|
Click here to read David Sinclair's
review of the James Taylor Quartet at The Jazz Café
New Album out
now. Don't Mess With Mr. T: James Taylor Quartet
Plays Motown The James Taylor Quartet playing the music of
probably the most famous, distinctive and definitive soul label of all
time. Click here to read
the Record Collector review and Click here to read the Times Online feature.
Hammond funk
gurus new outfit James Taylors 4th Dimension releases its debut
album PICKING UP WHERE WE LEFT OFF on
Monday 14 May 2007 (Real Self Records; RS5346). Describing his new
outfit, James Taylors 4th Dimension, the Rochester-based Hammond guru
affectionately known as the Medway Monarch - says:
This project is something Ive been promising myself for a long
while. Its an opportunity to return to, and further explore, the endless
possibilities offered by the classic Hammond quartet format, but this time with
20 years of recording, writing, and performing experience behind us. All
12 album tracks on PICKING UP WHERE WE LEFT
OFF are written by James, and the line-up is as follows: James
Taylor - Hammond C3 organ; Nigel Price guitar; Andy McKinney
bass; Neil Robinson drums. ORDER YOUR COPY
NOW!!!
A TASTE OF CHERRY was released in September 2006.
ORDER YOUR COPY
NOW!!! Read the
reviews!!!
 was released on 28th April 2003. Order your copy
now!!!, Read
the reviews!!!
was released on June 17th
2002. This was his 18th album in 15 years, but the guru of the Hammond is
anything but stale on this groove-laden long-player. High on funk, long on
soulful organ fills, and full of the Quartets trademark finesse, this
album proves that there is only for one British jazz/R&B combo.
Click here to read Selwyn Harris' interview with
James Taylor from the July 2002 issue of Jazzwise. His interview appears on
the JTQ website courtesy of Jazzwise.
Emerging from
the tragic bankruptcy of Stiff Records, James Taylor, founding member of the
infamous group The Prisoners - formed The James Taylor Quartet.
JTQ's first single,
, was released on the Re Elect The President
(Acid Jazz) label in 1985. It was a huge success, immediately attracting the
attention of John Peel who championed it; the track appearing three years
running on Peel's seminal Festive 50 Chart. After an impressive 13 weeks in the
Indie Singles Chart, the band decided to start work on a mini album, titled
. This debut, released in '86,
was naturally featured around Taylor's Hammon organ sound to produce classic
covers of Sixties film themes,
,
,
and other heavily grooving instrumental punk funk tunes. With JTQ's
following growing, the band were encouraged to put out their second album on Re
Elect The President,
. By the time it was released in '87, the
band's attentions were being drawn away from their recording career to their
now massive live audience. JTQ's emphasis on live 'dance' music has been the
key to the band's success, enabling them to establish a solid relationship
between them and their fans.
With the focus
now strongly on being a 'live' band, The Quartet gigged relentlessly, selling
out on the London club circuit. During this period, mjor record company
interest was aroused resulting in a long term deal with Polydor. The James
Taylor Quartet released three albums on Polydor,
in '88,
in '89 and
in '90. A number of hit
singles were spawned from these such as the acclaimed and well-loved classic
.
With the release
of their first live album
in 1991, The Quartet moved to Polydor subsidiary Big Life. Featuring guest
vocals from Rose Windross of Soul II Sould on
and Noel McKoy on
, the album initiated JTQ's introduction to the Soul Market.
In 1992, Noel McKoy officially became the Quartet's lead vocalist. Singles
and the top 40
were both taken from the Top 30 album
, released in 1993. In
this year alone, the band performed over one hundred and fifty shows in 15
different countries, including destinations as far flung as Thailand, Japan and
the USA. The climax of this was headlining in from of 5,000 people at London's
Brixton Academy. |
|
James' 10th album -
saw a return to the style he loved
most - instrumental Hammond led rocking jazz funk workouts. It featured the
stripped down to the bone sound that pays respect to the earliest JTQ hits like
and
The press respected him for the move away
from commercial pop/soul and the now wholly instrumental live set ripped up the
crowds more than ever. 1996 saw James play two full sell out weeks at London's
Jazz Cafe and a sell out show at The Brixton Academy, as well as tours in
uncharted territories from Brazil to Yugoslavia.
In 1998 James had the chance to fulfil a dream - film theme's always
featured heavily throughout his albums and he was asked to score a theme for
Austin Powers, a spy spoof starring Mike Myers (Wayne's World). James also set
up his own label JTI Records, releasing a compilation album of various artists
who he has worked with and respected over the years including Simon Bartholomew
(Brand New Heavies), The Prisoners, New Jersey Kings and The Apostles. That
year also saw James touring the UK and Europe to support the release of
MOBO-nominated
, a new live album by the band released in May. It also
saw James sign to a new label GUT Records, to begin the next phase of the
adventure.
The autumn of
1999 saw James featuring on the Tom Jones duets album
with
which they performed
together on the National Lottery Show. James' album
, released on December 6th, coincided
with a November and December club tour ending with a 6 night residency at
London's Jazz Cafe.
|