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Saturday, 22 September 2007

James Taylor

Posted on 15:49 by Unknown
It's probably the epitome of cliche for me to tell you I'm a James Taylor fan. Just about every guy my age who ever picked up an acoustic guitar has publicly pledged his troth to the music of James Taylor. So, yeah, it's probably not hip to say this. And, yeah, it's probably cliche.

Know what? I could care less. I'm a huge fan, and have been for years. And as both he and me have gotten older, my admiration has deepened and grown. As with Fogelberg's music, as I was learning the guitar I learned the "Greatest Hits of James Taylor." Or, I should say more accurately say that for many years I could play the
chords from the song book. But what came out of my guitar never sounded close to what Taylor played. (This may be why I gravitated more to Fogelberg...at least on some of his stuff I could approximate the records...)

page9_blog_entry221_1
So it's been gratifying is that, as my playing has improved through the years, so has may ability to mimic those records. Or at least, as I often say, I've been able to get "good enough to fool most people." In fact the "carrot and stick" of playing a flawless "You've Got a Friend," or "Something in the Way She Moves," was one of the key ways my own playing improved, especially in the early years.

A part of why I am adding JT to my "balcony people" list right now is, of course, because of the
tribute show tonight. Connections Band rides again with a tribute show to the music of James Taylor and Carole King. As I've mentioned, the first set will be King. The second Taylor. I suppose I ought to write an entry for Carole King too. She is arguably not the most prolific woman songwriter of a generation, but the most prolific songwriter of a generation, period. But for me personally, Taylor's the one whose music is so much a part of my cultural DNA.

"Goodnight you moonlight ladies
Rockabye sweet baby james
Deep greens and blues are the colors I choose
Wont you let me go down in my dreams
And rockabye sweet baby james"


What I'm about to write is based on stories I've heard over the years. Is it all true? Who knows. Write a comment if I get it wrong.

Taylor's first big hit was "Fire and Rain," a song that folks have struggled for years to interpret. The bottom line is: it was a song written out of some of the deep pain of his life at the time. And had it never been written, we might never have heard the name James Taylor.

Taylor has suffered from depression and mental illness for many years, and was first hospitalized for it during high school. Drug addiction, heroin specifically, has also been a minor chord of his life for decades.

Early in his musical life, Taylor formed a band called "
Flying Machine" with his lifelong friend, Danny Kortchmar. But the group bombed out, and ended up in "pieces on the ground."

A big break came after he sent a demo tape to the great Peter Asher, who would become extremely important in his career. That tape eventually led to a dea
l as the very first artist signed by Apple Records, the Beatles brand new label.

But even though his first record was recorded at Abbey Road, and even though George and Paul both played on it, it didn't do well. (An historical tidbit to give anyone whose record ever bombs a little comfort...)

When JT got back from England, depression and drug addiction reared their heads again. Add to this, he got the news that an old friend, Suzanne Schnerr, had committed suicide. There is some indication that perhaps Taylor's friends and family actually kept the news from him for the months he'd been in England, hoping to not upset him or interrupt the recording of that first record.

He made a couple of major appearances in 69, but the heroin was really gripping him tightly. And to top it all off, he had a motorcycle accident where he broke both of his hands!!!

At the turn of the decade he couldn't even play guitar, he'd lost a good friend to suicide, struggled with depression and drugs, seen the failure of an early band and a first record. It was looking like nobody would ever know the name James Taylor.

It's right about then that he sits down to write "Fire and Rain." That song, from his second album, would become the breakthrough smash hit that propelled him to stardom. (In fact, it caused folks to take another look at that first record, which pushed "Carolina on my Mind" into the charts almost two years after the album's release...)

It was a heady time for singer songwriters. As the decade progressed, they dominated Pop Radio. Taylor, King, Cat Stevens, Fogelberg, Harry Chapin, Carly Simon, Jackson Browne, Stephen Bishop...and no doubt a host of others I'm leaving out. Taylor was featured on the cover of Time Magazine as the quintessential American "singer-songwriter." Arguably, when folks think of that generation, it's his name they remember most.
Taylor and Simon got married, and were something of an early pop-icon marriage (at least as far as singer songwriters go...)

