Often Butterboy updates his links to special volumes he has shared with us and I do check on them regularly but I figure most folks do this when they are looking for something in particular but this one caught the eye this morning (something to do with being an indispensable classic!?)
Richard Thompson - The Life & Music of Richard Thompson [2006] (5 x CDs) + Bonus

Butterboy notes: Richard Thompson - The Life & Music of Richard Thompson [2006] (5 x CD's) + Bonus
For Richard Thompson fanatics (and those who admire the brilliant songwriter and virtuoso guitarist tend to be quite ardent about him), this five-disc set of obscurities, outtakes, live performances, and previously unreleased material is the holy grail. Earlier releases from Free Reed found the label mining the riches of British folk-rock from the likes of Fairport Convention (which featured Thompson in its most popular incarnation), but here they've hit the mother lode. This isn't the place for a newcomer to start with Thompson, as other "best-of" anthologies and career-spanning compilations might provide a better introduction. Instead, this is a treasure trove that will offer discovery for even the most devoted fan. Each disc has a theme--epic ballads, discarded songs, the essential canon--with the disc of cover versions particularly fascinating. From performance tapes, Thompson makes everything from the Who's "Substitute" and Squeeze's "Tempted" to the traditional "Danny Boy" and "Shenandoah" sound like his own. The expansive selection illuminates Thompson as an artist of great range and subtlety, humor and heart, from the intimacy of his solo acoustic performances to galvanizing, electrically charged renditions of masterpieces such as "Shoot Out the Lights," "For Shame of Doing Wrong," and "Calvary Cross." (Amazon)
A sixth CD "RT on FR" is offered free of charge by returning a coupon included in the 5,000 box sets. (included in this post).
The tracks date from 1971 (the year RT left Fairport convention) to 2005 (including two tracks recorded specifically for this project. There are twelve tracks from the seventies and the rest are fairly equally distributed over the next three decades.
If you haven’t got it and are a Thompson fan (who isn’t?!) have at it - you should really have this!
You won’t regret it!
WHY?
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