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Monday, March 15
2021

WRAL.COM — People gather beneath James Taylor Bridge in Chapel Hill to sing songs, celebrate his birthday

By Heather Leah

A Chapel Hill woman honored James Taylor’s birthday on Friday afternoon with a crowd of people joining together to sing his songs beneath the James Taylor bridge.

James Taylor’s childhood home sits in Chapel Hill – as well as a bridge named in his honor.

Bobbi Wilkins has prepared for the birthday celebration by hanging a banner on the bridge’s sign. At 3 p.m. on Friday, a small group gathered to sing songs in his honor.

“The City of Chapel Hill liked my idea to honor James on his Birthday and today a representative from Chapel Hill Tourism and her neighbor helped me hang these signs,” said Wilkins.

Wilkins, who grew up about a mile from the house James Taylor grew up in, has been using his music as part of healing from an unexpected injury. Every Saturday for the past year, she said she’s visited his bridge and cleaned up litter.

Wilkins was a PA at Duke when a back injury and brain injury changed her life.

LOCAL NEWS
People gather beneath James Taylor Bridge in Chapel Hill to sing songs, celebrate his birthday
Tags: good news
Posted March 12, 2021 1:01 p.m. EST
Updated March 12, 2021 6:25 p.m. EST

By Heather Leah, WRAL multiplatform producer

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — A Chapel Hill woman honored James Taylor’s birthday on Friday afternoon with a crowd of people joining together to sing his songs beneath the James Taylor bridge.

Bobbi Wilkins has prepared for the birthday celebration by hanging a banner on the bridge’s sign. At 3 p.m. on Friday, a small group gathered to sing songs in his honor.

“The City of Chapel Hill liked my idea to honor James on his Birthday and today a representative from Chapel Hill Tourism and her neighbor helped me hang these signs,” said Wilkins.

Wilkins, who grew up about a mile from the house James Taylor grew up in, has been using his music as part of healing from an unexpected injury. Every Saturday for the past year, she said she’s visited his bridge and cleaned up litter.

Wilkins was a PA at Duke when a back injury and brain injury changed her life.

“I will heal completely from both injuries, but brain injuries take a lot of time to heal. So, I had a lot of time on my hands and I needed to stay busy,” she said.

For the past eight years she’s listened to Taylor’ songs, read his story and walked the path to where he grew up.

Wilkins has seen fire, and she’s seen rain. She was inspired by the story of Taylor’s recovery from addiction.

“I didn’t have a heroin addiction, but I had a brain injury caused by a drug. The two are different, but surprisingly similar,” she said. “You have to heal from both injuries, and the healing process is the same — or, it has been for me.”

With all of this extra time and a lot of healing to do, she decided to make a positive impact.

On Saturday, she will have completed a full year of cleaning the area around the James Taylor Bridge – another yet of healing.

“I have spent a lot of time alone, out walking, healing my brain,” she said.

“James, I always believed you. I always felt like I had a friend walking with me. Thanks for walking with me all these years. I am almost there,” she said.

Happy Birthday James.

Tuesday, March 9
2021

JAMBASE.COM — See James Taylor Perform ‘Steamroller Blues’ With Joe Walsh At VetsAid 2018

By Scott Bernstein

James Taylor was among the performers at Joe Walsh‘s second annual VetsAid benefit concert, which was held at the Tacoma Doma in Tacoma, Washington on November 11, 2018. Taylor recently shared official video featuring Joe Walsh guesting on “Steamroller Blues,” aka “Steamroller” at VetsAid 2018.

Walsh founded VetsAid in 2017. “The aim of the annual event is to raise funds and awareness for the urgent and significant needs of returning U.S soldiers and their families in the areas of holistic, physical, mental, emotional and spiritual care,” reads a note accompanying the video. Over $800K was raised through VetsAid 2018. Don Henley, Chris Stapleton and HAIM joined Joe Walsh and James Taylor on the lineup for the 2018 benefit concert.

James Taylor was backed by the event’s house band consisting of Will Hollis, Scott Crago, Steuart Smith, Michael Thompson, Jimmy Johnson, Erica Swindell, Lara Johnston, Lily Elise, Tom Evans, Chris Holt and Milo Deering. “Steamroller Blues” dates back to JT’s sophomore studio album, 1970’s Sweet Baby James.

