent much of his time on the gig circuit and later took up a series of successful residencies at Bush Hall in Shepherds Bush and The Bedford, Balham which brought him to the attention of major record labels. A self-titled EP was released by Sony Music through the Columbia Records label in May 2004 and included the tracks "Joanna", "Half a Man" and "My Declaration". On 30 July 2004, Baxter released on Columbia Records to critical acclaim his 10-track debut album, Feather and Stone, recorded at Peter Gabriel's Real World Studios. Following the release the album became a regular on the BBC Radio 2 playlist. Singles from the album included "This Boy" and "My Declaration". The album release was followed by a headlining UK tour and entered the Official UK Charts Top 75 Albums in August 2004. He also supported Nerina Pallot on her UK tour in January 2007. Prior to the album release Baxter was signed early on by Mike McCormack at Universal music publishing in 2003. After the release of Feather & Stone. Baxter toured the UK & Ireland extensively off the back of a his Radio 2 success championed by Terry Wogan, Jonathon Ross and long time supporter Paul Kramer of the Hit Sheet. During this time he was managed by Matt Racher, Billy Mcleod, Matthew Austin. Baxter did many headline shows but also supported acts including, David Grey, Damien Rice, Kt Tunstall, Katie Melua, The Beautiful South. In 2004 Baxter performed live on the Jonathon Ross Show singing "This Boy" directed by Ben & Joe Dempsy 2004. In 2006, after parting ways with Sony. Baxter had the freedom, renewed confidence and artistic skills from his formative fine art training to pay for his next album by painting a large (3 ft x 3 ft) canvas for each of the ten 10 tracks on his next album Skybound. Each print sold for £2000 with a hugely anticipated artwork sale at the former Richard Dennis Gallery in Notting Hill, London. In an interview with the Daily Mail Baxter discusses how the musing of his artwork and music kept his perspective fresh and added more depth to his creativity. Now recognised not only as a gifted singer songwriter but a gifted painter, Baxter has been described as a multimedia role model. Online guitar tutorials and an 80-page hardback book ’Tales from the Forest of Hope’ with stories and illustrated artwork followed also helped to raise funds for his music. On 4 June 2007, Baxter released the critically acclaimed album Skybound under his independent label Sylvan. The 10 track album was recorded independently in just 5 days at a recording studio in Chelsea, earning the praise of reaching the Top 20 charts and hailed as Album of the Week. Released on the revived Charisma Records label through a licensing deal with EMI after he split with Sony early in 2007. The first single, "Better", was released in January 2008 and was subsequently used on the soundtrack for the motion picture Run Fatboy Run. "Miracle" was used by the BBC to cover the final montage of their Olympics and Paralympics coverage. The second single was "Tell Her Today". Baxter contributed the track "Make a Stand" to the Survival International charity album Songs for Survival in 2008. Later that year Boyzone covered and released "Better", reaching number 22 in the UK Singles Chart. In 2009, "My Declaration" was covered by Eliza Bennett and used in the soundtrack the film Inkheart (Bennett also played the female lead, Meggie Folchart, in the movie). "Almost There" was covered by Dame Shirley Bassey as the opening track of her album The Performance. Baxter and the BBC Concert Orchestra accompanied Dame Shirley Bassey when she performed the song at the BBC Electric Proms on 24 October 2009 at the Roundhouse in London, a concert broadcast live on BBC Radio 2 and on BBC Two television the next day. The song was also used in the ending credits for the 2010 film, Trust. Following Shirley Bassey's performance, Baxter was invited to stay with Danny Hillis,
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Our Catalog4 Albums · 2004 · 2018
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