Tim Taylor- "Too Long Gone"
While combing through hundreds of local CD releases over the
past few years, I’ve seen many instances where the artist jumps
the proverbial gun by recording far too early in their career.
Rather than sharpening their skills, honing their craft, and
mastering their specific discipline, they run into the studio like
excited schoolchildren, with both ego and checkbook flailing
about. The end result is most often a recorded document for all
to examine, exposing just how little they really know.
Nobody can accuse Tim Taylor of this behavior. Quite to the
contrary, the New England harmonica strongman, whose very
name has become synonymous throughout music circles with
traditional blues excellence, has accrued over four decades of
personal and professional growth before attempting his first solo
CD release “Too Long Gone”. The end result is a mature, well-
conceived collection of indomitable covers and authentic
original material, which despite a certain sophistication never
losses the electric edge that defines a sound that Taylor has been
mastering and building upon all these many years.
For those of us familiar with Tim Taylor’s work, there is almost
an illusion that he somehow emerged from the womb already
fully schooled in the harmonica licks of Little Walter. But truth
be told, just as it was with the vast majority of teens in the late
sixties and early seventies, Taylor was exposed to the standard
hippie rock faire that wafted from festival stages and radios
alike. That was until a chance attendance of a performance by
The Ken Lyons Blues Band. The stark difference in their
approach from the other acts on the bill, as well as the strange
new sound of highly amplified harmonica transfixed the young
Taylor, who by his own admission “was psychedelically
enhanced at the moment”. In reference to his early recollections
of the harp player, Taylor recounts: “To tell you the truth, I
didn’t know what he was doing. I just heard this sound. He had
his hands up to his mouth...he was making this big enormous
sound. I got closer and realized he was playing just a regular
little 10-hole harmonica. And that was it, I was hooked.”
In the ensuing years, Tim Taylor began to fully immerse himself
in the performance styling of harp legends like James Cotton,
Sonny Boy Williamson, and the aforementioned Little Walter.
In doing so, he’s developed a unique approach that is far more
about tone and attitude than it is about virtuosity. “I’m not a
jazzy player or an accomplished lick player by any means. I just
go for that big sound and feel.”
Before making this solo record, Taylor spent years as one of the
area’s most celebrated and prolific sidemen. With credits that
include Rick Mendes and Blueswagon, The Mercy Brothers (an
acoustic-tinged outfit which included Barrence Whitfield), and a
four-year stint with Loaded Dice, he amassed an all-
encompassing understanding of his art, which constitutes “Too
Long Gone” a credible, genuine effort. Along that fact-finding
road, Taylor met Marlie Wänseth, a young blues singer whose
vitality re-energized his own take on the music: “She had a
wonderful, natural original approach to playing the blues. She
was heavy into the call-and-response, Howling Wolf grooves...It
really appealed to me.”
The eleven-song disc contains some re-worked classics like
Slim Harpo’s “I’m a King Bee”, and a terribly moving rendition
of “Amazing Grace”, which is deemed all the more so by the
fact that he performed it at his sister’s wake. Thus this recorded
version came at the request of his family as a keepsake of that
poignant, heartfelt moment.
But truly, the record succeeds best when Taylor himself takes
the songwriting helm. One standout example is “R.L.”, a tribute
to the late North Mississippi hill country-blues singer/guitarist
R.L. Burnside: “R. L.’s in heaven sitting down – no more
walking blues, he’s left his Earthly shoes – R.L’s in Heaven
sitting down ”
With a great deal of modesty, Taylor is quick to point out the
help he’s had along the way in the making of “Too Long Gone”,
from the assistance of Duke Robillard to the recording auspices
of John Packer, of whom he claims; “it would have been
impossible to do (the CD) without him in every regard. He
played on it, he engineered it, he co-produced it, he played all
the bass on it. He was instrumental in getting Duke to come over
and play on it.”
“Too Long Gone” is one of those rare occasions where one
artist’s full body of work can be summed up within a single
project, without ever understating the scope of that work. It was
a lifetime in the making, and from my perspective well worth
the wait.