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Tuesday, February 21
2017

THEWEST.COM.AU — REVIEW: James Taylor

By Ross McRae

James Taylor unassumingly walked on to the picturesque Leeuwin Estate stage solo, took off his familiar cap and waved to the unsuspecting audience.

“Thanks for bringing us back here to this wonderful place,” he reflected on his second time playing Leeuwin; his first in 2003.

The 68-year-old folk, rock and pop singer-songwriter, 68, then led the crowd through a 21/4-hour masterclass spanning much of the cream of his back catalogue.

“It’s all about the band. It’s the first time I’ve been able to bring the full ensemble Down Under,” he said after belting through a cover of Buddy Holly’s Everyday, a hit for Taylor in 1985.

It wasn’t all about the classics, with Taylor scattering a couple of tracks from his long-overdue 16th album, 2015’s Before This World.

“I know what you are thinking; we didn’t come here to listen to some goddamn new music … The new songs sound like the old songs so it’ll be real painless,” Taylor joked. And he was right as he went into Today Today Today that was just as timeless as anything else he had written in the 1960s or 70s.

Not only in fine voice, Taylor is a consummate storyteller which drew the audience in and created a deeper connection to the songs.

No matter how many times he might have told the stories, he made it seem like the first time, such as talking about his breakthrough smash, Carolina in My Mind, which celebrates its 50th birthday next year, where he spoke about getting signed by the Beatles’ Apple Records and recording it in London where they were making The White Album.

Taylor has a wry sense of humour, which came through most prominently when introducing Country Road from his seminal 1970 album Sweet Baby James.

“(It’s about) a theme I keep coming back to, a hippie anthem, nature as church, a spiritual connection to the planet through nature, hippie bulls…, can’t get enough of that country hippie thing.” While he didn’t want to talk politics — “It’s humiliating. I hope your government is good, we broke ours” — he ended the first act with Shed a Little Light, his gospel-esque tribute to Martin Luther King Jr.

After a 20-minute intermission, Taylor returned and paid homage to one of his good friends and often collaborator Carole King, in what was the double-header highlight of the evening with Up on the Roof and You’ve Got a Friend.

“As soon as I heard it I ran to get my guitar as I had to try to it, not realising I would be playing it for every gig of my life, no exception,” he said of being there the first night King ever performed You’ve Got a Friend live at the Troubadour in Los Angeles.

After some classic renditions of Shower the People and Fire and Rain, Mexico got the party going with punters from the general admission running to the front of the stage, with even the corporates in black-tie rushing to join the throng worshipping at Taylor’s stage.

Energy levels stayed high for the finale, a surprisingly upbeat cover of Knock on Wood and, of course, his beloved 1975 version of Marvin Gaye’s How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You) before finishing with an impromptu encore, thanks to the desperate pleas of the crowd.

“A totally unforgettable night, we will never forget you, you are the best,” Taylor said sincerely before ending on a “new love song” You and I Again from Before This World.

source: https://thewest.com.au/entertainment/music-reviews/taylor-made-for-good-time-ng-b88384114z

Tuesday, February 21
2017

LIBEL.NZ.CO — James Taylor

By Jarred Tito

Date / Venue: Saturday February 4th, 2017 – Vector Arena, Auckland

Simply an excellent concert. James Taylor’s performance demonstrates how he is a masterful singer/ song writer and a consummate entertainer. He makes a casual entrance onto the stage and is greeted by a full house at the Vector Arena. He is the consummate professional and also the consummate gentleman. He takes his first bow in gratitude to the audience to his immediate right then turns to the centre and bows and then to the people on his left. He doesn’t say a word but his acknowledgement says a lot. His band makes an equally quiet entrance and prepares to join him for the opening number, ‘Wander’.

James Taylor is a tall man who has aged well. He sports a cheese cutter hat which complements his Midwest casual dress style which is of course very James Taylor. He’s looking cool and relaxed and immediately sends out a good vibe. The crowd warms to him naturally. As soon as he plays the first chord on his guitar and begins to sing we quickly realise that although he’s older, his voice still processes those unmistakable smooth, dulcet tones that can only be James Taylor. He sings the first few verses and chorus as a solo act and it’s not until the second part of the song that the band joins in. He has a full complement of both musicians and backing singers who demonstrate the quality of their musicianship as they sync perfectly with each song played.

