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Mick Taylor




  Img Mictaylorjpg
  Background solo_singer
  Birth Name Michael Kevin Taylor
  Alias Little Mick
  Born <br> Welwyn Garden City , England
  Instrument Guitar , Vocals , Bass Guitar , Piano
  Genre Blues-rock , Rock
  Occupation Musician , Songwriter
  Years Active 1965 - Present
  Label Deram , Decca , Rolling Stones Records , Atlantic , Columbia , EMI , Virgin Records , CBS , Maze
  Associated Acts John Mayall's Bluesbreakers <br> The Rolling Stones
  URL wwwmicktaylornet
  Notable Instruments Gibson SG <br> Gibson Les Paul <br> Fender Stratocaster


Michael "Mick" Kevin Taylor (born 17 January , 1949 in Welwyn Garden City , Hertfordshire ) is an English Music ian best known as the former guitarist for The Rolling Stones .


BIOGRAPHY


Early career

Mick Taylor grew up in Hatfield , Hertfordshire , and began playing Guitar at age 9. As a teenager he formed bands with schoolmates and started doing gigs as The Juniors (or the Strangers). They also appeared on television and put out a single. Part of the band was recruited for a new group called The Gods which included Ken Hensley (later of Uriah Heep fame). In 1966 The Gods opened for Cream at the Starlite Ballroom in Wembley.

When he was 16 years old (in 1965) Taylor went to see a John Mayall's Bluesbreakers college gig in Hatfield with a couple of his bandmates. For some reason guitarist Eric Clapton failed to appear. After approaching John Mayall during the intermission, Taylor ended up playing Clapton's guitar for the second set. Taylor became known as a musical prodigy. When Peter Green resigned from the Bluesbreakers, Taylor was asked to take his place. Before he turned 18, Taylor toured and recorded the album Crusade with John Mayall's Bluesbreakers . From 1966 to 1969 Taylor developed a fluid and emotive guitar style that is Blues-based with Latin and Jazz influences. Taylor is also seen as one of the most prominent Slide Guitar players.


The Rolling Stones

When The Rolling Stones wanted to tour North America in 1969 the problems surrounding founding member and guitarist Brian Jones could not be ignored. His conviction for illicit drug usage prevented him from obtaining the work visa needed to perform on tour in America; this and his emotional problems had alienated him from the rest of the group, and would have made touring difficult if not impossible. Jones was fired in early June 1969 (less than a month later he died by drowning on 3 July).
Mick Jagger reportedly did not want to hold auditions to replace him, and the process by which Taylor became a Stone was significantly different from the way Ron Wood would five and a half years later. Jagger simply asked John Mayall from The Bluesbreakers for his advice. Mick Taylor was recommended, and Jagger invited him to a recording session. Taylor arrived at the studio thinking they wanted him to do some session work, but after a while he realised he was being auditioned as a new guitarist for the band. Taylor did overdubs on two tracks, "Country Honk" and "Live With Me" from the 1969 album Let It Bleed. This impressed Richards and Jagger enough to tell him: "See you tomorrow" before he left the studio. Taylor continued rehearsing and recording with the band during the summer of 1969.
The song Country Honk was dramatically changed when Taylor experimented with the riff on guitar. The new version of the song was called " Honky Tonk Women ", which was released as a single and became a number one hit in July 1969.
The Stones were rehearsing Stevie Wonder's "I Don't Know Why (I Love You)" when Jagger answered the telephone informing the band Jones had drowned.

Mick Taylor made his debut with the Stones at a July 5th free concert in London’s Hyde Park which was attended by a quarter of a million people. The concert launched the 1969 tour while at the same time paying tribute to Brian Jones.
In November, The Stones set off on The North American Tour , their first in three years. It was comprised of arena sized venues and also included the ill-fated concert at the Altamont Speedway in Livermore, California.

After the 1969 tour, Jagger and Taylor developed a way of working together when Richards was "missing in action", mainly because of Richards' growing use of drugs, including heroin.
Jagger and Taylor wrote and recorded songs like " Sway ", " Moonlight Mile ", " Winter " and " Time Waits For No One ", but Taylor was never given writing credit. Taylor consequently became disenchanted. He received songwriting credits for only four songs "Ventilator Blues", "Stop Breaking Down", both on the '' Exile On Main St. '' album and two songs on the album Metamorphosis. In the 90s the Stones were sued for wrongly taking credit for "Stop Breaking Down" and the composition was reclaimed by the Robert Johnson estate.

