News Archives

BOSTONGLOBE.COM — Gertrude Taylor, 92; mother of Taylor singing clan

October 13, 2015 Published by Comments Off on BOSTONGLOBE.COM — Gertrude Taylor, 92; mother of Taylor singing clan

By Bryan Marquard

For Trudy Taylor, no aspirations were beyond reach, and she made sure her children shared her view of life’s expansive opportunities.

“The thing that stands out most to me about Trudy Taylor was that she took any vision you had about yourself completely seriously,” her son Livingston said by phone. “I remember at the age of 6 telling her that I wanted to dig a swimming pool in the front yard. And I studied her face as only a child can study a mother’s face, looking for signs of incredulity. I did not see the slightest trace then or ever. She supported her children’s visions without reservation. It was a remarkable trait.”

As four of her five children — Alex, James, Livingston, and Kate — turned to music, achieving renown and fame, Mrs. Taylor charted her own path artistically as a painter and a weaver, a photographer and gardener. A world traveler, she trekked in the Himalayas and visited China several times, at one point photographing and cataloging the architecture and kitchens of rural homes. The daughter of a fisherman, “she sailed across the Atlantic a couple of times, up and down the Caribbean, to Newfoundland and among the ice floes up there,” her son James said in an interview. “That was in her blood, too. She was a sailor.”

Mrs. Taylor died Saturday in her Martha’s Vineyard home overlooking Stonewall Pond in Chilmark. She was 92.

“She was quite an artistic person, really,” said her son Hugh. “She was an avid photographer for a period of her life and then moved on once she mastered that. That was a fairly common part of her practice: She would get good at something and then move on to something else, and not frivolously.”

Among Mrs. Taylor’s talents was spinning wool with friends, using material from the Vineyard and elsewhere. The designs on apparel she created often were inspired by “landscapes she could see out her windows, the different colors in different seasons,” Hugh said.

“There wasn’t anything that she tried that she didn’t master,” Mrs. Taylor’s daughter, Kate, wrote in a tribute. “Her artistic flair was manifest in her home — the furnishings, the table she set, the food she served, the art she surrounded herself with.”

To her children, Mrs. Taylor passed along her sense that all things were possible. “She made sure to expose us to all kinds of things,” James said. “She was constantly signing us up for a trip abroad, or an environmental camp, or a French immersion course, or a study the university was doing.”

In the mid-1950s, while the children were young, her husband, Dr. Isaac M. Taylor, served for two years as chief medical officer at McMurdo Station in Antarctica. When he returned, Mrs. Taylor took the five children to Europe. “She was simply fierce in her desire to give her kids as broad an experience of the world as possible,” James said. “She really took that to heart.”

Born Gertrude Woodard, she was the second oldest of five children, and was a teenager when her older sister, Ruth, died.

Mrs. Taylor grew up in Newburyport, where her father “was a fisherman and a boat builder and the unofficial mayor of Ring’s Island,” Kate wrote. “Her mother was a sweet whistling songstress who created a beautiful home for her family, with braided rugs made from their old woolen clothes and colorful and cheerful hooked rugs for every surface of their floors.”

She attended high school in Newburyport and studied voice at New England Conservatory, and met Ike Taylor in Boston. They married and had “four boys and a girl, all born in the span of six years between 1947 and 1953,” James noted on his webpage.

The family moved to Chapel Hill, N.C., where Dr. Taylor was dean of the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. In an interview, James recalled that his mother “walked the picket line” protesting segregation in the South.

“She was politically astute,” Kate wrote. “She had a fierce sense of the need for fairness and justice.”

In the early 1970s, Mrs. Taylor and her husband divorced. Dr. Taylor died in 1996.

“I always had the feeling that if she had been born 20 years later, she would have been a fully emancipated woman,” James said, and instead she lived in a time when women were expected to take a secondary role in marriages.

“She knew too much to be comfortable with that, yet she wasn’t born late enough to have the support from the culture to do differently,” he added in the interview. “It was as if she was caught between two worlds, my mom. I think honestly if she had been born later, she would have been independent her entire life.”

Nevertheless, Mrs. Taylor crafted a life of steady adventures, creatively and geographically, once she moved full time to the Vineyard, where her gardens always brought “lots of traffic through her place,” Hugh said. “She was also a really great cook.”

Her kitchen talents “were celebrated by anyone fortunate enough to sit at her table,” James wrote on his webpage. “This included the illustrious James Beard, who introduced the world to her ‘Chilmark Bouillabaisse.’ ”

Kate added in her tribute: “Pity the poor soul who tried to make her a clam chowder! Man could she cook!”

A service will be announced for Mrs. Taylor, who in addition to her children James, Livingston, Hugh, and Kate leaves her brother, Henry Woodard; two sisters, May Atkinson and Jean Woodard; nine grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

In 1993, Mrs. Taylor’s oldest child, Alex, died of a heart attack at 47. “At the death of our beautiful brother Alex I watched as she bent, and I was very concerned that she would break,” Livingston said. “But she did not break. She bent, and then accommodated that pain and continued with her life of adventure and discovery.”