James then addresses the audience for the first time and quickly mentions that he would like to apologize for the President which receives a rousing applause from the audience and a couple of suggestions that he should maybe think about moving to New Zealand and making it a permanent residence – well, at least for the next four years. I would imagine that James Taylor would make a perfect dinner guest or coffee companion as his conversation is easy and interesting. He has a quick wit and his timing is perfect. His second song is a Buddy Holly classic, ‘Love Like This, Surely Come My Way’. An excellent version.

‘Walking Man’, is his third and then a new song called, ‘Today Today Today’, (a slow blue grass tune) which he tells us was about the time he first met Paul McCartney and George Harrison in 1968 when he was auditioning for a position in one of their tours. A nerve wracking time for Taylor but also a major break which helped him become a namesake in his own right. He’s a great storyteller who puts the audience at ease. I was very impressed with the way he took his time to introduce the band members and made sure to thank them personally on stage throughout the performance. ‘Walking Down Country Road’ was one of my favourite songs of the evening which also featured an excellent drum solo by Tim Wackerman who really burnt it up.

The first set included a lot of classics like, ‘Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight’, ‘Down On Copper Line’ and ‘Going To Carolina’ which included an interesting story of how George Harrison and Paul McCartney were the original guitarist and drummer for that song. At this stage a lady fan gave James a small gift. By the description, it sounded like a skin cream or cologne; thankfully it wasn’t her underwear.

The second set included some Carole King songs like, ‘Up On The Roof’ and ‘You’ve Got a Friend’ which were both crowd pleasers.

There was a new song ‘Montana’ followed by an all-time James Taylor classic, ‘Fire And Rain’ and then a blues song. I believe it was ‘Steamroller Blues’ for which James played a flat back electric guitar. This was also the perfect opportunity for the band to unleash some of their musical talents which included a solo from the keyboardist, guitarist and saxophonist. Louise Conte was allowed to break out on percussion during the song ‘Mexico’, which was one of my favourites of the night.

The whole concert was a thoroughly enjoyable time and of course it included a great encore which featured songs like ‘Knock On Wood’ and also a new song which James closed with. However, the song that I’m sure everyone was waiting for, which was his second to last song, was ‘How Sweet It Is’, which brought the house down. In fact, I’m quite sure that that was going to be the grand finale but the crowd was so ecstatic and into the whole thing that James Taylor actually rallied up the band as they were leaving and got them to do a final song, a song that will be on his new album.

source: http://libel.co.nz/home/2017/2/5/james-taylor

Tuesday, February 21
2017

RADIONZ.CO.NZ — James Taylor recognises the ties between us

By Nick Bollanger

James Taylor opened his current tour last night at Auckland’s Vector Arena. Nick Bollinger was there to witness his humility and craftsmanship.

While Guns N’ Roses played out their cartoon rebel personas to a packed Western Springs, across town James Taylor offered up what might have been the opposite of a Guns N’ Roses show. On a stage furnished only with instruments – no screens or smoke, and barely even any visible monitor speakers – Taylor and his ten-piece band performed more than two hours of music that seemed designed to sooth rather than excite. And he did so with humility and delicate craftsmanship.

That such a low-key performer ever became an arena star pivots on the period in the early 70s, when he emerged with several iconic hits including his own ‘Fire and Rain’ and his definitive version of Carole King’s ‘You’ve Got A Friend’. Naturally, these songs featured in his Vector set – the King tune prefaced with an introduction about the first time he heard it, not realising that he’d wind up having to sing it every night for the rest of his life. “One could do worse”, he said, with customary understatement.

The show (the first of his current tour) was filled out with material from across his close-to-50-year career.‘Carolina In My Mind’, from his 1968 debut for The Beatles’ Apple label, was introduced with a recollection of finding himself in London, in the company of heroes Paul McCartney and George Harrison, realising he was at a life-changing moment yet suffering from a desperate homesickness.

Newer songs like “Today Today Today’ and “Montana’ were introduced, almost apologetically, with the reassurance that “they’re just like the old ones.”

