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Eric
Taylor is a sage musician, a lyrical genius and a master of the
guitar. If you're familiar with the intricate Texas singer/
songwriter jigsaw puzzle, you probably already know a lot about
Taylor. If you're not familiar with Taylor by name, you've probably
heard his songs performed by people such as Nanci Griffith and Lyle
Lovett. He has created a multitude of fans and devotees that are
legends themselves in the singer/songwriter realm, artists who have
long considered Taylor to be a teacher and a lantern bearer whose
time is long overdue.
Taylor grew up in Atlanta, Georgia, and started playing soul music
in his early years, steeping himself in the rich cultural heritage
of the black South. "I've written poetry all my life," Taylor
recounts. "When I learned how to play guitar, it was a natural
progression to write songs." After high school, a brief stint at
Georgetown University in Washington, DC, just "didn't work out,"
according to Taylor.
"Music lured me away," says Taylor. "I thought I'd make my way to
California like everybody else back then but I ran out of money and
ended up in Houston." It's a good thing he never made it to
California, because the musical environment in Houston during the
'70s was just what Taylor needed to inspire him.
Taylor learned intricate blues guitar stylings from music legends
Lightnin' Hopkins, Mance Lipscomb and Mississippi Fred McDowell
while working at the Family Hand club. Later, he developed his own
unique guitar picking style, that would be imitated by many of his
contemporaries from the early Houston days, such as Guy Clark,
Townes Van Zandt, Robert Earl Keen, Lyle Lovett, Steve Earle, and
Nanci Griffith. "There were no lines drawn in the sand between
musical genres in Houston back in those days," Taylor remembers.
"You were just a musician. I believe so many great writers came out
of that scene because you could learn from others. Isn't that the
point of this whole thing?"
In 1977 Taylor was a winner of the "New Folk" competition at the
Kerrville Folk Festival. Shameless Love, his first album, came out
in 1981, and after a hiatus of almost 14 years, he returned with the
self-titled Eric Taylor, released in 1995. His eponymous release was
chosen as the 1996 Kerrville Folk Festival Album of the Year. Three
years later he released Resurrect, and it was subsequently named one
of the "100 essential records of all time" by Buddy magazine. Taylor
has headlined the prestigious Newport Folk Festival, played National
Public Radio's "Mountain Stage" and has appeared on both "Late Night
With David Letterman" with Nanci Griffith and "Austin City Limits"
with Lyle Lovett, Guy Clark, and Robert Earl Keen.
"To say that Eric Taylor is one of the finest writers of our time,
would be an understatement," Nanci Griffith says. "If you miss an
opportunity to hear Eric Taylor, you have missed a chance to hear a
voice I consider the William Faulkner of songwriting in our current
time." Griffith has recorded several of Taylor's songs, including
"Deadwood," "Storms," "Dollar Matinee" and "Ghost in the Music,"
which they wrote together. Lyle Lovett, who recorded Taylor's
"Memphis Midnight/Memphis Morning," and with whom Taylor co-wrote
the immensely popular "Fat Babies," compares Taylor's narrative
voice to that of Bruce Springsteen. Iain Matthews claims, "Once you
become a Taylor fanatic, it gives one immense joy and pride to be
able to enlighten others to the man's work."
2001 brought forth Scuffletown, and shortly following its release,
Taylor was a featured artist on "Austin City Limit's" and NPR's
"Morning Edition." The Kerrville Tapes (2003) is his first live
album, recorded during three years of appearances at the prestigious
Kerrville Folk Festival.
In 2004, heeding repeated requests by fans and media, Taylor
re-mastered the vinyl Shameless Love and reissued it as a CD with 2
never-released-before bonus tracks.
In the spring of 2005, Taylor returned to Rock Romano's Red Shack in
Houston to record his 5th studio album, The Great Divide. Garnering
rave reviews at home and abroad, The Great Divide quickly reached #3
on the Euro Americana Chart and in 2006 was named one of the Top
Releases Most Played by Folk Radio.
And now we have Hollywood Pocketknife, a 10-song collection that
shows Taylor in his prime as a writer and performer, with his
exquisite narrative style, his keen, studied observation of the
human spirit, and his intricate, roots-driven guitar work. Produced
by Taylor, Hollywood Pocketknife also features a stellar cast of
musicians, including Eric Demmer (saxophone), David Webb (keyboard,
Hammond organ), Mathias Schneider (lap steel), James Gilmer
(percussion), Vince Bell (vocals), Steven Fromholz (vocals), and
Susan Lindfors (vocals).
In January 2008, Eric Taylor and Hollywood Pocketknife were
nominated for FolkWax's Artist Of The Year and Album Of The Year.
A mesmerizing performer, Taylor has toured extensively in the United
States and Europe, playing notable venues such as Club Passim, The
Bottom Line, Caffe Lena, The Bluebird Cafe, Eddie's Attic, The Ark,
CSPS, Freight & Salvage, Paradiso (Amsterdam), Theatre Kikker
(Utrecht), The Real Music Club (Belfast), Hotel du Nord (Paris),
Grey's Pub (Brighton), and The Bein Inn (Perth). Festival
appearances include Kerrville, Newport Folk Festival, Woody Guthrie
Folk Festival, Take Root (The Netherlands), and Roots of Heaven
Festival (The Netherlands).
He has taught at the Kerrville Song School, and has conducted
songwriting workshops at the Fulston Manor Performing Arts Centre (Sittingbourne,
England), CARAD (Rhayader, Wales), and the Plowshares Coffeehouse
(Pennsylvania).
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from Eric Taylor
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