James Taylor in the early eighties
was the hammond-player of the
English rock band The Prisoners and in 1987 after the
band broke up, decided to lay the foundations for
his own group The James Taylor Quartet. The proposal was purely
instrumental and was inspired by
the blaxploitation films of the
seventies but also to soul
R & B of Booker T. & the MG’s. The
passion for the movie themes is
apparent in the first LP of the
band, Mission Impossible, a
collection of covers of acronyms of movies made with hammond, electric guitar,
bass and drums. The group's reputation
was growing thanks to the countless concerts based on funky wah-wah
sound, giving ample space to solos and active participation
to the public.
In the early nineties,
the group changed its sound,
including singers of the caliber of Rose
Windross, Alison Limerick
and Noel McKoy.
The single Love The
Life reaches a good level of
sales. In The
Hand Of The Inevitable, the
wake of the movement Acid Jazz, however, remains their best-selling record.
In the new millennium occurs a new change of direction towards a more funk and
instrumental sound and a return
to the original quartet, at least with regard to live concerts which remain
the favorite form of exhibition of James Taylor et al. The British band has
recently performed live in Rome
Rising and Music
Postcards from Rome was able, during
the sound check in the afternoon
to ask few questions
whose answers have revealed the man who still believes in the strength of human
kind notwithstanding his passed experiences and the JTQ’s future projects to
which he is really looking forward to. It
was a real pleasure talking to him.
Interview to James Taylor of the James Taylor Quartet
by Marina Parigiani
by Marina Parigiani
MPFR: So, glad to finally meet you. I would like to
start by asking you how your passion, your
career, the emotions that you inject with such enthusiasm at each
concert, through your many albums have remained intact after more than a
quarter of a century. Where do you get
your inspiration from?
JT: From
people, from human courage, from human hope. You know what I mean, people in the face of despair and
how people try to recreate their life in face of adversity. Musicians usually reflect what's going on around them really. Another
source of inspiration was my father.....he was a great guy. He inspired me a
lot to reach for beautiful things, beautiful relationship at the highest level
with an audience for instance. If I can
create something beautiful is something fundamental for me.
MPFR: We can
say that the at the beginning of your career
together with the group "The Prisoners": you were mainly a
band following beat and soul of the '60s are there any records of those years
to which you are particularly attached?
JT: Yes, loads. I can say that. Particularly in those
times, I was attached to many records as
a child such as Beatles and Rolling Stones. Many things are still valuable to me
but I don't listen to that music any
more. So I can hardly say that I am attached to this or that record in
particular. But as a part of my development
as a musician, I mostly got
saturated with records that had organ on it. It could be rock music of the
Stones, but if it had
Hammond on it, I had to have it.
MPFR: Few days ago Ian Mc Lagan, keyboard player of
the Small Faces passed the way.
Ian McLagan - 1967 |
JT: Ian, oh he
was an absolute huge hero for me.
MPFR: Oh great because we are great fans of Small Faces.
JT: Me too. In
fact when you asked me the question I thought you were going to ask me if there was a seminal record for me and I
was going to say "Odgens' Nut Gone Flake" but there were many seminal records. Oh the way he used to
play his instruments, because you see it
is such a complex and interesting sound that when I used to listen to him I'd
ask myself how does he get that sound out of that organ?
And also this goes for "Up the Wooden Hill to Bedfordshire"
and all the music he performed. I think he was phenomenal. But never had the
pleasure of meeting him personally.
MPFR: How did he influence your music?
JT: He had a
massive, massive influence. When I'll play tonight you will hear some of Ian Mc
Flagan too.
MPFR: I have
noticed the way you merge jazz, R&B
and funk doesn't make it easy to describe your music at all. However I have
also noticed, as a female, that when you want, you give great space to
romanticism. How do you combine rhythm with sentiment?
JT: This sounds
like an ultimate question! (releasing a
contagious laugh).
On my recordings you mean?
MPFR: Yes, you
do, especially on your recordings.....
JT: This is an interesting idea to explore, but the
fact is that you don't have to combine them together you can just oppose them and see what happens
when you push them once they are beside
each other. I will start together with a sort of romantic mellow which has hardly any rhythmic
quality at all. It is far more related to a
sentimental sound. My biggest
hero is Beethoven, he combines romanticism with sentiment. And he does it by pushing something very
sentimental into something very muscular, very powerful, then into something gentle again, a pure
bipolar genius.
MPFR: By listening to your many records, you seem to
love making covers especially detective ones, can you tell us which are the
elements that guide you towards a specific choice?
JT: When we were children we were literally
overwhelmed by American detective stories and often those movies were quite
revolting but the scores were wholesome
and who wrote them? Lalo Schifrin and we are still attracted by his music. With
respect to covers, however, we use them as hooks for that part of the audience
that does not know us yet. Some follow and know everything about us, others
only know few things we've done. Covers are mainly used to make our audience
interact with each other. We usually decide on the spot what should be played
as we don't have a play-list and the audience telling us what they prefer to
hear becomes a part of our interaction with them as well.
MPFR: You have also participated to a true OST, that
of Austin Powers. Did you like that movie?
How was your experience with the movie industry? What is the difference
at working at your own album such as let's say The Money Spider instead of performing for a real movie?
James Taylor invites us to go on back stage away as sound-check
has just started.
JT: The movie was not successful. They were wanting to
take our ideas and make them theirs by often leaning on me. They paid me well, but they did not give me
enough space to work on the whole thing.