Taylor ended his five-song VetsAid 2018 with the “Steamroller Blues” featuring Joe Walsh. The performance came after James played beloved originals “Carolina In My Mind,” “Native Son,” “Sweet Baby James” and “Fire And Rain.”

source: https://www.jambase.com/article/james-taylor-steamroller-blues-joe-walsh-vetsaid-2018-video

Tuesday, March 9
2021

UDISCOVERMUSIC.COM — Watch James Taylor And Joe Walsh Team Up On ‘Steamroller Blues’

By Paul Sexton

James Taylor has shared the YouTube video of a performance of his longtime live staple “Steamroller Blues” featuring Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh. It was filmed on November 11, 2018 at the second VetsAid festival in the Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, WA.

As at just about all of Taylor’s live shows for decades, Taylor oversees a hugely entertaining, slow blues rendition of the song first heard on his Sweet Baby James album of 1970. He delivers the lead vocal in his deliberately exaggerated and lighthearted bluesy style, with Walsh weighing in on electric guitar. Tom Evans (saxophone) and Mike Thompson (piano) also star in a stirring band rendition.

“Steamroller Blues” was notably covered on stage by Elvis Presley, as captured in his 1973 live album Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite. The song was also recorded by Merry Clayton, Eric Burdon & Jimmy Witherspoon, Tower of Power and many others.

Walsh created VetsAid in 2017 to help returning US soldiers and their families with holistic, physical, mental, emotional and spiritual care. He was also on the bill for the 2018 event with fellow Eagle Don Henley, Chris Stapleton, Ringo Starr, and Haim.

The arena audience featured military veterans, active-duty military and their families, and raised over $800,000 for charity partners supporting vets and their families. The VetsAid Jobs Fair, in cooperation with Operation GoodJobs and Goodwill WA, connect dozens of veterans and families with meaningful employment and a living wage as a result of the funding,

The VetsAid veterans charity event was founded in 2017 by Walsh to raise funds and awareness for the urgent and significant needs of returning US soldiers and their families in the areas of holistic, physical, mental, emotional and spiritual care.

The VetsAid 2018 Band featured here included Taylor, Walsh, Evans, and Thompson as well as Will Hollis, Scott Crago, Steuart Smith, Jimmy Johnson, Erica Swindell, Lara Johnston, Lily Elise, Chris Holt, and Milo Deering.

Source: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/news/james-taylor-joe-walsh-steamroller-blues-live/

Friday, February 5
2021

LATIMES.COM — ‘Tapestry’ at 50: How Carole King ‘bet on herself’ to record a singer-songwriter classic

By MIKAEL WOOD

In January 1971, Carole King — a native New Yorker recently transplanted to touchy-feely Los Angeles — entered A&M Studios on La Brea Avenue to record her first album of songs for which she’d written both music and lyrics.

With her was a family-sized crew of musicians-slash-confidants from the emerging Laurel Canyon rock scene, among them her producer, Lou Adler, and James Taylor, the sexy and ruminative singer and guitarist for whom she’d played piano on tour the year before.

They worked quickly, cutting two or three tunes a day, and finished the 12-song record in three weeks. (The studio budget, according to Adler: $22,000.) By June, the LP — King called it “Tapestry” in acknowledgment of its handcrafted vibe — had reached the top of the Billboard 200, where it stayed for 15 weeks on its way to finding a permanent spot in what seemed like every home in America.

“In a funny way, it was almost like Obama’s first presidential run, when he sprinted through the campaign so quickly that the Republican dirt machine didn’t get him in their sights,” says Taylor, whose early success alongside King would propel the two of them half a century later to performances at Joe Biden’s presidential inauguration. “People didn’t get a chance to say, ‘Oh, Carole — she doesn’t really have a singer’s voice.’ Or, ‘She’s a mother.’ Or, ‘She’s from Brooklyn.’

“The first thing you knew about it was, here’s this incredible material, and people heard it and said, ‘Yeah, that’s for me.’ It was like a first-pitch home run.

“Of course, that wasn’t true,” Taylor adds with a laugh. “It came after a decade of work.”

Indeed, for all its energy of arrival, “Tapestry” actually marked the beginning of an unlikely second act for King, who at age 28 had left behind a life and career as half of a prolific Brill Building songwriting duo with her husband, Gerry Goffin, and had moved to L.A. with her two young daughters, Louise and Sherry. Here, nestled in the verdant hills above Hollywood, the woman who co-wrote the deathless “Up on the Roof,” “The Loco-Motion” and “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” remade herself as a new kind of pop star: thoughtful, relatable, understated. The album’s iconic cover, showing wavy-haired King and her cat sitting contentedly by a window in her home on Wonderland Avenue, said it all.