Taylor’s music is an individual and sophisticated mix of styles. A deft acoustic guitarist with his own distinctive voicings, he combines this cornerstone of 60s folk with elements of soul, R&B, gospel and even jazz. His trio of backing singers (Andrea Zonn, Kate Markowitz and Arnold McCuller) and classy horn section (saxophonist Lou Marini of Blues Brothers fame and trumpeter Walt Fowler) lent an understated funk to the more upbeat tunes, including covers of soul standards ‘Knock On Wood’ and ‘How Sweet It Is’ and his own ‘I’ve Got To Stop Thinkin’ ‘Bout That’.

Towards the end of the night, the deep groove of his excellent rhythm section seemed to inspire him to take a Chuck Berry-style duckwalk across the stage – a rare moment of showbiz histrionics.

In the early 70s, Taylor’s music may have been balm to a generation beleaguered by America’s long-running war in Vietnam and Nixon’s rule, but there was a sense tonight that things have come a full circle. “I’m sorry about our President”, he said early in the show, to a roar of applause. If there was a quiet message that seemed to run through his choice of songs, it was one of love and human decency. “Shower the people you love with love”, he sang in another of his 70s hits, while a particular highpoint was ‘Shed A Little Light’, from his 1991 album New Moon Shine, which opens in rich a cappella harmony with the lines “Let us turn our thoughts today to Martin Luther King, and recognise that there are ties between us.”

Taylor’s recognition of those ties carried on into the intermission. As his band took a twenty-minute break, he went to the edge of the stage to shake the hand of an eager fan and remained crouched there for the duration, signing autographs and submitting to selfies. When the other musicians returned he simply picked up his guitar, rolled up his sleeves and went back to work.

source: http://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/nat-music/audio/201832000/james-taylor-recognises-the-ties-between-us

Tuesday, February 21
2017

13THFLOOR.CO.NZ — James Taylor – Vector Arena February 4, 2017

Liz Gunn shares her thoughts on James Taylor’s concert, last night at Vector Arena…

“This is our first gig of our Down Under Tour. What a wonderful way to start the tour!” said the very tall, ever-slim and self-effacing James Taylor to his appreciative Auckland audience of largely baby boomer generation at Vector Arena last night. The love was mutual.

Taylor is one of the best-selling music artists of all time with over 100 million records sold and the first non-British signing by the Beatles to their Apple label, back in the day, after Paul McCartney was bowled over by the heart in his writing and his mellifluous vocals.

The first thing that hit me, hearing him live, is how fully he has retained those dulcet tones which are the hallmark of his singing, right through his now 68 years. It’s a voice that has an almost unnerving youthful quality to it, and in only one song did I detect any strain negotiating the higher notes. For many of the songs, it was as pure as the vocalising on that huge hit album Sweet Baby James which was received as a folk-rock masterpiece and sold hugely when it was released in February 1970.

For a career to span that length of time, and to be able to fill a large arena like Vector (with upper levels curtained off) is a huge feat. And a reflection of his unquestionable talent. It’s not just the effortlessly tuneful soulful voice, but also an endearing, even slightly goofy charm, and an ability to connect with his audience with humour and a quiet humility, in between the songs while he changes a series of acoustic guitars. He seems to warm the audience as much with his joking asides as with the relaxed vocals. “ Here’s a Buddy Holly tune” he intoned before his second song,” which we like to do with some frequency, if not every day” and he launched into -what else?- Every Day.

In one of his later asides he promises that the night will include “ ..some new tunes”. A pause. Then with that self-effacing sweetness, “Not many. And we’ll get it over with quick. It’s like taking off a band aid- just get it over with quick” . The audience laughed and breathed a sigh of relief. They have come for the hits that have served as part of the musical backdrop to their generation, and most want that dish warmed up and served again.

I wondered, in spite of the laughter, whether that is what James Taylor the Artist also wants in his heart of hearts? How do you sing the same songs- as beautifully lyrical as they are- night after night, tour after tour, for forty-plus years, and still keep them fresh? It’s like asking a great actor to come on stage every night for over four decades to deliver the same play, the same lines, and each night present the play as if it’s the first time it has been performed. Even the greatest, most in-this-moment kind of performer could struggle pulling off that feat.

And the bigger question is whether it feeds the soul of the artist who might feel caged by the very success that has brought him the audience adoration. I suddenly understood why Bob Dylan refuses to be snagged by his own success and simply performs what he wants, with no catering to audience expectations. I suspect James Taylor is too empathetic a character to disappoint his audience expectations thus.

