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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

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 4, 2014

Article by Dave Read

As if the ghost of Paul Revere had gotten loose, with a mind to make mischief in the Berkshires, in the days and hours leading up to James Taylor’s 4th of July concert at Tanglewood, a quiet rumor rose to a dull roar that a British(er) were coming – to wit, Sir Paul McCartney would make a special guest appearance.

That would be a reunion of the former Beatle and the first artist signed to the beatles’ Apple records. The anicipation built and built during the concert, as Taylor made 3 or 4 references to his lucky days in London, where he auditioned for McCartney and George Harrison while the Beatles were at work on the White Album. In fact, he began the show with the very audition song Something in the Way She Moves! But it never happened, and I don’t think anybody was disappointed. (McCartney did made an appearance, via video, at Taylor’s 60th birthday celebration here six years ago.)

It was another sold-out Tanglewood gig for Taylor, who appeared fit as a fiddle after taking last year off from touring to concentrate on the latter part of the singer-songwriter job description. He performed one new song tonight that’ll appear on an album eventually – Today, Today, Today. The balance of his typically generous setlist was familiar, including: Handy Man, Fire and Rain, Up on the Roof, Sweet Baby James, You’ve Got a Friend, Buddy Holly’s Everyday. Over the course of the nearly three hour show (including encores), everybody in the band and vocal quartet got the spotlight. Michael Landau, Luis Conte, Walt Fowler, Andrea Zonn, Kate Markowitz, Arnold McCuller, David Lasley, Larry Goldings, Steve Gadd, Lou Marini, Jimmy Johnson. His wife Kim and son Henry joined the vocalists for a couple numbers, too.

James Taylor at Tanglewood July 2 – 4, 2012

by Dave Read.

The Koussevitsky Music Shed at Tanglewood is a holy place in the minds of legions of classical music lovers, sort of a chapel to the cathedral – Symphony Hall in Boston. Over the past decade or so, the BSO has instituted a way to ready the place for the returning congregants, inviting lay ministers Garrison Keillor and James Taylor to hold services that are certain to clear the dust from the rafters and get the aisle-wardens, parking-assistants, concessionaires, and ticket-takers into mid-season form.

Tanglewood audience July 4th James Taylor concert; photo: Dave Conlin Read
Tanglewood audience July 4th James Taylor concert; photo: Dave Conlin Read

Keillor, an annual Tanglewood attraction since 2000, can now be counted on to append nearly a whole show of audience sing alongs to his 2 hour live broadcast of A Prairie Home Companion. And James Taylor, who has played 40+ times at Tanglewood since 1974, has taken to scheduling little series of shows, often with special guests. This year’s 3 night run included one with Taylor Swift, the young country-pop sensation who was named after him. She appeared late in the first set of the July 2 show for a duet on Fire and Rain, and sang her own hits Ours and Love Story in the 2nd set. Ms. Swift’s entrance caused an eruption of shrieks from the youngsters in the sold-out audience that reminded us of the reception afforded the youngsters from Liverpool when they were introduced by Ed Sullivan in 1964.

Tanglewood lawn scene,July 4th James Taylor concert.
Tanglewood lawn scene,July 4th James Taylor concert photo: Dave Conlin Read

The Beatles get a mention at all James Taylor concerts, when he talks about his luck in getting signed by them to record his first album on their Apple label. The album included Carolina in My Mind with appearance by Paul McCartney and George Harrison, and Something in the Way She Moves, which inspired Harrison to write Something. This season’s version of Taylor’s band was missing singer Arnold McCuller but included long-time collaborator Larry Goldings on keyboards and Dean Parks on pedal steel, each of whom added serious and searing oomph to the proceedings.

We attended the 1st and 3rd show; together the series attracted somewhere in the neighborhood of 53,000 fans. Mr. Taylor is also on the program for the Gala 75 Anniversary concert July 14, which features Boston Symphony, Boston Pops, and Tanglewood Music Center Orchestras, plus special guests John Williams, Keith Lockhart, Andris Nelsons, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Yo-Yo Ma, and Peter Serkin.

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