And the shift went beyond her: Along with Taylor’s “Sweet Baby James” and Joni Mitchell’s “Blue,” the latter recorded just down the hall at A&M with some of the same players, King’s album helped launch the singer-songwriter movement of the 1970s, resetting pop’s mood and scope in the wake of the cultural and political upheaval that defined the end of the ’60s.

King, now 78, declined to talk about her signature work, as she does with virtually all interview requests. But 50 years after its release on Feb. 10, 1971, “Tapestry” stands as an indelible document of soft-rock introspection, with the statistics and accolades — four top-20 singles; Grammy Awards for album, record and song of the year; estimated worldwide sales of 30 million copies — to ensure it’s still talked about even as hand-me-down vinyl collections have given way to streaming ones and zeroes.

Yet to tune out the decades of adulation and simply listen to “Tapestry” is to be struck by the essential modesty of its sound and outlook. Accompanying herself on piano — and backed unobtrusively by Taylor, guitarist Danny Kortchmar, bassist Charles Larkey and drummer Russ Kunkel — King sings in a yearning, slightly raspy voice free of obvious ornamentation.

“It’s an it-is-what-it-is kind of vocal,” says Peter Asher, the veteran producer and manager who oversaw Taylor’s career at the time. “She wasn’t saying, ‘Look, I’m a singer!’”

Instead, King was using her warmly conversational tone (which she’d developed, if that’s the word for it, recording demos for her and Goffin’s songs) to deliver her lyrics about romance and friendship. In the made-to-order hits she wrote in her teens and early 20s, back when Goffin was handling the words, love always carries the promise of ecstasy and the threat of agony; it’s a sensation to be swept away by, to get lost in, sometimes to fear.

But love on “Tapestry” is a more realistic proposition. “You’re so far away,” she sings in one typically plainspoken line. “Doesn’t anybody stay in one place anymore?” There’s no exaggeration in the heartache she describes in “It’s Too Late” (which King wrote with Toni Stern), no hyperbole in the commitment she offers in “You’ve Got a Friend.” The songs treat relationships within the dramatic parameters of everyday life — a point of view born from King’s experience with divorce that ended up resonating with a generation of young women reordering their priorities regarding sex, work, marriage and motherhood.

You wouldn’t call “Tapestry” an explicitly political album, though drummer Kunkel ties its themes of personal liberation to the sense of possibility embodied in the efforts to end the Vietnam War and to stop the proliferation of nuclear power. King, an ardent Democratic activist known to turn up on MSNBC, no doubt would agree.

“What she does so beautifully on that record is she distills these really complex subjects — the big emotional milestones of our lives — to these simple phrases that you feel like you can hold,” says 41-year-old Sara Bareilles, who first encountered “Tapestry” in a bin of her parents’ LPs and recalls getting deep into the album after college.

With its highly legible emotions and its easy show-tune melodicism, “Tapestry” contrasted with Mitchell’s more intellectual approach. But for an artist who started out in a pop factory thought by some to crank out product for teenyboppers, the album succeeded in establishing King as a grown-up presence — an achievement that cleared a path for the ascent of a hitmaker-turned-auteur named after King’s sideman: Taylor Swift.

“Carole bet on herself,” says Bareilles, who calls King her “north star.” “She had the courage to step out from a framework that’s safe and lucrative and to make a decision that’s a little bit more honest and a little bit more authentic.”

Barry Mann, another Brill Building pro who with wife Cynthia Weil came up alongside Goffin and King, wasn’t surprised when the world learned to take Carole King seriously.

“If it wasn’t ‘Tapestry,’ it would’ve been something else — she’s just so talented that it was only a matter of time,” he says. But King’s split from Goffin, as a result of his infidelity and volatile behavior, focused what she wanted to say with her music. (Goffin died in 2014.) So too did her new home, according to Toni Stern, a born-and-raised Angeleno who says King “intuited that things were happening out here musically” and that the singer, once ensconced as Laurel Canyon’s yoga-practicing earth mother, felt freed from the various ways her family and her oldest friends thought of her.

“She stopped eating red meat… and started to cook vegetarian,” Sheila Weller writes of King in her 2008 book “Girls Like Us,” about the interconnected lives of King, Mitchell and Carly Simon. With a neighbor, King played volleyball on a team called the Wonderland Wonders.