That said, where JT (or Stringbean as is his other nickname) seemed to me to really glow in his performance, was with his most recent material. He said it would be like the pain of a bandage being pulled off but I found it quite the opposite.

Beautifully worked, sung from his heart, with his total engagement in the meaning and the lyrics, these latest songs will stay with me long after last night’s show. Today Today Today is from Before This World, his 16th album and the first in 13 years. It acknowledges his own surprise that he is still here. In his introduction to the song, he tells us it harks back to his original signing to Apple in 1968 after auditioning for Paul and George when the Beatles were at their zenith.” I was like a chiuawawa on methamphetamine” he quips, but then counters with “ It was like someone opened a door and my life was on the other side of it” . A heart-melting image.

What human could not relate to that? The dream of living a life doing the thing that makes your heart sing- and in the case of JT, has made the world’s heart sing for decades? The song has a little country feel to the folk-rock descending scale of major to minor notes. But perhaps it’s his delivery of the lyrics that most touches me: The bell is about to ring/The big girl she’s about to sing/Today, today, today/The world will open wide/And I’m running with the tide/It’s time to cut this side/And I must not miss my ride/Somehow I haven’t died/And I feel the same inside/As when I caught this ride/When first I sold my pride/The way ahead is clear/My heart is free from fear/I’ll plant my flag right here/Today, today, today.

That line ’Somehow I haven’t died’ refers to the relentless struggle he faced for much of his early career, marred as it was by a ferocious and voracious heroin addiction which eventually cost him his marriage with Carly Simon. Even his friend John Belushi expressed his concern to Taylor at JT’s self destruction in a warning that was eerily prescient for Belushi himself.

Taylor today seems in a calm, good-humoured and contented space, and from this fullness, is happy to give of himself to his loyal audience. He spent the entire 20 minute half time break sitting on the edge of the stage greeting fans and then jumping down for photos as more and more gathered around him. Something I have never seen at any concert. Tremendously endearing.

During the first half of the show he had served up those big hits, ranging from Country Road with his capacious lungs holding the final note impossibly long (perhaps a breath-controlled nod to his opera singing mother!), to Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight– the only song I felt would have been better in a lower key for his warmed-honey tones which don’t need to be asked to strain for any note.

There were two songs about his much-loved home state of Carolina- Copperline (the perfect key for his voice and a beautifully understated arrangement) and Carolina On My Mind, the song he wrote in an overwhelming homesick patch in 1968 at Apple Studios even though he was “surrounded by this heavenly host of musical angels who were making the White album” because “I missed my family” (an audible sigh of adoration from many of the mothers in the crowd! No wonder his female fan base is so strong). It was a very slow version of the song, almost soporific, but fitting for a song of sadness and longing. Personally I would have liked it pacier, and he still needs to feel that raw heartbreak of sickening home ache EVERY time he sings it, if he wants the full beauty of the lyrics to land right inside the heartspace of his audience.

He cannot sing in a perfunctory way without compromising the very power of his own song writing. Although his voice can carry much, it needs the emotion behind it to penetrate and thereby make his songs rise from ‘good’ or even ‘great’, into the stratosphere of ‘special’. Perhaps my favourite of the first half was Sweet Baby James from the eponymous album. A lovely introduction on the guitar and his voice simply stunning in its flow.

No, I am mistaken. The absolute high point of the night for me, followed that song. It was Shed A Little Light , with words so needed in today’s Trump Era, that I am including them at the end of this review. Powerful and moving.

The second half had highlights from his back catalogue including You’ve Got A Friend and Up On The Roof. Yet again, though, the high point of this half was his newer work, a song written in a friend’s cabin in Montana. The rendition was fresh and deeply-felt in the way JT sang, and I recommend listening to the lyrics of Montana. And you could listen to another from his latest album, called You and I Again. He introduces it as “ A new love song but not a song about new love. It’s about love over time, maybe even more than one life time”. I wonder to myself if lines like this are a reference to his third wife: cause I can’t escape this feeling/that we’ve been this way together, you and I.