Indeed, to be in the presence of Trudy Taylor at any point in her life “required always that your thoughts be in hyperdrive,” Livingston added, “because no part of your vision was going to go unchallenged.”

source: https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/obituaries/2015/10/12/gertrude-taylor-mother-taylor-singing-clan-dies/rjUgas9znOCOJxf64iZ6sN/story.html


Trudy Taylor

October 12, 2015 Published by Comments Off on Trudy Taylor

I'm deeply grateful for all the kind words of sympathy and condolence that people have been sending in these past two days.

Thank you.

Gertrude Woodard Taylor (1921-2015) was the daughter of a Massachusetts fisherman and the wife of a North Carolina doctor. She devoted her life to her marriage and her five children, four boys and a girl, all born in the span of six years between 1947 and 1953.

She raised us in the home she built in Chapel Hill, NC and, since she never lost her Maritime New England roots, made an annual summer migration to Martha's Vineyard Island.

Her two homes, in Chapel Hill and Chilmark, were works of art into which she channeled her constant creativity. But she was also an accomplished painter, a weaver (spinning her own yarn), a photographer, a distinguished horticulturist and a killer cook, whose talents in the kitchen were celebrated by anyone fortunate enough to sit at her table. This included the illustrious James Beard who introduced the world to her "Chilmark Bouillabaisse." Everything she put her hand to became a work of art.

As the wife of the Dean of Medicine at the University of North Carolina, she shouldered the burden of official hostess with a warmth and sophistication that was an invaluable asset to my father, as he built a world-renowned School of Medicine and assembled its faculty.

She ended her days in her simple, elegant cottage overlooking her beloved Stonewall Pond, surrounded by dear friends and four generations of family. As she liked to say: "Life is finite, but love lasts forever..."

~ James

trudy1 trudy2

(Photos by Jeannie Whitehead, Aboard the Queen Mary 2, 2009)


James on PBS’ Tavis Smiley

October 9, 2015 Published by Comments Off on James on PBS’ Tavis Smiley

Last week from LA, James appeared on two episodes of Tavis Smiley. James joined host Tavis Smiley for a lengthy conversation — over two nights — touching on James's #1 new album, his song-writing process, long career and even Taylor Swift! Click the images below to watch those two episodes in full now!

Tavis Smiley Part One

JT_Tavis1

Tavis Smiley Part Two

JT_Tavis2


James Visits Concord Music Group

October 2, 2015 Published by Comments Off on James Visits Concord Music Group

Earlier this week, James stopped by the Los Angeles offices of his record label, Concord Music, to thank the team for all their hard work supporting his number one album, Before This World. Click the image below to see an album of photos from that afternoon.James Taylor Concord staff 9.28.15_Sm



James on Rich Eisen & Tavis Smiley

September 25, 2015 Published by Comments Off on James on Rich Eisen & Tavis Smiley

UPDATE: James's appearance on Tavis Smiley will air in two parts, tonight (September 29) and tomorrow, September 30.
James has two more appearances to let you know about: he'll be on The Rich Eisen Show show today, starting at 11:20 am PST/2:20 pm EST. The Rich Eisen Show is heard on more that 160 sports radio stations and is simulcast on DirectTV's Audience Channel. Visit RichEisenShow.com for more details. Next week, James will guest on PBS's Tavis Smiley — exact air date is to be determined, so check your local listings!


…In My Pants

September 25, 2015 Published by Comments Off on …In My Pants

James stopped by Jimmy Kimmel Live on Wednesday night, performing a special outdoor mini-concert, sitting for a chat with Jimmy and premiering an "advertisement" for a new collaborative project! Click the two images below to watch those clips now.

James Taylor and Jimmy Kimmel's "In My Pants"*

_91A0632-ABC-Randy Holmes_sm

*Just a joke, folks!

James Taylor Played in an Insane Asylum

_O6A9709-ABC-Randy Holmes_sm

Photos: Randy Holmes, Jimmy Kimmel Live, 09/23/2015.



BOSTONGLOBE.COM – James Taylor gets silly with Jimmy Kimmel

September 24, 2015 Published by Comments Off on BOSTONGLOBE.COM – James Taylor gets silly with Jimmy Kimmel

By Mark Shanahan As serious as he sometimes can seem, singer James Taylor actually has a good sense of humor, which he displayed during an appearance Wednesday on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” In the skit, JT promoted a new greatest hits...

Read More


Upcoming TV Appearances and free Kimmel mini-concert tickets!

September 18, 2015 Published by Comments Off on Upcoming TV Appearances and free Kimmel mini-concert tickets!

James has lined up another round of TV appearances in support of his new album, Before This World. Mark you calendars, set your DVR's and be sure to tune in to see James in action!

First up, on Tuesday, September 22 James and Band will perform on The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Check your local listings for channels and air times.

Next, James will appear on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live on September 23 at 11:35 pm local time. James will be performing an outdoor mini-concert, starting at 5:45. Get your FREE tickets here.

Last, James will tape his FIRST EVER appearance on the long-running Austin City Limits on Thursday, October 1 (the program will air November 15 on PBS). Tickets will be available on ACLTV.com sometime in the next week. Keep an eye on this page for details!