King quickly formed a short-lived group, the City, with Kortchmar and Larkey (whom she later married), then made her solo debut with 1970’s “Writer.” Neither project garnered much attention outside the music industry but they established crucial connections that set up what was to come.

For “Tapestry,” Adler was aiming for what he’s called “a smooth ride” modeled in part on June Christy’s mid-’50s “Something Cool”; he and his engineer, Hank Cicalo, turned down the lights in the studio and huddled the musicians as close as they’d been while rehearsing the music in King’s living room. It’s not all so hushed: “I Feel the Earth Move” opens the album with a barreling piano groove. But Taylor says the producer “protected the integrity” of the singer’s naturalistic sound by resisting the urge to “send it to the garden to pick up strings and horns.”

“Lou left Carole raw and left the tracks raw,” Taylor says. “‘Raw’ may be the wrong word. I mean pure.”

Adds Kunkel: “The songs flew the plane,” including a pair of Goffin-King numbers — “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” and “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman” — reframed here as stripped-down ballads.

The reaction to “Tapestry” was immediate, with rave reviews in Rolling Stone and the Village Voice. Stern remembers walking into her dry cleaner’s at the corner of San Vicente and Santa Monica boulevards one day and hearing a guy “walking out, his cleaning flung over his shoulder — I can still see the plastic — and he’s humming ‘It’s Too Late.’ That was better than hearing it on the radio,” she says.

It wasn’t just fans and critics either; other musicians clamored to cover King’s songs. Taylor famously scored a huge hit that year with his own take on “You’ve Got a Friend,” while Barbra Streisand put three tunes from “Tapestry” on her “Barbra Joan Streisand” album, which came out just months later.

Asher says King’s appeal among artists “proves that the other Carole — the Brill Building Carole — was still in there: ‘Here’s a hit song for you.’” And as in that earlier era, when acts like the Drifters and Aretha Franklin were singing her stuff, many of the best interpretations came from Black soul and R&B artists such as Donny Hathaway, who did “You’ve Got a Friend” on a classic live album cut at the Troubadour in L.A., and the Isley Brothers, who turned “It’s Too Late” into a lusty-tortured slow jam.

“That song to me was like a great R&B song,” says Ron Isley. “It used to be a showstopper for us.”

In the years after “Tapestry,” King could seem ambivalent about the stardom she’d attained. She continued to make records, occasionally in search of a convincing style, but she didn’t tour or promote them as the pop industry requires. Today, nine of her 10 most-streamed songs on Spotify are from “Tapestry,” and her 1974 track “Jazzman,” which reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, may be best known in a version by Lisa Simpson.

“She wanted to be home with her children — and to create more children,” Kortchmar says. (In addition to her daughters with Goffin, King has a daughter, Molly, and a son, Levi, with Larkey.) “And she was just seriously less interested in the fame part of the gig — the everyone-adores-me part — than in actually creating the music.”

The adoration came anyway, of course. There was a “Tapestry” tribute album with performances by the Bee Gees and Celine Dion. There was TV’s “Gilmore Girls,” which used “Where You Lead” as its theme song. There was an episode of “Glee” featuring King’s music, and the Tony-winning Broadway biographical musical “Beautiful,” and a Kennedy Center Honors ceremony in which Franklin blew everybody’s mind (and brought President Obama to tears) with a thrilling and queenly rendition of “Natural Woman.”

In 2010, King surprised lots of folks when she agreed to an international arena tour with Taylor in which the two “got the band back together,” as Taylor puts it, and played their beloved old songs as though they were onstage together at the Troubadour in 1970.

“It worked extremely well,” Taylor says. “Then at the end of it, when everybody’s saying, ‘Keep the big ball rolling,’ Carole says, ‘No, let’s quit while we’re still ahead.’ And she walked away.”

source: https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2021-02-04/carole-king-tapestry-50-james-taylor

Monday, February 1
2021

PEOPLE.COM — Zac Brown Band Releases Cover of James Taylor’s Hit Song ‘Sweet Baby James’: He’s ‘My Influence’

By Darlene Aderoju

Zac Brown Band has released a new cover song that will ease music listeners’ ears.