Therein lies the key to James Taylor. He writes and sings songs from his life. Songs of his heart. Songs looking for answers and finding reasons. He has given the world songs that touch lives and made Taylor Swift’s parents give her that Christian name. He writes songs to say “Let’s care for one another”. And he shows it in his way with people. I include below, a backstage photo taken last night with two friends, Anna and Braydon. Note JT’s open arms. The human touch. That is the hallmark of his music.

My wish for James Taylor is that he find renewed reasons to offer up those songs that reflect him now, today, and to trust that the audience will love those as much as they love the songs that remind them of their youth from these last four decades. For me, those latest songs took the show last night from ‘good’ to ‘great’.

source: http://www.13thfloor.co.nz/?p=80091

Tuesday, February 21
2017

NZHERALD.CO.NZ — James Taylor remains a musical marvel

By Michael Burgess

Taylor, who continues his New Zealand tour in Napier on Sunday night, wowed a capacity crowd at Vector Arena on Saturday.

Indeed, a shout from the audience summed it up best midway through his impressive show, which stretched for more than two hours.

“You’ve still got it James”, yelled an excited fan from the back of the arena, as Taylor completed a beautiful version of Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight.

That’s the point with Taylor. While some legendary musicians struggle to replicate their deeds of decades past, Taylor’s famous voice remains as pure as ever.

Indeed, if you closed your eyes last night you could imagine you were back in 1968, when Taylor was first signed to Apple records, and sharing a studio with the likes of George Harrison and Paul McCartney.

A lot has happened since then – including countless hits and more than 100 million albums sold – but Taylor remains as versatile and talented as ever.

Saturday night was the first gig of his 2017 tour, and Taylor was in fine form.

Taylor enjoys telling stories about particular songs and demonstrated a keen sense of humour.

“We are going to play some new tunes,” said Taylor. “Not that many and we’ll get it over quick – but they sound just like the old ones.”

The new songs – from 2015’s Before This World – his first album of new material in 13 years, were well received, particularly an emotional rendition of You and I, to close the concert.

But it was the old classics that the crowd had come to see, and Taylor didn’t disappoint. There was a rock twist added to Country Road, a high energy version of Mexico and the punters jumped to their feet for How Sweet it is.

Fire and Rain got one of the biggest ovations, while You’ve Got a Friend had everyone singing along.

Taylor seemed to be enjoying himself immensely. The 68-year-old appeared at the front of the stage during the intermission, taking photos and signing autographs for delighted fans.

He also had great rapport with his all-star band, more than happy to share the limelight with the large ensemble of talented musicians around him.

The current tour is Taylor’s first appearance in New Zealand in seven years, but based on Saturday night, his next visit can’t come soon enough.

source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=11795155

Tuesday, February 21
2017

STUFF.CO.NZ — James Taylor and his all star band kick off Pacific tour in Auckland

By Catrin Owen

REVIEW: Auckland’s Vector Arena was packed out tonight to listen to the gentle, sweet-voiced and magical James Taylor.

With a tip of his hat, he took the the stage with encouraging shouts from the audience and his all star band soon followed.

The award-winning singer-songwriter did not disappoint, and again wowed a packed house, with his effortless performance.

Taylor kicked off the gig, sitting on a stool singing Wandering, before thanking the audience.

“What a delight it is to be back in Auckland, thanks for bringing us back,” he said.

Taylor was last in New Zealand in 2010 where he played alongside Carole King at Vector Arena.

He has returned to kick off his tour of the Pacific Rim with his all-star band including Louis Marini, the American saxophonist and original member of the Blues Brothers Band.

Taylor was quick to apologise about the new American president, receiving a few chuckles from the audience.

“Sorry about the president, folks. Just have to hope for the best, but it hasn’t been working too well,” he said.

Taylor looked as he always does, blazer, blue shirt, capped and at ease on the stage.

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He took the audience to exactly where he was when he wrote each of his songs like Montana, Country Road and Copperline.

He told the crowd his rendition of Carolina In my Mind was written while he was recording in London, homesick despite being surrounded by music royalty.

Taylor played the “original, unlistenable” version of the song to Paul McCartney and George Harrison of the Beatles who were in the same studio recording The White Album at the time.

Before a brief intermission, Taylor had the crowd on their feet, swaying and singing along to Shed A Little Light.

Despite the intermission, he took time to take photos with fans and chat before returning to the stage with a new song about Botany Bay in Australia.