Hits poured forth: a covers like "You've Got a Friend," and "Up on the Roof;" originals like "Something in the Way She Moves," Walking Man," and "Shower the People."

This incredible career has seen five Grammy Awards, 40 gold, platinum, and multi-platinum records, induction into the Rock and Roll and Songwriter Hall of Fames. Taylor was awarded Billboard's "Century Award," given for the highest level of creative attainment, and more recently he recieved the honor of "GrammiCares Person of the Year." On Taylor's Wikipedia site, it says this about that event:


"At a black tie ceremony held in Los Angeles, musicians from several eras paid tribute to Taylor by performing his songs, often prefacing them with remarks on his influence on their decisions to become musicians. These artists included Carole King, Bruce Springsteen, Sting, Taj Mahal, Dr. John, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, David Crosby, Sheryl Crow, India.Arie, the Dixie Chicks, Jerry Douglas, Alison Krauss, and Keith Urban. Paul Simon performed as well, although he was not included in the televised program..."


In other words, there is no doubting that Taylor's music and career have had an influence not only on countless guys like me, but on
many of today's most famous musicians.

Taylor's first "Greatest Hits" record featured new versions of "Carolina" and "Something in the Way." And although it never rose to higher than 26th place on the charts, it eventually blew away every higher charting album of that era. In fact, to this day, thirty years later, it still holds the record for second longest number of consecutive weeks on the charts. (Right behind Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon.") It stayed on those charts for 573 weeks...or eleven years!! It's sold more than 10 million copies, making it not just platinum, but the very rare "diamond" record.

Despite the professional success, Taylor was beset with personal problems. His marriage to Carly Simon was rocky. There are stories that she was often frustrated by his long touring schedule, and there are stories that his album "Dad Loves His Work" was something of a response to this. If true, this was hardly a way to keep a marriage together. Sure enough, the marriage ended two years after that record. Their children,
Ben and Sally Taylor are now also both musicians, and have had some success among twenty-somethings in the past few years.

His siblings,
Livingston and Kate, have also been musicians of some note. I have a couple of Livingston Taylor records, and they're all quite good.

"
Oh my God, a monkey can move a man
Send him to hell
And home again
With an empty hand in the afternoon
Shooting for the moon

It's halfway sick
And it's halfway stoned
He'd sure like to kick
But it's too far gone
They wind him down with the methadone
He's all on his own"


Heroin was an addiction Taylor struggled with for much of his adult life. It no doubt colored many of his relationships, and his ability to work and produce. As successful as he's been, it's something to wonder what else might have been possible, had he not been trapped by the addiction. Add to this, as time passes and songs get more famous and take on a life of their own, and become larger than life. The demand to hear the "old stuff" outpaces the desire of fans to let an artist change and grow. I don't know, but I would guess these are issues that Taylor has struggled over the years.

As I understand, it was the death of Taylor's friend, John Belushi, that was something of a wakeup call for him concerning his life. It's mentioned in this verse from the song, "That's Why I'm Here."

"John's gone found dead he dies high he's brown bread
Later said to have drowned in his bed
After the laughter the wave of the dread
It hits us like a ton of lead

It seems "learn not to burn" means to turn on a dime
Walk on if you're walking even if it's an uphill climb
Try to remember that working's no crime
Just don't let 'em take and waste your time"


That record, "That's Why I'm Here" marked something of a return to James Taylor for me. It was roughly around the time I was discovering other contemporary songwriters (Wilcox, Gorka, Larkin, etc...) and also roughly around the time when I began to think most of the rest of pop music on the radio really sucked. It seemed like Taylor had lifted out of a fog in his life and career and was at a place where he could finally look back and see (and accept) his own place in life. In fact, it would later be said that Taylor was close to walking away from his career in the time just before this record. But then, he played an incredible show down in Rio. Taylor's Wikipedia entry tells the story:



"He was quoted in various interviews that he was thinking of retiring after fulfilling his last contractual obligation, the Rock In Rio in 1985. However, he was surprised by the reception of the audience on Saturday, January 12 (there were 250,000 people, the biggest attendance of the 10-day festival), when he performed right before George Benson. Two days later, they were scheduled to perform in the same order, but because Taylor's extended performance had caused a delay to Benson's on Saturday, Benson proposed that they switch the order. Taylor ended up the finale in this second performance. Buoyed by the audience's reception, he decided to take back his life and his career. (Sixteen years later, on January 12, 2001, he played the very same site, at the opening night of the third Rock in Rio, whose organizer, Roberto Medina, described Taylor to the Brazilian press then as "his good luck charm".) The song "Only a Dream in Rio" was written in tribute to that night...The album, That's Why I'm Here, from which that song came, started a series of studio recordings that, while spaced further apart than his previous records, showed a more consistent level of quality and fewer covers."


Oh what a night wonderful one in a million
Frozen fire brazillian stars
Oh holy southern cross


If "Fire and Rain" had defined the young man --and an early life filled with pain and disappointment-- it seems to me that "That's Why I'm Here" --the album and song-- marked the beginning of a new era; a turning point for a guy who was now a little older, a little wiser, less tormented by ghosts, and much more comfortable inside his own skin. Taylor sings as much in the final verse:

"Oh, fortune and fame's such a curious game
Perfect strangers can call you by name
Pay good money to hear fire and rain
Again and again and again

Some are like summer coming back every year
Got your baby got your blanket got your bucket of beer
I break into a grin from ear to ear
And suddenly it's perfectly clear

That's why I'm here
Singin tonight, tomorrow, everyday
That's why I'm standing here
That's why I'm here"


H
ere's a RealPlayer video of a CBS story about James Taylor from a couple of years back. It gives a lot of nice background on him, and features him talking candidly about his life.

If you haven't heard JT's more current work, you owe it to yourself to check it out. Start with "
That's Why I'm Here." But don't forget "Hourglass," "Never Die Young," and New Moon Shine. His newest record, "October Road" has song that will take you back to all those old hits, and new ones that are fresh and unique.

To me, Taylor's recent recordings and live shows have a jazz undertone to them that separates him from a lot of singersongwriters. If you listen to the chords even in his earliest records, you can hear jazz-like progressions even then. They've always been there. In fact, you could argue that, structurally, his chord progressions have always borrowed more from Jazz than from Pete Seeger. (Which may be why they're so hard for the aspiring folkie to learn...)

His 1993 Live CD is a gem, and you shouldn't miss it. It gives a great flavor of all those live shows. His live band, which has been together for years, is awesome.

page9_blog_entry221_2
I'm certainly one of those guys, coming back summer after summer to hear those songs "again and again." There is something magical about a JT concert in the summertime. I've been that guy with the "baby and beer," sitting on the lawn at StarPlex, allowing the music to take me back through time, but also right into the present too.

There is something incredible about the connection of those songs to your life and your personal history, and sense that Taylor now realizes what an honor it is to be a part of so many people's musical DNA and personal life stories. Few artists ever get to that level, really...where their songs are really part of the story so many people tell about their own history. In fact, just last Friday at the Northaven Coffeehouse, a member came up to me afterwards because I'd closed my set with two JT songs (trying to pitch tonight's show...). Everyone in the room had been singing along with every word, and he said, "Wow I'd forgotten how much a part of me those songs were."

And yet, it's also great to see how he's stayed relevant, and even thrived, in recent decades. As he knows all too painfully, some of his generation didn't make it. Some, literally. Some faded away, professionally.

But he's kept at it, and it's always been a grace-filled experience to have his music as a soundtrack for life.

"I forget what to ask for
There isn't anything I haven't been given
How could I wish for anything more
As I am here living in heaven
This moment in the sun
To feel the wheel turning on
Carry me on my way"
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Friday, 21 September 2007

Do you remember, the 21st night of September?