On Friday, the multi-platinum, Grammy-winning group dropped their Amazon Original cover of James Taylor’s classic song “Sweet Baby James.” Their soulful rendition is available for both purchase and streaming on Amazon Music’s “Fresh Country” playlist. Zac Brown Band’s frontman has always been an avid fan of the star, who is now 72.

“I started listening to James Taylor in elementary school,” Brown, 42, said in a statement. “He’s probably my single biggest influence that I’ve ever had.”

For the country star, Taylor’s impressive skills as a guitarist are what really seal the deal. He said of his inspiration, “What Taylor plays on the acoustic guitar is very hard, there are moving baselines and there’s a rhythm and melody all playing at one time. He showed me what you can do with a single guitar to accompany a song. I hope our fans love this as much as we do.”

The country hitmakers have already joined forces in a huge way. In 2011, Zac Brown Band and Taylor hit the stage together and wowed fans at Academy of Country Music Awards. They performed a medley of fan-favorites, including hit song “Colder Weather” and of course, “Sweet Baby James.”

Zac Brown Band released “The Man Who Loves You the Most” and “You and Islands” digitally last year — the former debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s country digital song sales chart.

The original “Sweet Baby James” is still considered one of Taylor’s most popular tracks and was the lead single of his 1970 eponymous breakthrough album.

source: https://people.com/country/zac-brown-band-james-taylor-sweet-baby-james-cover/

Monday, February 1
2021

AMERICANSONGWRITER.COM — Zac Brown Band Releases Amazon Original Cover of James Taylor’s Enduring Classic, “Sweet Baby James”

Multi-platinum, Grammy Award-winning Zac Brown Band released an Amazon Original cover of James Taylor’s “Sweet Baby James,” available to stream and purchase only on Amazon Music. The soul-stirring song is the opening track on Taylor’s 1970 breakthrough sophomore album and is considered by Taylor to be his best song.

“I started listening to James Taylor in elementary school. He’s probably my single biggest influence that I’ve ever had,” said Zac Brown. “What Taylor plays on the acoustic guitar is very hard – there are moving base lines, and there’s a rhythm and melody all playing at one time. He showed me what you can do with a single guitar to accompany a song. I hope our fans love this as much as we do.”

Zac Brown Band has a long history with Taylor, sharing the stage with him at the 2011 Academy of Country Music Awards, performing a medley of their hit song “Colder Weather” with “Sweet Baby James.” This Original cover of “Sweet Baby James” follows Zac Brown Band’s two digital singles released in 2020, “The Man Who Loves You The Most,” which debuted at #1 on Billboard’s Country Digital Song Sales Chart, and “You and Islands.”

Amazon Music listeners can find the track on the “Fresh Country” playlist, the best place to find the freshest tracks in country music. Customers can also simply ask, “Alexa play the Amazon Original by Zac Brown Band” in the Amazon app for iOS and Android and on Alexa-enabled devices. In addition to Zac Brown Band, Amazon Music listeners can access hundreds of Amazon Originals featuring both emerging and established artists across numerous genres, available to stream and purchase only on Amazon Music.

source: https://americansongwriter.com/zac-brown-band-releases-amazon-original-cover-of-james-taylors-enduring-classic-sweet-baby-james/

Monday, January 25
2021

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL — James Taylor Looks Back on His Early Years

By Alan Paul

It might seem unusual, even presumptuous, for a 72-year-old man to write a memoir covering just the first 21 years of his life, as James Taylor did last year with “Break Shot,” published as an Audible Original audiobook. But Mr. Taylor’s first two decades were extraordinary. He had already lived a privileged but tormented childhood, seen his New York rock ’n’ roll dreams collapse, spent time in a mental institution, been addicted to heroin, recorded with the Beatles, lived in both swinging London and Los Angeles’ Laurel Canyon at its creative peak, and cut a landmark second album, “Sweet Baby James,” that included the classic “Fire and Rain.”

“I stopped the story with the release of ‘Sweet Baby James’ because at that point, I become a public person and said everything worth saying,” says Mr. Taylor on the phone from a recent Montana ski trip. “I was on the cover of Time magazine in 1971 and became sort of an open book.”

Mr. Taylor has had a seismic cultural impact. His manager says that he has sold 100 million albums. Taylor Swift was named after him, as she announced from the stage of Madison Square Garden in 2011 when Mr. Taylor joined her to sing “Fire and Rain.” In addition to his own songs, Mr. Taylor has excelled as an interpreter, notching hits with covers including Carole King’s “You’ve Got a Friend” and “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You),” which was written by the Motown team of Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland and Eddie Holland.