The crowd were mesmerised by his ease and Taylor managed to get the audience up on their feet with old favourites such as You’ve Got a Friend, Fire and Rain and Steamroller.

Taylor took time to introduce each of his seven piece “all star” band and three backing vocalists who each had a part to play throughout the show.

It all ended with the crowd all up on their feet singing along to Your Smiling Face before an encore of songs Knock on Wood, How Sweet it is and You and I again.

Taylor may be 68, but he still has that twinkle in his eye, boogies on down with his band and looks like he’s having one heck of a time on stage.

source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/music/gig-reviews/89104473/james-taylor-and-his-all-star-band-kick-off-the-pacific-tour-in-auckland

Thursday, February 16
2017

THEBRAG.COM — James Taylor @ ICC Sydney Theatre

By David James Young

A myriad of adjectives come to mind when one thinks of James Taylor – singer, songwriter, guitarist, occasional actor and American folk icon. Perhaps the most fitting one, however, would be ‘beloved’. It takes all of a stroll out onto centre stage and a tip of his cap to elicit a huge round of applause – some even take the initiative even further by presenting the man of the hour with a standing ovation. Not ten minutes later, he’s fielding a half-dozen “I love you”s from all across the room – fitting, given the date – and assuring every last caller-out that he loves them too.

As Taylor introduces his ten-piece backing band across the course of the show, he makes a point of embracing each one of them and making note of their individual accomplishments. When the rest of the band takes leave during intermission, Taylor remains onstage to sign as many autographs and take as many selfies as he can for the full 20 minutes, only stopping when the lights go back down.

Across the two-and-a-half-hour show, Taylor draws from his classic hits right up to his 2015 album Before This World, jokingly justifying the latter’s inclusion by telling the crowd it “sounds like the old tunes anyway”. The crowd goes pin-drop quiet in captivation during ‘Carolina In My Mind’ and ‘Fire And Rain’, but is just as quickly on its feet for joyous sing-alongs like ‘Mexico’ and ‘How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)’.

His bandmates are in full swing, with particular highlights coming from powerhouse drummer Steve Gadd and Blues Brothers alum ‘Blue’ Lou Marini on the saxophone. Taylor is also backed by a trio of exceptional backing vocalists, who fill out the unmistakable harmonies of ‘You’ve Got A Friend’ and steal the show during ‘Shower The People’.

As far as gentle, nostalgic arena shows go, one couldn’t ask for a great deal more than what Taylor and co. offer up this evening. Although astronauts in the middle of an interstellar crisis may not have the time for Taylor’s unique brand of bittersweet folk rock, a crowd of mostly over-55s on a pleasant Tuesday evening have all the time in the world. Thanks, old friend.

Thursday, February 16
2017

THEAGE.COM — James Taylor review: How sweet to see a true gentleman on song

By Lucy Cormack

James Taylor
International Convention Centre, February 2
★★★★½

Is there a greater gentleman than James Taylor? If you find him, let me know – but I won’t hold my breath.

With hat in hand, and a bow so low his brow almost kissed the stage floor, the 68-year-old troubadour oozed warmth as he greeted a packed International Convention Centre on Tuesday.

Promising mostly the old stuff and just a little of the new (which he swore would “sound like the old stuff anyway”), the veteran performer delivered the best of his ballads, bookmarked by the storytelling and wit for which he is so loved.

It’s hard to say what showed off his goodwill most: was it his promise to get through the songs from his new album Before This World “nice and quick” to make way for the favourites? Or his determination that he couldn’t take credit for his own songs. “I don’t write them, I’m just the first person to hear them.”

Then again, perhaps it was the 20-minute interval that he spent on his knees at the front of the stage signing autographs and posing for selfies.

Opening with a mellow Secret O’ Life, it was clear Taylor was ready to settle into a laid-back but intimate performance.

His signature earthy voice soared across old favourites such as Fire and Rain, Country Road and Shower the People, supported by the skilled musicianship of his All-Star (10-man) Band, replete with brass, bass, percussion and backing vocals.

Impressive solos from the band were best heard in the blues parody Steamroller, which showcased everything from the sounds of former Blues Brother “Blue” Lou Marini on saxophone, to the lightning fingers of Michael Landau on guitar.

But while the band could dish out the sparks and sound, they also knew when to back off, a fitting transition for the Carole King favourite You’ve Got a Friend.

