• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Berkshire Links

Berkshire Links

  • Tanglewood schedule
  • Berkshire towns
  • Berkshire parks
  • Berkshire writers
  • Contact

James Taylor at Tanglewood

  • 2014 July 4 encore How Sweet It Is, video
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018
  • James Taylor’s 4th of July 2016 – photos
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2015
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2014
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood July 2 – 4, 2012
  • James Taylor, Amy Grant, Vince Gill at Tanglewood
  • James Taylor with the Boston Pops and John Williams at Tanglewood
  • James Taylor and friends at Tanglewood Ozawa Hall
  • James Taylor and Carole King concert Tanglewood scenes
  • James Taylor and Carole King Troubador Reunion 2010 World Tour at Tanglewood
  • James Taylor and Friends at Tanglewood
  • James Taylor’s Tanglewood festival video
  • James Taylor at Tanglewood August 26-30, 2009
  • James Taylor One Man Band at Tanglewood
  • James Taylor – Tanglewood – August 21, 2006
  • James Taylor – Tanglewood – July 4, 2005
  • Review of James Taylor concert at Tanglewood June 24, 2003
  • James Taylor’s July 4, 2001 Tanglewood concert
  • James Taylor and the Boston Pops set Tanglewood attendance record – July 17, 2002
  • James Taylor and Yo Yo Ma video – Sweet Baby James
  • James Taylor’s 60th Birthday party at Tanglewood, July 4, 2008
  • James Taylor and Band at Tanglewood, July 4, 2001, with special guest Yo Yo Ma

2014 July 4 encore How Sweet It Is, video

Article updated July 19, 2019 by Dave Read

We got lucky with the end-of-show crowd surge at James Taylor’s July 4, 2014 Tanglewood concert, recording five minutes of fairly steady video to afford a good look at how much fun he is having. Of course, the audio ain’t so hot, but still worth it to catch Lou Marini’s hot sax solo – and related hamming it up!

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018

Article updated July 6, 2018 by Dave Read

Something about James Taylor’s Fourth of July concert at Tanglewood felt low-key, but that’s in reference to a dozen or so such, which always rank among the most exciting shows of the year. Our expectations may have been out of whack because his July 4, 2008 show exploded into a celebration of his sixtieth birthday. Maybe now that the ¾ century mark is within shouting distance, seventy is not so big a deal?

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018; Hilary Scott photo.

My reading of the show doesn’t extend to the usual aspects, such as the favorites-filled setlist of 25 songs, the 218 autographs from the lip of the stage during intermission, nor the revival-like 3 song encore when everybody got into the act, nor his awesome band. I thought he ceded primacy to Mike Landau on Steamroller, which his ace guitarist did not squander, before cutting loose with his own axe-indulgence during a coda that would not quit.

The stagecraft of James Taylor

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018; Hilary Scott photo.

James Taylor is a master of stagecraft, that aspect of a musician’s duty to an audience that cannot help but color his virtuosity and singing. Stagecraft, a.k.a. patter, is the golden thread a singer weaves through a performance. James Taylor is so good at it sometimes that it steals the show; tonight it was spot-on, meaning that I wouldn’t have noticed it, except that I had an eye out for it.

James Taylor’s Lawn Nation at Tanglewood

The Fourth of July James Taylor concert at Tanglewood is a “bucket list” sort of event; it is a musical performance with social implications elbowing their way to the fore. It is a generational thing, with an abundance of kids running around and no shortage of patrons for whom the metaphorical bucket is the last thing they want to be thinking about. Not annual, but since Mr. Taylor built a house near October Mountain seventeen years ago, there has been at least one James Taylor Tanglewood show almost every year.

Here are snapshots of Lawn Nation, as James Taylor likes to call his Tanglewood audience. The images were made around half past six, July 4, 2018.

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018 lawn audience
James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018 lawn audience
James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2018 lawn audience

James Taylor’s 4th of July 2016 – photos

July 4, 2016 Tanglewood concert review by Dave Read

Over the years, whenever James Taylor introduced a new song onto his tried and true setlist, he would mollify his adoring audience by telling them that it sounds just like all the rest. This year he sounded vexed, letting his stage persona go right to the edge: “I know you didn’t come here for no goddam new songs.”

Whether he was merely freshening a stale old joke, or is feeling pinched by audience expectations, it still was every bit as good a concert as we’ve attended in the Tanglewood series going back two decades.

James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.
James Taylor 4th of July 2016 concert at Tanglewood; photo: Dave Read/BerkshireLinks.com.

The one variation in the series was his 2002 appearance with John Williams and the Boston Pops when, after reciting Aaron Copland’s Lincoln Portrait to open the program, he returned with an ad hoc quartet of guitarist John Pizzarelli, Larry Goldings on keyboards, drummer Gregg Bissonette, and Jimmie Johnson on bass, with the Pops in an accompanying role. It was a very entertaining set and it left us thinking he was looking down the road toward shows with an emphasis on singing within a looser, jazzier setting.

Tanglewood’s popular artist series

Coming four days before the BSO’s opening night, this show was the tenth on an outstanding roster of popular artists that began June 17 with Dolly Parton and included Earth, Wind, and Fire, Brian Wilson, Jackson Browne, the penultimate broadcast ever of A Prairie Home Companion, with Garrison Keillor, and Bob Dylan. This show was similar to the one Bob Dylan put on 2 nights earlier in a few respects: each fronts an awesome band, each covers songs written by others, and each crafts a setlist that leaves his fans gasping for breath!

James Taylor’s July 4, 2016 setlist

Something in the Way She Moves
Everyday
Walking Man
Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight
Today Today Today
Country Road
On the 4th of July
Copperline
Carolina in My Mind
(I’ve Got To) Stop Thinkin’ ‘Bout That
Fire and Rain
Shower the People
The Frozen Man
The Promised Land
You’ve Got a Friend
Angels of Fenway
Up on the Roof
Sweet Baby James
Steamroller
Mexico
Your Smiling Face
Encore:
In the Midnight Hour
How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)
You Can Close Your Eyes

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 8
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

© 2001–2025 Dave Read Terms of Service; WordPress by ReadWebco

  • Tanglewood schedule
  • Berkshire towns
  • Berkshire parks
  • Berkshire writers
  • Contact