On his most recent releases, 2020’s “American Standard” and the three-song EP follow-up “Over the Rainbow,” Mr. Taylor’s taste in covers gets more eclectic. He focuses on songs he learned in his childhood, including “Moon River,” “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” and “Surrey With a Fringe on Top” from the musical “Oklahoma!”, mostly performed as guitar duets between Mr. Taylor and the jazz great John Pizzarelli. “American Standard” has been nominated for a Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album—his 19th nomination on his 19th album. He has previously won five.

“Early in my career, I found it almost embarrassing to be nominated for Grammys,” says Mr. Taylor. “I was dismissive and arrogant and felt an adversarial relationship with the business side of music, which only wanted massive hits and turned a blind eye toward so much beauty. Now that albums don’t sell like they used to, there’s no longer a king’s ransom involved, and the people left are really dedicated. It feels like more of a team effort, and I appreciate the acknowledgment of all that work.”

Mr. Taylor’s sweet, contemplative voice and wonderfully precise fingerpicked guitar have always hearkened to pop, standards and Anglican hymns, as well as folk and blues. Their beauty has often belied some dark subject matter, most notably in “Fire and Rain.” The song, about a friend’s suicide and Mr. Taylor’s own mental health and struggles with addiction, has been central to many people’s lives, played at countless funerals and farewells. That could be a large burden to bear, but Mr. Taylor says that isn’t so.

“Writing something with that kind of resonance was always the main point for me,” he says. “My songs were always expressing very internal thoughts in music, and you hope that these things which mean something to you will resonate with other people. We go shopping in the popular culture for our own mythology and our tribe. We assemble things to speak for us.”

Mr. Taylor has largely been riding out the pandemic at home in western Massachusetts with his wife, Kim. Last summer’s postponed tour with Jackson Browne has been rescheduled to start May 14 in New Orleans. His twin sons, Rufus and Henry, are in their freshman years of college. His children with Carly Simon, Ben and Sally, are both singer/songwriters, following in a Taylor family tradition that included all four of Mr. Taylor’s siblings.

His late mother Gertrude was also musical; she studied singing at the New England Conservatory of Music. His father Isaac was a physician who moved the family from Boston to Chapel Hill, N.C., when he took a job at the University of North Carolina, where he eventually became dean of the Medical School. The family spent summers on Martha’s Vineyard, which became central to Mr. Taylor’s musical development. He met a group of musicians there that included the guitarist Danny Kortchmar, who would become a key collaborator.

Mr. Taylor later attended Massachusetts’ Milton Academy. At age 17, he checked himself into McLean psychiatric hospital outside of Boston, where he was treated for depression for nine months.

After graduating high school, he moved to New York City and formed the Flying Machine, a band with Mr. Kortchmar and drummer Joel O’Brien, an important musical guide who also introduced him to heroin. When that band flamed out, Mr. Taylor moved to London. That led to a meeting with Peter Asher, who had a new job signing acts to the Beatles’ Apple Records.

Mr. Taylor’s self-titled debut album was released in 1968 on Apple Records, and to get that deal, he auditioned alone with his guitar for George Harrison and Paul McCartney, both of whom played on the record. (Mr. Harrison borrowed the opening line of Mr. Taylor’s “Something in the Way She Moves,” which he played at the audition, for his own song “Something.” Mr. Taylor says he was “hugely flattered” by this and always considered it accidental.) It is almost impossible to imagine what that attention from the rock legends must have felt like for an unknown 20-year-old, as the Fab Four were recording their seminal White Album; his own album was cut in the same studio when they went home for the night. How was he confident enough to do such a thing? “I had some competence and the arrogance of youth,” says Mr. Taylor.

“If we didn’t have those things, nobody would ever do anything, because you would hedge your bets. There’s a stage in our development where you’re allowed to do impossible things.”

Mr. Taylor says that can-do momentum continued on his second album, 1970’s “Sweet Baby James,” which truly launched his 50-year career. It was recorded in less than two weeks for less than $10,000. He and his band, which included Carole King and Mr. Kortchmar, recorded songs as fast as he could write them.

“We were just living on the surface, like one of those water striders that can walk on the surface tension of a pond,” he says. “It felt like we were just right on the surface of ourselves. Our artistic process was like stepping out into traffic and getting hit by a truck. There was nothing premeditated or strategic about the entire enterprise.”