When he first heard King play the song about 40 years ago, Taylor said he loved it instantly, but he had no idea he would be singing it “every performance, forever”.

Looking around at this moment, it was no doubt a poignant one for Taylor’s 7000 adoring fans, who had either loved the song in their youth, or perhaps (like me) had cherished it as a tyke among the family records.

source: http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/music/james-taylor-review-how-sweet-to-see-a-true-gentleman-on-song-20170215-gudeih

Tuesday, November 1
2016

UPDATED: Just Days Before Election Day, President Barack Obama to Campaign for Hillary Clinton in North Carolina with James Taylor

On Wednesday, November 2, just days prior to Election Day, President Barack Obama will return to North Carolina to campaign for Hillary Clinton. At a public “Get Out The Early Vote” event in the Raleigh area, President Obama will urge North Carolinians to take advantage of one-stop early voting and lay out his support for Clinton and her vision of an America that is stronger together, with an economy that works for everyone, not just those at the top. President Obama will be joined by Carolina’s own, Grammy Award winning singer-songwriter James Taylor.

With more people voting in this election than any in history, North Carolinians can visit iwillvote.com/learn to ensure that they have all the information they need to vote early from October 20 through November 5, or on Election Day.

North Carolina Democratic Party Get Out The Early Vote Event with President Barack Obama featuring James Taylor
Doors Open: 12:30 PM
When: 2:00 PM
Where: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Michael Hooker Fields, South Road, Chapel Hill, NC

Tuesday, October 11
2016

BROADWAYWORLD.COM — James Taylor Added to 94th Annual National Christmas Tree Lighting Talent Lineup

James Taylor has been added to THE LINEUPfor the 94th annual National Christmas Tree Lighting ceremony. Find out who else has been announced so far atwww.thenationaltree.org. Taking place on Thursday, December 1, on the Ellipse at President’s Park (White House), the special event wraps the National Park Service centennial year and celebrates the launch of a second century of stewardship. Through a partnership with the National Park Foundation, the official charity of America’s national parks, the National Christmas Tree Lighting will be telecast exclusively on the Hallmark CHANNELon Monday, December 5, and simulcast onDIRECTV 4K Ultra HD. *

Free tickets for the 94th annual tree lighting ceremony presented by the National Park Service and the National Park Foundation are awarded through an online lottery, which opens tomorrow, October 7, at 10 a.m. EDT and closes at 10 a.m. EDT on Monday, October 10. To enter the lottery, visit www.thenationaltree.org and click the “TICKET LOTTERY” link. Those without computer access may call 877-444-6777 (TDD 877-833-6777) to enter the lottery. Lottery winners will be notified on October 27.

Dates to note:

  • Tomorrow, October 7 at 10 a.m. EDT: Free ticket lottery opens
  • October 10 at 10 a.m. EDT: Free ticket lottery closes
  • October 27: lottery winners will be notified
  • December 1: National Christmas Tree Lighting takes place on the Ellipse in President’s Park
  • December 5 at 7 p.m. ET/PT: National Christmas Tree Lighting telecast exclusively on theHallmark CHANNEL and simulcast on DIRECTV 4K Ultra HD

An American holiday tradition started by President Calvin Coolidge in 1923, the National Christmas Tree Lighting is a great example of the countless ways there are to #FindYourPark. Launched in March 2015, Find Your Park/Encuentra Tu Parque is a public awareness and education movement to inspire people to connect with, celebrate, and support America’s national parks and community-based programs. Celebrating the National Park Service Centennial and setting the stage for the Service’s next 100 years, Find Your Park invites people to discover and share their own unique connections to our nation’s natural landscapes, vibrant culture, and rich history.

Keep up with the National Christmas Tree on Twitter at @TheNationalTree, follow #NCTL2016 on social media, and visit www.thenationaltree.org for more information about the event and its history.

Additional information, more talent announcements, and coverage logistics for news media will be released at a later date.

*Please note that a previous release said it would be broadcast on December 2. The broadcast is now confirmed for December 5.

ABOUT THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
More than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America’s 413 national parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local history and create close-to-home recreational opportunities.

 

source: http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwtv/article/James-Taylor-Added-to-94th-Annual-National-Christmas-Tree-Lighting-Talent-Lineup-20161007#