Lack of songwriting credits wasn't the only reason he chose to leave the band. While recording Exile on Main St. in the South of France in 1971 Keith and Mick Jagger would hardly ever turn up on the same night. This was Jagger's way of punishing Keith for not showing up after getting out of it. As a result the others (Bill, Charlie, Mick T and Stu) were forced to spend an endless amount of time waiting around, hoping Mick and Keith would turn up at the same time. This and the general madness surrounding the making of Exile (and later albums, when things got even worse) also added to Mick T's frustration.

In the book "Rolling with the Stones" Bill Wyman implies that Taylor "dallied with hard drugs" during the recording of Exile, a statement that has been misconstrued by some readers. Taylor did not develop a hard drug addiction in the South of France.
In interviews Taylor has described Bill as "the most straight-laced of them all". He was the only one who was never involved with parties and reportedly even got bullied for not doing drugs. Perhaps this explains also why he's second guessing about the recreational habits of the other bandmembers. When Richards was taking hard drugs at Nellcôte it was done behind closed doors, never openly. After a couple of weeks in the south of France Andy Johns , Jimmy Miller and Bobby Keys decided to move into Bobby's apartment on the ocean where they set up a private casino and started dabbling with acid and heroin.1
While they were living as exiles, even Richards was not seen doing anything more serious than drink 's place in France, where Taylor lived with his young family) and Nellcôte . There are no eye-witness reports of Taylor taking heroin, because he didn't take any.

Just before the release of '' It's Only Rock 'n Roll '' in October 1974, Taylor told Nick Kent from New Musical Express about the new LP and that he had co-written "Till the next Goodbye" and "Time Waits for No One" with Jagger. When Kent showed Taylor the record sleeve it became clear that once again, despite Jagger's promises, Taylor had been denied song writing credit.

In December '', accessed 04 Sept 2007 The Stones were supposed to start recording a new album in Munich, West Germany.
Jagger was taken aback completely, but took the news professionally. Keith Richards complained about Taylor's departure as he felt that Taylor left at a very inconvenient moment. Taylor's future, however, looked bright. At the time, he was considered one of the best guitarists in the world, and it was expected that he could build a solo career as had Eric Clapton .

In an essay about the Rolling Stones, printed after Taylor's resignation, music critic Robert Palmer (The New York Times) wrote that "Taylor is the most accomplished technician who ever served as a Stone. A blues guitarist with a jazzman's flair for melodic invention, Taylor was never a rock and roller and never a showman."

Even many years later, the remaining Stones, when asked to reflect on Taylor (and his contributions), often come out with contradictory statements.
Mick Jagger, in a 1995 interview with Jann Wenner of '' Rolling Stone '' magazine, nearly admitted that the years in which Taylor was a member of the band were its best, musically. Jagger said Taylor never explained why he had left, and surmised that "He (Taylor) wanted to have a solo career. I think he found it difficult to get on with Keith." Charlie Watts stated: "I think we chose the right man for the job at that time just as Ronnie was the right man for the job later on. I still think Mick is great. I haven't heard or seen him play in a few years. But certainly what came out of playing with him are musically some of the best things we've ever done". (A Life On The Road, Virgin Books 1999). One of the statements made by Keith Richards is "Mick Taylor is a great guitarist, but he found out the hard way that that's all he is" (Source: Guitar World, Oct 2002, reprinted in GuitarLegends Jan 2007).

However, hard feelings have dissipated over time: Taylor appears on "I Could Have Stood You Up", a song from '' Talk Is Cheap '', Richards' first solo album. On 14 December 1981 , Mick Taylor appeared on stage for almost the full show at the Kemper Arena in Kansas City with the Rolling Stones; and at a Mick Taylor show in NYC (Lone Star Cafe) on 28 December 1986 , Richards appeared on stage with Taylor, jamming on "Key to the Highway" and "Can't You Hear Me Knocking". The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame inducted the Stones ''and'' Mick Taylor in 1989 2.
Taylor also worked with Bill Wyman on Wyman's solo project ''The Rhythm Kings'' in the early 90's.

