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James Taylor - October Road (CD)

Album Details: October Road

Release Date:08/13/2002
Label:Sony
UPC:074646358429

Other Available Formats: October Road

User Reviews: October Road

  • Overall:

    October Road

    By Tony B  Aug 17, 2002 | 2 out of 2 found this October Road review helpful

    On his first release of new material in five years, James Taylor is, well, James Taylor. From the opening track "September Grass" to a cover of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," Taylor's latest effort is a 12-song season of laid-back classics...-to-be complete with the usual introspective lyrical journeys and comfortable manipulation of Taylor's trusty guitar. My personal favorite is the CD's opener, a gentle and sensual - and oddly, sing-along catchy - celebration of the simple joys of reclining on the "September grass" with the one you love. Another highlight: "Raised Up Family," a musical nod to the Taylor family's apparent genetic propensity for personal self-destruction. (A lyrical and musical phrasing in the middle of the song will catch you by surprise, leaving you smiling or maybe chuckling and feeling a little guilty because of the otherwise dark undertones of the song.) All in all, "October Road" is a triumph - a long-awaited addition to the simple treasures we have come to expect from the mind and voice of James Taylor. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Go Sweet Baby James

    By Judy  Sep 30, 2002 | 1 out of 1 found this October Road review helpful

    Love it the first time. Loving it even more every time I listen.

Pro Reviews: October Road

  • All Music Guide

    James Taylor's 15th studio album of his first new recordings in 32 years is, if possible, even more familiar and self-referential than ever. By now, it is an article of faith that you could take practically any track from any Taylor album and put it on another one without disturbing the mood, and that is as true of the songs here as it is of those on the other 14. That warm (if slightly deepened) tenor, singing in its odd accent which combines New England and the North Carolina Piedmont, and that acoustic guitar, with its sparkling, unhurried fingerpicking, remain the most prominent elements in the sound. But even more, October Road finds Taylor seemingly intent on evoking his own past. The title track, of course, recalls his song "Country Road," and "Caroline I See You," (even if it refers specifically to his wife), inescapably echoes "Carolina in My Mind." Also, Taylor deliberately recycles themes from his earlier work. "October Road" begins, "Well I'm going back down maybe one more ...time," while "My Traveling Star" ends, "And shame on me for sure/For one more highway song." Throughout, on what seem like the most personal songs he has written in decades, Taylor appears to be commenting on a second chance he feels he has received, and though he couches the negative aspects in humor ("Mean Old Man," whose subject is the singer, ends with a dog joke, and "Raised Up Family," which contains recriminations, tosses in a musical reference to Gilligan's Island), there are strong hints of a man who feels he's been rescued. As such, it is perhaps fitting (if seasonally curious for an album released in the summer) to conclude with "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," a holiday song from wartime that reaffirms the importance of family in a world gone awry. - William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

James Taylor

When people use the term "singer/songwriter" (often modified by the word "sensitive") in praise or in criticism, they're thinking of James Taylor. In the early '70s, when he appeared with his introspective songs, acoustic guitar, and calm, understated singing style, he mirrored a generation's emotional exhaustion after tumultuous times. Just as Bing Crosby's reassuring ... Read more