Posted on 15:50 by Unknown
"Do you remember the 21st night of september?
Love was changing the minds of pretenders
While chasing the clouds away"


Today is my birthday. And in a deeply personal way, it's always been awesome to have a birthday associated with such a bitchingly cool "Earth, Wind, and Fire" song. Especially one that I remember from my own past, as a great dance track in my high school days. When I DJed dances, back in the day, we'd pretty much play all of EWT's Greatest Hits, and September was among everyone's favorites.

But, for me, late September has always been a magical time for many other birthday reasons. For, you see, next week is my Mom's birthday (September 29th). And so it was always cool to not only have a birthday remembered in an EWT song, but also one close to Mom's too.

That would be cool enough. But, turns out, last Saturday, September 15th, was my daughter's birthday...her tenth.

This, by the way, is completely incomprehensible. Not the date, the number. It is not possible she's ten. And yet, every facet of my life tells me it must be true. And so I am aquiecing to it as a
possible truth, even as I am still searching for the evidence that her being ten is an optical illusion. (It has to be...)

In yet another cool connection, my Grandmother's birthday (on Dad's side) was also September 15th. But she and Maria missed knowing each other by couple of decades.

My daughter's birth, 10-years-ago, was the greatest birthday presents for me ever. It solidified these later weeks of September as a sort of spiritually rich time for our family...perhaps a part of the calendar that's also a part of our DNA?

And then, just a few short years later, September 11th happened. And, as anyone with a September celebration can tell you, it changed things for a while. My daughter's birthday that year was muted, to say the least, coming just four days after that horrible day and while we were all still reeling in shock. I'm not even sure we did
anything for my birthday that year. I'm pretty sure I didn't want to.

Truthfully? It's felt a little odd to want to "celebrate" anything in late-to-mid September for several years now.

"Our hearts were ringing
In the key that our souls were singing.
As we danced in the night,
Remember how the stars stole the night away

Ba de ya - say do you remember
Ba de ya - dancing in september
Ba de ya - never was a cloudy day"


While I would never want to downplay the significance of September 11th, I am grateful for the years that have passed since; and for the fact that this year, really for the first time since 2001, it somehow feels again like we are celebrating this month as our birthday month. Maybe it's the time that's passed. Or, maybe I'm just not as depressed as I have been the past few years.

Who knows?

But, for me, even with September 11th now permanently mixed-in to my September DNA, this year there is also a certain connection with feeling "normal" again about the month of September. And for me personally? It's really nice.

For the first time in several years, there is postive, life-affirming power, there is a permission --or maybe even a compulsion-- to sing and jam with EW&F again, and to again feel the sheer unadulterated joy of September birthdays.
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Thursday, 20 September 2007

Carole King/James Taylor Show Reminder

Posted on 15:51 by Unknown

Hey Everybody:

We had a serious blast at the Northaven Coffeehouse last Friday night. A nice crowd saw a great show with me, my friends Rick O'Connor and Jack Kennedy, and Richard Newton sitting in.

And on the heels of that.... a quick reminder about the show Saturday night:

Connections Band
Tribute to the Music of Carole King and James Taylor
Saturday, September 22nd 7 pm
Spring Valley UMC


Click here for the official pdf flyer (with a handy map)

Here we are at the Chicago/Eagles Tribute last year:

page9_blog_entry214_1

And here are some sound clips of us from various shows.

We had a good rehearsal tonight, and we've got one more tomorrow night too. The show is really coming together. For the Carole King stuff, we feature three really great women vocalists: Ann Willet, Jennifer Rawlinson, and Lisa Rucker. (Lisa also plays killer sax throughout...)

I'm getting to play and sing some of my all-time favorite JT songs, like "Something in the Way She Moves," and "Country Road." And we close the show with me singing and playing on "You've Got a Friend," "Fire and Rain," and "Shower the People."

Come on and sing along...you know you like this music...admit it. It's way back there in your music DNA, and you know it. Nobody's too cool to be reminded how great these songwriters and songs are.

They're be great desserts, and the show is free. But we will take a love offering for UMCOR. Rusty King, our band leader, figured out today that if we net an offering of $2,000, that will put us over the $10,000 mark raised for the second year in a row.