Taylor's live presence with the Stones is preserved on the '' Get Yer Ya-Yas Out! '' live album recorded over three concerts at Madison Square Garden in New York on November 27 and 28, 1969. ''Sticky Fingers'', ''Exile on Main Street'', ''Goats Head Soup'' and ''It's Only Rock 'n Roll'' were the four studio albums Taylor recorded with the Stones. Recordings that remain bootlegs - due to complications with past Stones management - of the 1972 American Tour and the 1973 European Tour are the best showcase for Taylor's playing with the Stones.

After Taylor's resignation his playing can be heard on the compilation album '''' and '' Forty Licks ''. Two new songs on 1981's '' Tattoo You '' also feature Taylor ("Tops" and " Waiting On A Friend "). Taylor is sometimes mistakenly credited as playing on "Worried about You" from Tattoo You, but the solo on that song is performed by Wayne Perkins .


Solo career

In 1973 Taylor had also been involved with introducing Mike Oldfield 's music to the public by performing Tubular Bells live at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in June of that year. Taylor was asked to take part in this project by Richard Branson because Mike Oldfield was the first artist he had signed to his fledgling label Virgin Records, but Oldfield was still completely unknown. Mick Jagger came to witness the first live rendition of Tubular Bells, and Taylor introduced him to Richard Branson. Taylor also played once more time with Mike Oldfield for a BBC Performance in November 1973.

After Taylor's resignation from the Stones, Jack Bruce asked him to form a new "supergroup" together with Carla Bley and Bruce Gary . The band got together for rehearsals in London in 1975. Because tour dates had already been lined up for later that year, there wasn't much time left for writing new material, and in the studio it became clear that in Jack Bruce's view the object of touring was to promote his three solo albums. The group toured Europe (including a performance at the Dutch Pinkpop Festival), but was disbanded for various reasons (mostly conflicting egos) before any studio material was recorded. In May 2003, the double CD Live at the Manchester Free Trade Hall (recorded June 1st 1975) was released by Polydor after some tapes were found back in someone's attic. This, and their performance Live at the Old Grey Whistle Test, is the only material available from this line-up which included drummer extraordinaire Bruce Gary (a good friend of Taylor). Bruce Gary passed away in Los Angeles in Aug '06, at the age of 55.

In the mid 1970s there was an extremely unhealthy climate in the music business, which lasted well into the '80s. This may have been part of the reason that Taylor disassociated himself somewhat from the scene after starting work on his first album. He developed his own musical ideas, wrote the songs and recruited the musicians. He then got on with recording and producing the tracks at the studio. Apart from singing and playing rhythm plus lead guitar, he had mastered bass guitar and keyboards, as is in evidence on the album.

Taylor worked with American guitarist Lowell George and his band Little Feat , appearing as a special guest at the Rainbow Theatre in London, and on the Waiting for Columbus album (see discography). He collaborated with French drummer Pierre Moerlen and his band Gong (Expresso II album), ''Miller Anderson'', Alan Merrill and others. He was present at many of the recording sessions for John Phillips ' first solo album. John Phillips, a former member of The Mamas & The Papas , had moved to London in 1973 to work on developing soundtracks and start a solo career. The recordings for John Phillips 's first solo album took place in London over a prolonged period during the second half of the 1970s. This led to Richards, Jagger and Taylor working together on some of the tracks. (After Atlantic Records pulled the plug on the project, the sessions did not result in an official release, but illegal copies of the "Half Stoned" or "Phillips '77" record circulated amongst bootleg traders). Decades later the original tapes were rescued and restored, and an official release came about in 2002 under the title "''Pay Pack and Follow''").
In 1975 and 1976 Taylor also contributed to the soundtrack of the Nicolas Roeg film " The Man Who Fell To Earth ", starring David Bowie .

In 1979, four years after he had left the Stones, Taylor's first solo album, the self-titled '' Mick Taylor '', was released on CBS. The album met with critical acclaim but could not have come out at a worse time. Taylor's new material was rock, jazz, and Latin flavoured blues while the year 1979 was the height of the punk and new wave movement. Still, it was his only charting album on both US or Europe, reaching #119 on Billboard in early August with a stay of 5 weeks on the Top 200. The record label told Taylor he should promote the record by visiting American radio stations. Taylor, on the other hand, wanted to take a new band on the road, which he saw as the best way to introduce new audiences to his own songs, but this plan wasn't backed by the record company. Already frustrated with this situation, Taylor took some time out and deliberately kept a low profile for about a year. He had moved to the US East Coast to promote his solo record and was now living in the house where part of The Great Gatsby was filmed (Long Island).

