Introduction

“I know where I’m going. But don’t die with me.”
Those were the final words Linda Trenchard spoke to her husband, Sir Tom Jones, before she lost her battle with cancer. They were not words of surrender, but a tender, unwavering command — a final act of love. She was telling him to keep living, to keep singing, even when she no longer could.
Tom and Linda’s story began in Pontypridd, South Wales, where they met as children and later became teenage sweethearts. In 1957, when they were both just 16 years old — and Linda was eight months pregnant with their son, Mark — they married and stepped together into a life that would last nearly six decades.
Those early years were hard. Tom worked construction by day to support his young family, then sang at night, chasing a dream that felt impossibly distant. He often credited those Welsh working-men’s clubs for shaping him, saying that if you could win over a coal-mining crowd, you could sing anywhere in the world.
Their marriage was not simple. As Tom’s fame exploded globally, temptation followed, and he later admitted to infidelities while on tour. Yet through every storm, Linda remained his anchor. She was the one person who could keep him grounded, the woman who reminded him who he truly was.
“I married Thomas Woodward,” she would say, using his real name. “So don’t try that Tom Jones nonsense with me.”
When Linda became ill, Tom canceled his tour. He told her he wasn’t sure he could sing anymore. That was when she gave him the words that would carry him forward:
“You’ve got to sing. There’s no way out for me — I know where I’m going. But don’t die with me.”
After her death in 2016, Tom felt utterly lost. He wondered who would save him from himself now. Overwhelmed by grief, he nearly walked away from music entirely, afraid that if he let himself feel too much, his voice would fail him.
With the help of his son Mark — now his manager — and a therapist, Tom found his way back. He began by singing Bob Dylan’s “What Good Am I?” in a quiet hotel room with close musician friends, using the song to face his grief and the questions that haunted him.
“I got through it,” he said. And that was enough to begin again.
He learned how to carry deep emotion on stage without letting it consume him:
“You take the emotion, work it into the song, and get through it — but you can’t get lost in it, or you won’t be able to sing.”
Across a remarkable six-decade career, Sir Tom Jones has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, with timeless hits like “It’s Not Unusual,” “Delilah,” and “Sex Bomb.” Every performance now is more than entertainment — it is the fulfillment of Linda’s final, loving wish.
Their love was a beautiful, complicated journey — a bond forged in youth, tested by fame, and strengthened by shared history. It did not end with Tom’s mistakes, and it did not end with Linda’s death.
Her love remains the light that guides him.
And every time Sir Tom Jones steps onto a stage and sings, he proves that true love does not fade — it lives on, in voice, in memory, and in the courage to keep going.