"How sweet it is" to be able to sing these great songs, and raise money for this great cause.

Hope to see you there....


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Monday, 17 September 2007

Perspective

Posted on 15:52 by Unknown
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Friday, 7 September 2007

September Music News (07)

Posted on 15:53 by Unknown

Several fun things going on musically this month...

First, the peace really in Fort Worth last week was fun. A smaller crowd than expected, but many of my peacemaker friends were there...Charles Stovall, Hadi Jawad, Diane Baker and Beatriz Saldivar (who became a good friend at Camp Casey and actually lives in Fort Worth. We had her and others come to Northaven to tell their stories of relatives killed in Iraq...)

I got to do several songs, including "Prairie Chapel Road," which was especially cool since Cindy Sheehan was there and said she appreciated hearing the song again. She may have been just being polite. However, Ann Wright was also there, and I really did get the sense that she remembered me from the Camp Casey days. So, that was cool. All in all, an honor to be asked.

There are two other shows to tell you about, however:

FeastFest Coffeehouse at Northaven: September 14 7 pm
This should be a fun show on the home turf. It will feature myself, Rick O'Connor, and Jack Kennedy all doing sets, and possibly sitting in with each other too. There will be coffees and desserts and a casual coffeehouse atmosphere. I'll be doing my own stuff, and it will be the first real show to showcase the Santa Cruz.

Connections Band Tribute to James Taylor and Carole King: September 22 7 pm
Spring Valley UMC
Connections is back, with our next tribute show. We'll be doing a first set of Carole King songs, and featuring our women singers. Then, after the break, we'll break out the Greatest Hits of JT. I'm playing a singing a lot of these, which is cool, since I've been playing and singing them for years anyway. Again, I can tell you now, the new guitar is so very incredible sounding on these classics. It will be a great night. Here is
the official concert poster.

Both of these events are free, but both will feature a "love offering." At the Northaven show, the goal will be go cover expenses. At the SVUMC show, we hope to add to the amazing amount that Connections Band has raised for UMCOR.

Plan to come to both, since both shows will be quite different, really.

New Demo song on Myspace
I've written a new song, and the demo's up on my Myspace.
Click here and then click on "No Greater Wound." I'd love to hear what you think.

All for now....see you later this month at these shows.

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Tuesday, 4 September 2007

Oh, the Places I've Been

Posted on 15:53 by Unknown












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Monday, 3 September 2007

Watch the World Go By. Literally.

Posted on 15:55 by Unknown

File this under: "Cool Things You Can Find on the Web"

The clock/counter below comes from
this guy.

Even though
quantum physics tells us that there is no such thing as time, and that there is no such thing as a "steady state," it's easy to forget this due to the way we actually experience our lives day to day.

Even for those of us who are "in" to
Process Theology --which has, as fundamental tenet, that the world is always changing, and that change is a fundamental part of reality-- it's easy to get lulled into the idea that things are sort of permanently the way they are...right now.

Whether we look at these things through the lens of science or philosophy/theology, it's easy to get lulled into the belief that the world is unchanging. But the truth is, the world is always changing, in every moment of every day. And the clock below helps you see that in a really powerful way.

There is something quite powerful about it, really. Kind of like meditating on the vastness of the Grand Canyon, or the stars in outer space. There is something about being aware, even just statistically, of how things are constantly in a state of change, that is deeply spiritual and profound.

So, play around with this counter for a while. And, quite literally, watch the world go by:






Poodwaddle.com


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Saturday, 1 September 2007

American People's Poll on Iraq

Posted on 15:56 by Unknown
Later today, I will be a part of a large peace rally planned for downtown Fort Worth. It's called "The American People's Poll on Iraq," and is set to be an all day festival featuring music and speakers. I just looked on their website, and it seems Cindy Sheehan may be there, along with other Camp Casey alumns.

So, I'll probably pull out "
Prairie Chapel Road, and "Purple Land."

As I understand it, this is visioned as a peace rally for folks who have never been to a peace rally.

If you're free, stop by.
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