Mr. Taylor adds, “That was an unprecedented time in popular music. The postwar baby bubble was 21 years old, and we all decided that we were going to rewrite everything and decide how life would be lived from this point on. That was supremely arrogant and destined to fail, but it did actually change a lot—and it sure made a huge musical impression.”

source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/james-taylor-looks-back-on-his-early-years-11611334730

Monday, January 18
2021

ROLLINGSTONE.COM — James Taylor, Carole King, Fall Out Boy to Play Pre-Inauguration ‘We the People’ Virtual Concert

By Daniel Krebs

James Taylor, Carole King, Fall Out Boy, and Ben Harper are among the performers set for a pre-inauguration virtual concert hosted by the Biden administration on Sunday, January 18th.

Will.i.am, AJR, Michael Bivins, and more will also perform at the We the People event, which will be co-hosted by Keegan-Michael Key and Debra Messing, People reports.

The We the People concert also doubles as a fundraiser for the Biden Inaugural Committee, with tickets ranging from $50 (complete with a personalized commemorative inauguration ticket and an exclusive event poster) to a pay-what-you-want fee.

Earlier today, Lady Gaga revealed that she would sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” following the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, with the singer also attending the swearing-in ceremony in Washington, D.C.

On the night of January 20th, Tom Hanks will host the primetime Celebrating America special marking the inauguration, with performances from Justin Timberlake, Demi Lovato, Bon Jovi, Ant Clemons, and more.

“This inauguration presents a unique opportunity to spotlight the resilience and spirit of an America United,” said Tony Allen, the President of Delaware State University and CEO of the Presidential Inaugural Committee. “We have witnessed countless heroes this past year step up to the frontlines and serve their fellow Americans, so we are telling their stories, spreading their collective light, and celebrating the best of our country and its people with this primetime program.”

source: https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/james-taylor-carole-king-fall-out-boy-pre-inauguration-we-the-people-virtual-concert-biden-1114763/

Monday, January 4
2021

UDISCOVERMUSIC.COM –Sweaters, Snakes, And Joni Mitchell: James Taylor Remembers 1970

By Paul Sexton

James Taylor has been sharing his memories of the staging-post period in his career that included his celebrated BBC television performance of November 16, 1970. The monolog is available on the revered singer-songwriter’s YouTube channel, along with each of the individual songs in the set.

In the clip, Taylor covers a range of subjects including his song list of the day, the sweater he wore for the filming, and his adventures with Joni Mitchell and James’ soon-to-be movie co-star Warren Oates.

“It’s funny to look back at those times and realise I had just enough material to do a full set,” says Taylor. “I had written the songs on the James Taylor Apple album, I’d written the songs on Sweet Baby James, my first Warner Brothers album, and that was it. So I basically pulled out everything I knew, including a snuff commercial from when I was a kid in North Carolina, and a brand new song that was sort of half-baked, on the piano.”

Of his choice of knitwear for the occasion, he confides: “I’ll tell you about that sweater. That was made for me by Joni Mitchell. She was travelling with me and I was filming that movie [also starring Dennis Wilson] Two Lane Blacktop – my only movie that I ever acted in. Well, at least in a starring role, I guess I’ve had a couple of cameos.

“Joni was on a knitting jag, and like everything she set her mind to, she made some beautiful stuff, and that actual sweater was meant to be representative of Two Lane Blacktop, and the time that we had on the road with Warren Oates. We had a great time, too.

“I also wrote ‘You Can Close Your Eyes’ during that same time and I remember so much that we did. Warren had a funky little rented RV, ‘cos he wanted to have his own space to use as a dressing room, a hideaway. Joni and I would ride with Warren between cities, as we drove across the country. It was a movie about driving across the country, so that was perhaps appropriate.”

He recalls that the trio visited a ceremonial dance by the Native American Hopi tribe, in their village of Hotevilla, in Navajo County, Arizona. The Hopi were communicating with snakes, causing Joni to face her phobia about the creatures.

“It was a really exciting time, and it was the first time I’d got back to London since I’d been there for a year,” he concludes. “A great time…sort of a time capsule to see those performances and that beautiful sweater that Joni knit me. One of the sleeves was eight inches longer than my arm. The other was an avant garde piece of wearable art.”

source: https://www.udiscovermusic.com/news/james-taylor-remembers-1970-bbc-concert/

Monday, January 4
2021

BERKSHIREEAGLE.COM – James Taylor tops charts again as audio memoir makes big impact

By Clarence Fanto

James Taylor’s groundbreaking audio memoir, “Break Shot: My First 21 Years,” ranks as Audible.com’s most listened-to original production of 2020.