So I didn't enjoy that particular Hollywood experience although I was invited to the movie's premiƩre where I also
took my wife along, but got an
idea on how the movie world works, I suppose. To be honest with you, I did feel
used by that environment. Instead, writing The Money Spider was very exciting
because I didn't have any obligation nor
image to work on. When it is your imagination that counts foremost it's another world altogether. Without doubt. Indeed, if your music is born from an inspiration or
a circumstance, it will sooner or
later encounter the favour of the
audience, otherwise someone may get
that same image and get a successful connection with the listener. That's the
skill of Lalo Schifrin. He was able to work and give colour and dramatize a story
. There are very capable people working in this field.
The Spider Money Lp |
MPFR: Your work in the past years progressively
broadened with horns and vocalists. The James Taylor Quartet, however, has
remained a Trade Mark of yours.
JT: It still remained my favourite form of exhibition
because people love to hear the Hammond. I have been pulled in many
directions, I've flirted with many
ideas. I've been called to different places. I worked with an orchestra, with a
choir and the Quartet at the same time. We worked with up to 100 members on
stage. But still JTQ remains my favourite.
Those people want to hear the Hammond, they want to hear that
sound. It's always the experience I
enjoy the most. It's the purest thing and the least corruptible within this
context, It's really the music I enjoy
the most , I feel.
MPRF: So as
your music has strongly evolved, how did manage to obtain the best out of your
group after so many years? Because there must be some kind of discipline.
JT: This is a very fragile collaboration, to work with
other musicians on musical projects over a period of time, lot of travelling,
lot of recordings and the creative spark
has to survive. So it's not only about talent, that's about serious people, and these guys are not only profoundly talented
but very serious and know who they are and what they want . The guy who goes on stage is a bit of freak,
he's mad. In a way what they are doing is exercising their demons on stage and transform their madness into something beautiful and positive with an
audience by producing sound is a way of
connecting to God as it were. So that relationship permanently needs work in a
very subtle way, it's very delicate, it
is like a dance. You are very sensitive to them and they to you and if you
manage to stay on the same landmark you can do good work together.
MPFR: Sure you can tell. It's looks like as if you are
embracing your guys as your family or considering it as such. Of course there
might have come times when one might
have hurt each the other, but also others where
when one realizes that the one can't do without the
other and by losing that person just
wouldn't be the same, then what happens?
JT: In fact doing without a musician you love, can get
you broken hearted. It happens. It is
very painful. The idea is to create something and try to be as human as you can
possibly be. To urge them to go on stage to
perform at their highest level
gets me very excited, like a
child, just like my father did for me.
MPFR: You know, I really appreciate the way you
mention your father the way you do. He must have been a very positive figure
for you. We had other artists talking about themselves but never opening on
their personal background spontaneously. So I just wanted to say that your
father would be proud of you for remembering him the way you always do.
JT: That is it. That is what I am selling, selling my father's love
MPFR: Oh no, if you allow me James, you are not
selling it, you are spreading your father's love.
JT: Yes, you
are right, what am I doing is actually
spreading his love.
MPFR: In the past century, Italy has given birth to
great musicians namely Piero Umiliani, Ennio Morricone, Armando Trovaioli &
Marc 4, Piero Piccioni but all these maestros, for various reasons, have
received more recognition abroad than in their home country. Do you know their
music and what do you think?
JT: Really, I didn't know that. I hate that. It sounds
very sad. I adore their music. That ,
that sounds very sad. I think they draw a lot from Verdi's opera tradition,
they know how to dramatize they know how
to paint at their image. Verdi is the king.
Verdi still influences all kind of movie scores and is my numero uno for
romanticism more than Beethoven. Because it took the emotional thing far more
intimately than Beethoven did. He was a man who
knew true despair. He knew about true loss. He lost his children and
wife, his composing made him be always
on the edge of falling.
MPFR: During the '90s you also approached soul and
acid jazz, proposing female vocals and then with the new millennium you
returned to a more direct and instrumental sound. What memories do you have of that period?
JT: I was very young then
MPFR: You still are ...
JT: I meant in my head.....that period was my loss of innocence .....It was like
crossing the Rubicon then, like Caesar,
there was no going back then. I had addiction problems. I was going through my
"hedonistic phase". I became successful and became a drug addict. I managed to stop all of that and put things back into place. But
there was a lot of shit being put around in those in years. Especially for
musicians. In fact all the success and fame thing is a myth. For the happiest
memories I have to go back years before then.
MPFR: Lately, you have included in your research some
classical music such as Dark August and Pearl's Dance and you have performed
your version of the Pathetic Sonata n.8 of Beethoven on Closer to the Moon, do
you think that this could be a new direction to take or is it only a kind of
experimental research break from funk soul?
JT: It is like recognizing extreme levels of beauty
artistry that can be hardly perceived these days. As a musician I want to find a way to continue to write great music,
so I want to continue the tradition of greatest musicians and composers by
sculpturing the sound of music as if it were eternal. And that is the direction
I am working towards.
MPFR: In your last album you decided to sing
"Closer to you", well, are you satisfied of the result and do you
think you will sing again on your next recordings?
JT: No, I was not satisfied.
MPFR: Do you think you'll ever sing again?
JT: It's just another instrument only that I am not
very good at it. But
yes, I will sing tonight.
MPFR: Well, I
think I have taken enough of your time and must thank you very much for having
answered all our questions.
JT: I must say they were very good questions.
MPFR: Thank you James, I am happy you liked them!
The Prisoners, the first band of James Taylor |
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