In 1981 he toured Europe and America with Alvin Lee (from Ten Years After ), sharing the bill with Black Sabbath . He spent most of 1982-1983 on the road with his old mentor John Mayall for the so-called Reunion Tour with John McVie ( Fleetwood Mac ) and Colin Allen . It was during this tour that Bob Dylan showed up backstage at The Roxy in Los Angeles because he wanted to meet Taylor.

Perhaps Taylor's second most known work came in 1983 with Bob Dylan 's Infidels album, on which Taylor played with Mark Knopfler as well as Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare . Taylor lived in New York throughout the decade, which turned out to be a dark period. He battled with addiction problems for part of the decade before getting back on track the second half of the 1980s and moving to Los Angeles in 1990.

At the end of the 1980s and early '90s, Taylor managed to find his way back by doing session work and touring in Europe and America with a band including Max Middleton (formerly of Jeff Beck group), Shayne Fontayne, and Blondie Chaplin (now a back-up musician with the Stones). Taylor moved back to England in the mid 1990s. He never seemed to feel comfortable in his role as a former Rolling Stone until he released a new record in the year 2000, the CD "A Stone's Throw". Playing at clubs and theatres (impossible for the Stones) as well as appearing at festivals has connected Taylor with an appreciative audience and lasting fanbase.

In 2003, Taylor reunited with John Mayall for his 70th Birthday Concert along with Eric Clapton.


DISCOGRAPHY


With John Mayall's Bluesbreakers



With The Rolling Stones


  • '' Let It Bleed '' (1969)

  • :Taylor plays on Country Honk and Live With Me



  • '' Rewind (1971-1984) '' (1984) (compilation of hits 1971-1983)

  • ''''. (1989) (compilation of singles 1963-1971)

  • '''' (1993) (compilation of hits 1971-1989)

  • '' Forty Licks '' (2002) (compilation 1964-2002)

  • '' Rarities 1971-2003 '' (2005)

  • :Taylor plays on "Let It Rock" (live 1971) and the 1974 b-side "Through The Lonely Nights".


Non-Rolling Stones work with Rolling Stones members:
  • ''Pay, Pack & Follow'' John Phillips (first official release by Eagle Rock Records, 2001)

  • :from 1973-1979 recording sessions in London aka "Half Stoned" sessions

:produced by Mick Jagger and Keith Richards


With Jack Bruce

  • ''Live at the Manchester Free Trade Hall'' (2 CD, Polydor, 2003)



Notable work with Bob Dylan

  • '' Infidels '' (1983)

  • ''Real Live (In Europe, 1984)'' (1984)

  • '' Empire Burlesque '' (1985)

  • ''The Bootleg Series Vol 1-3 - Rare & Unreleased 1961 -1991'' (1991)



Solo discography

  • '' Mick Taylor '' (1979) US #119 wks on top 200

  • ''Stranger in This Town'' (1990)

  • ''Too Hot for Snakes'' (1991) (Carla Olson & Mick Taylor)

  • '' Arthur's Club-Geneve 1995 '' (Mick Taylor & Snowy White ) (Promo CD/TV Especial)

  • ''A Stone's Throw'' (2000)

  • ''Coastin' Home'' aka ''Live at the 14 Below'' (1995) re-issued 2002



With Carla Olson

  • ''Too Hot For Snakes'' aka '' Live At The Roxy '' (1991 live album)

  • ''Within An Ace'' (1993)

  • '' Reap The Whirlwind ''

  • '' Special '' - The best of Carla Olson (1995, Virgin Records)

  • ''The Ring of Truth'' (2001)



Other session work

  • ''Tubular Bells Premiere'' (Mike Oldfield) June '73 Queen Elizabeth Hall

  • '' Tubular Bells '' (Mike Oldfield) Telecast Tubular Bells Part One and Tubular Bells Part Two. Recorded at BBC Broadcasting House Nov '73 and aired in early '74 and June '74

  • Note: recently repeated on BBC and included in Mike Oldfield DVD

  • ''The Tin Man Was A Dreamer'' (Nicky Hopkins) (1973)

  • ''Billy Preston - Live European Tour'' (Billy Preston) (A& M, 1974). Recorded with Stones Mobile Studio during the '73 tour. Preston opened up for the band with Mick Taylor on guitar.