The online audiobook and podcast service owned by Amazon.com announced the No. 1 ranking on its Instagram page this week. Audible Originals, described as a “genre-bending” documentaries combining words and music, released Taylor’s autobiographical production last January, recorded at his high-tech home studio, The Barn, in the town of Washington.

His deeply introspective look at his formative years included his most candid acknowledgement of personal demons that haunted him from his privileged but ultimately fractured family life, suicidal thoughts while in high school and eventual heroin addiction.

“Three of us kids ended up in psychiatric hospitals, and the fourth should have,” he said in “Break Shot.”

He also admitted that “heading out into the world to play music was not a career path, it was an abandonment of conventional ambitions. It was like becoming a hobo and riding the rails. No one was offering the music business as a college degree. Any hope my family might have had that I would pull myself together, go to college, study law or medicine, was now abandoned. I was heading into territory for which there was no map. I was free.”

Barely out of his teens, he arrived in London, singing for Paul McCartney and George Harrison and being the first outside act signed to Apple, the Beatles’ new label, to cut his first album.

Taylor recalled his brief romance with Joni Mitchell, followed by a lifelong friendship with her and with Carole King. He credited his 19-year marriage to Kim Taylor for overcoming multiple personal struggles.

Shortly before the Audible.com release, during a revealing fireside chat with The Eagle, Taylor mused about the long and winding trail, including bouts of depression that led him to spend time at the Austen Riggs Center in Stockbridge.

“Austen Riggs is very close to where I live now,” he commented. “Life circles around.”

Asked about any downsides to fame as a celebrity, Taylor replied: “I think there’s such a thing as too much exposure, being too popular. I see people whose lives are restricted by how well known they are. I can move relatively calmly and comfortably in pretty much any circumstance. People in the Berkshires may recognize me more than they do elsewhere but basically it’s a very comfortable level of fame, it’s really the best of both worlds, and it’s been extremely gratifying.”

Taylor’s year included last February’s release of his 19th studio album, “American Standard,” recently nominated for a Grammy award in the category of Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album.

The recording of selections from Broadway and the Great American Songbook competes against releases by Burt Bacharach & Daniel Tashian, Harry Connick, Jr., Rufus Wainwright and Renée Zellweger (for her soundtrack album based on the film, “Judy”). CBS will televise the annual Grammys award show on Jan. 31.

2020 also marked the 50th anniversary of the release of Taylor’s second album, “Sweet Baby James.”

As for a 2021 tour, rescheduled from 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, his website lists 39 U.S. and Canadian dates, beginning May 14 in New Orleans and ending in Vancouver, B.C., on Oct. 2.

The U.S. performances are with singer-songwriter Jackson Browne, and the Canadian dates feature guest artist Bonnie Raitt. There’s also a July 4 date reserved for Tanglewood (minus Browne), but details of the season at the Boston Symphony’s summer home are not expected until mid- to late March.

In His Own Words…
James Taylor commented to The Eagle via text on his top-ranked Audible.com memoir and other topics:
“My autobiographical piece, ‘Break Shot,’ seems to have reached a lot of listeners: it has been Audible Original’s number one offering this past year (!)

“Along with the Grammy nomination for our album, ‘American Standard,’ we get a splendid bright spot in an otherwise disappointing year: Jackson Browne and I had to postpone our American tour. The same thing happened to the tour of Canada that Bonnie Raitt and I had booked for this past April.

“It seems odd to celebrate in the context of so much suffering and sadness, the great global interruption of COVID-19. Of course, these changes to our plans are nothing compared to the huge challenges that so many people, all over the world, are grappling with.

“But, for the moment, I am deeply grateful for the good news. Congratulations to the terrific people at Audible and to my editor/producer, Bill Flanagan, for the inestimable parts they have played in ‘Break Shot’s’ success. And to Dave Odonnell, John Pizzarelli and the excellent team at Fantasy Records for making ‘American Standard’ such a rewarding recording.”

source: https://www.berkshireeagle.com/news/local/james-taylor-tops-charts-again-as-audio-memoir-makes-big-impact/article_a436b96e-4d3b-11eb-831f-27628db92e3e.html