Thursday, June 3, 2010

Member Review: James Taylor and Carole King



BPD member Boy@Heart shares:

It took them 40 years to tour together but the wait proved to be worth it.

James Taylor and Carole King, who first performed at the Troubadour in 1970 during King's breakout solo performance before her 1971 landmark album, Tapestry, reunited for six acclaimed shows in 2007 to celebrate the legendary L.A. club's 50-year history.

The duo since regrouped this year for the so-called Troubadour Reunion trek - "an intimate and an in the round" affair.

Taking the circular, slowly rotating stage in the middle of the arena floor alone, the 62-year-old Taylor and the 68-year-old King held hands and took a bow before being joined by their original 1970 bandmates - bassist Lee Sklar (celebrating a birthday Friday night), guitarist-producer Danny "Kootch" Kortchmar, who introduced Taylor and King "In 1903" as Taylor joked, and drummer Russ Kunkel.

"The thing that makes this reunion tour the real deal for me is we've got the original band, the original guys," Taylor told me before going on. Rounding out the lineup was keyboard player Robbie Kondor and backup singers Arnold McCuller, Kate Markowitz and Andrea Zonn (also on violin). I asked him how they settled on the setlist. "When Carole and I first sat down to make a set list, it would have been a seven-hour show. There were so many songs that we had to pull out of the original set list, it was heartbreaking, like sending the kids off to camp."

Taylor, on acoustic guitar, was clearly in better voice of the two singers, with his trademark warmth evident on the concert opener Blossom, compared to the weaker-sounding King on piano, on the follow-up So Far Away.

After the show, King confessed to me "As you can probably tell, I wasn't at full voice tonight,"

She eventually gathered strength on Way Over Yonder and Smackwater Jack, the latter for which she joined Taylor on acoustic guitar, happily jamming side by side with him.

But it wasn't until (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman that King really hit her stride, playfully vocalizing with Kortchmar on his electric guitar before a 20-minute intermission.

She powerfully kicked off the second set with Where You Lead (I Will Follow), and singing - and snuggling - with Taylor on Cryin In The Rain, Will You Love Me Tomorrow, You've Got A Friend, Up On The Roof and You Can Close Your Eyes, the latter two during the encores.

The duo was nothing if not approachable and they seemed to be genuinely having fun and affectionate together as Taylor often rubbed the back of King's head or kissed her forehead

Shared history aside, it helped that they have been on tour together since March in Australia, New Zealand and Japan, before hitting North America in May.

Taylor's song highlights were numerous - Carolina In My Mind, Country Road, Mexico, Shower The People (which saw King join the backup singers including McCuller who delivered a staggering solo), Your Smiling Face, Sweet Baby James, Fire and Rain and How Sweet It Is To Be Loved By You (the latter two the biggest crowd pleasers).

Taylor and Kortchmar also showed off their blues guitar chops on Steamroller Blues with Taylor hamming it up by using his guitar as a cane at one point and over-emoting at the end, hiding his face behind his hat in mock shame.

For her part, King consistently radiated health, happiness and a soulful, earthy spirit with a big, broad smile all night long and even kicked up her heels for I Feel The Earth Move towards the end of the second set.

All in all, a feel-good show if there ever was one.

SET LIST:

Blossom

So Far Away

Machine Gun Kelly

Carolina In My Mind

Way Over Yonder

Smackwater Jack

Country Road

Sweet Seasons

Mexico

Song of Long Ago/Long Ago and Far Away

Beautiful

Shower the People

(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman

INTERMISSION

Where You Lead (I Will Follow)

Crying in The Rain

Your Smiling Face

Sweet Baby James

Jazzman

Will You Love Me Tomorrow

Steamroller Blues

It's Too Late

Fire and Rain

I Feel the Earth Move

You've Got a Friend

ENCORE:

Up on the Roof

How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)

SECOND ENCORE

You Can Close Your Eyes
Way to go, Boy@Heart. Aren't you the oldies freak?

Nothin' quite like being backstage. Find out for yourself. Join BPD today.