  • released on CD (A& M - Japan, 2002)

  • ''Reggae II'' (Herbie Mann) (Atlantic, 1976)

  • '' Waiting For Columbus '' (Little Feat) (1978) double CD released 2002

  • '' Expresso II '' ( Gong ) (1978)

  • '' Alan Merrill '' ( Alan Merrill )'s solo album (Polydor, 1985) recorded in London in 1977

  • '' Once In A Blue Moon '' (Gerry Groom) (1993)

  • '' Cartwheels '' (Anthony Thistlethwaite) (1993)

  • ''Crawfish and Caviar'' (Anthony Thistlethwaite)

  • ''Mick & I'' (2001) Miyuki & Mick Taylor

  • ''From Clarksdale to Heaven'' (BlueStorm, 2002) John Lee Hooker Tribute Album.

  • ''Key To Love'' (Debbie Davies) (Shanachie Records 2003)


  • '' Shadow Man '' (re-release of a Sasha album from '96) (2003)

  • Originally released by Alpha Music in 1996, this "Mick Taylor featuring Sasha" album should have read "Sasha featuring Mick Taylor", but the company felt it would sell better under a household name. It features Mick Taylor on guitar, but is basically a Sasha Gracanin album.



Music DVDs

  • '' Blues Alive '' video (RCA/Columbia Pictures 1983), recorded at Capitol Theatre, NJ 1982

  • ''Jamming with the Blues Greats'' - DVD release from the 1983 video, featuring John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Buddy Guy, Etta James, Albert King, Mick Taylor, John McVie, Sippie Wallace and Junior Wells (Lightyear/Image Entertainment 2005)

  • ''The Stones in the Park'' Hyde Park concert video (Granada Television, 1969)

  • :released on DVD (VCI, 2001)

  • '' Gimme Shelter '' (Maysles Films, 1970) music documentary film by Albert and David Maysles, shot at the Rolling Stones concerts at Madison Square Garden, NY on 27th/28th November and Altamont , CA on 6th Dec December 1969.

  • :restored and released on DVD (Criterion, 2000)


  • ''John Mayall, the Godfather of British Blues'' documentary about John Mayall's life and career (Eagle Rock, 2004. Region 1: 2005)

  • '' 70th Birthday Concert '' (Eagle Rock, 2004. Region 1: 2005). Bluesbreakers Charity Concert (Unite for Unicef) filmed in Liverpool, July 2003. John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers with special guests Chris Barber, Eric Clapton and Mick Taylor.




Music DVDs - Unofficial


FILMOGRAPHY


  • ''The Last of the Finest'' (1990) directed by John Mackenzie. Assisted composer Jack Nitzsche with the moviescore

  • ''Bad City Blues'' (1999) directed by Michael Stevens. After the book by Tim Willocks .

  • Music composers: Mick Taylor and Max Middleton



AWARDS

  • Inducted into the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame (with the Rolling Stones, 1989) Hall of Fame

  • Taylor's handprints are on Hollywood's RockWalk since 6th September, 1998. RockWalk



GUITAR HISTORY

Throughout his career, Taylor has used various Gibson guitars (mostly Sunburst Les Pauls, Gibson SG's, a 335 in the studios, a Firebird and Dove pr Hummingbird acoustic) and Fender Stratocasters and a Telecaster. His first Les Paul was bought when he was still playing with The Gods (from Selmer's, London in '65). He acquired his second LP in 1967, not long after joining The Bluesbreakers (Taylor came to Olympic Studios to buy a LP that Keith Richards wanted to sell). This LP Standard '59 with Bigsby arm was stolen from Nellcôte in the South of France in summer '71 during the recording of Exile on Main Street. On the '72/'73 tours Taylor used a couple of Sunburst LP guitars without a Bigsby.


REFERENCES



External links



Wiki links