12 March 1948, Boston,
Massachusetts, USA. The embodiment of the American singer-songwriter
in the late 60s and early 70s was the frail and troubled James
Taylor. He was born into a wealthy family. His mother was a
classically trained soprano and
encouraged James and his siblings, including
future recording artists Livingston Taylor (b. 21 November 1950,
Boston, Massachusetts), Alex Taylor (b. 28 February 1947, Boston,
Massachusetts, USA), Hugh Taylor (b. 24 July 1952, Durham, North
Carolina, USA) and Kate Taylor (b. 21 November 1950, Boston,
Massachusetts, USA) to become musical.
The young James Taylor wanted for nothing and
divided his time between two substantial homes. He befriended
Danny "Kootch" Kortchmar at the age of 15
and won a local talent contest. As is often the case, boarding
school education often suits the parents more than the child, and
James rebelled from Milton Academy at the age of 16 to join his
brother Alex in a rock band, the Fabulous Corsairs. At only 17 he
committed himself to the McLean Mental Institution in Massachusetts
to undergo treatment for his severe depression. Following a
nine-month stay he reunited with "Kootch" and together they formed
the commercially disastrous Flying Machine. At 18, now being
supported by his parents in his own apartment, the seemingly
affluent James drew the predictable crowd of hangers-on and
emotional parasites. He experimented and soon was addicted to
heroin.
Eventually he had the drive to move out from
his family home, and after several months of travelling he arrived
in London and found a flat in Notting Hill (which in 1968 was hardly
the place for someone trying to kick a drug habit!). Once again "Kootch"
came to the rescue, and suggested Taylor take a demo tape to
Peter Asher. "Kootch" had supported Peter
And Gordon on an American tour, and Asher was now looking for talent
as head of the new
Apple Records. Both Asher and Paul
McCartney liked the work and the thin, drug-weary, weak and by now
experienced teenager was given the opportunity to record.
James Taylor
was not a success when released, even though classic songs like
"Carolina On My Mind" and "Something In The Way She Moves" appeared
on it.
Depressed and still hooked on heroin, Taylor
returned to America, this time to the Austin Riggs Mental
Institution. Meanwhile Asher, frustrated at the disorganized Apple,
moved to America, and persevering with Taylor, he secured a contact
with
Warner Brothers Records and rounded up a
team of supportive musician friends; "Kootch", Leland Sklar, Russ
Kunkel and Carole King. Many of the songs written in the institution
appeared on the superlative
Sweet Baby James. The album
eventually spent two years in the US charts and contained a jewel of
a song: "Fire And Rain". In this, he encapsulated his entire life,
problems and fears; it stands as one of the finest songs of the era.
Taylor received rave notices from critics and he was quickly
elevated to superstardom. The follow-up,
Mud Slide Slim And The Blue Horizon,
consolidated the previous success and contained the definitive
reading of Carole King's "You've Got a Friend". Now free of drugs,
Taylor worked with the Beach Boys' Dennis Wilson on the cult
drag-race movie
Two Lane Blacktop and released
One Man Dog which contained another
hit, "Don't Let Me Be Lonely Tonight". Fortunately Taylor was not
lonely for long; he married Carly Simon in the biggest showbusiness
wedding since Burton and Taylor. They duetted on a version of the
Charlie And Inez Foxx hit, "Mockingbird",
which made the US Top 5 in 1974.
Taylor's albums began to form a pattern of
mostly original compositions, mixed with an immaculately chosen
blend of R&B, soul and rock 'n' roll classics. Ironically most of
his subsequent hits were non-originals, such as
Holland/Dozier/Holland's "How Sweet It
Is", Otis Blackwell's "Handy Man" and
Goffin/King's "Up On The Roof". Taylor was
also beginning to display a new confidence and sparkling onstage
wit, having a superb rapport with his audiences, where once his
shyness was excruciating. Simon filed for divorce a decade after
their marriage, the punishing touring and once again the recurring
drug dependency were blamed, but Taylor accepted the breakdown and
carried on with his profession. He continued to prosper as a hugely
popular live act. A tribute to the assured Taylor is captured on Pat
Metheny's joyous composition "James", recorded on his
Offramp album in 1982.
After a spell of indifferent albums, in 1985
Taylor released the immaculate
That's Why I'm Here. The reason he
is here, as the lyric explains, is "fortune and fame is such a
curious game, perfect strangers can call you by name, pay good money
to hear 'Fire And Rain', again and again and again". This one song
says as much about James Taylor today as "Fire And Rain" did many
years ago. He has survived excess, his brain cells are in order, he
is happy, he is still creative and above all, his concerts exude a
cosy warmth that demonstrates he is genuinely grateful to be able to
perform. In the following years, Taylor continued to add his harmony
vocals to all and sundry as a session singer, in addition to
regularly touring. He has devoted much time to performing at
benefits, especially in Brazil, a country he fell in love with in
the mid-80s. The double live album that was issued in 1993 is a
necessary re-starting point for those who stopped buying his records
when they moved out of their bedsitters in 1971.
After a recording break of nearly five years,
Taylor returned with
Hourglass in 1997. It was well
received by the critics and became one of his highest-charting
records for many years and received a Grammy award. Quite why is a
mystery, because it was no better or worse than his other most
recent studio recordings, but the critical wind of change was once
again blowing in his favour. His first album of the new millennium,
October Road was a truly magnificent
recording, very much in the style of
Sweet Baby James but with a maturity
that observes the twilight years that have arrived. Taylor has often
reminded would be musicians that one of the keys to starting out in
the music business is to "avoid a major drug habit". Taylor is now
an elder statesman of the classic singer-songwriter genre, and
remains one of the real surviving stars of the post-hippie
generation.