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Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Date: January 17, 2019 13:05

Happy Birthday! smileys with beer

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: mtaylor ()
Date: January 17, 2019 13:28

Happy 70 years b-day to Mick Taylor.

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: S.T.P ()
Date: January 17, 2019 16:22

Happy birthday Mick Taylor!

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: hot stuff ()
Date: January 17, 2019 17:48

A big Happy Birthday MICK!!

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: moonlightaffair ()
Date: January 17, 2019 17:50

Happy Happy Birthday Mick Taylor! smileys with beerdrinking smiley

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: Redhotcarpet ()
Date: January 17, 2019 17:54

Happy birthday prince of the Golden era!

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 18:00

Happy Birthday Mick Taylor

[www.youtube.com]

Mick Taylor - Sway Solo II - Autumn 1991


Mick Taylor's structured blistering note solo on Sticky Fingers to his live version with Carla Olsen where MT unleashes melodic mastery never loses control of his melodic ideas and never exhausts the extended solo. His guitar pharsing is
beyond imagination on the solo.

Mick Taylor hope you do listen to your guitar catalog of music you have given us in your career and thank you for the melodic wonderment .

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: His Majesty ()
Date: January 17, 2019 18:18

Happy birthday.

Sorry you never found a backing band you deemed good enough.

smileys with beer

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: powerage78 ()
Date: January 17, 2019 19:17

thumbs up

Happy birthday Mick Taylor

Quote
Redhotcarpet
Happy birthday prince of the Golden era!

***
I'm just a Bad Boy Boogie

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 19:42

[www.youtube.com]

Pussycat · Keith Richards · John Phillips

Pay Pack & Follow


Keith starts playing You Gotta Move during outro of song at 5.32 mark never noticed that

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 19:44

[www.youtube.com]

Oh Virginia - John Phillips - Pay Pack & Follow - Mick Taylor solo Keith and Jagger Backup Vocals

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 19:53

[www.youtube.com]

Zulu Warrior -- John Phillips - PayBack And Follow - Solo By Taylor

Pay Pack & Follow is an album by John Phillips, released in April 2001 following his death in March of the same year. It was recorded in the 1970's for release on The Rolling Stones' record label "Rolling Stones Records" but remained unissued until 2001. Mick Jagger appears on backing vocals and co-production, Keith Richards on guitar and co-production, former Stone Mick Taylor also on guitar and current Stone Ron Wood on bass guitar.

John Phillips: lead vocals, keyboards
Keith Richards: electric, acoustic and electric slide guitars, backing vocals
Mick Taylor: electric and acoustic guitars
Ron Wood: bass guitar
Chris Spedding: electric guitar
Jean Rousell: keyboards
Sid McGinnis: acoustic guitar
Jeb Guthrie: tambourine
Paul Shaffer: keyboards
Yogi Horton: drums
David Wooford: bass guitar
John Kito: keyboards, piano
Debra Dobkin: percussion
Rebop Kwaku Baah: percussion
Mick Jagger: backing vocals
Michelle Phillips: backing vocals
Laura MacKenzie Phillips: backing vocals
James Biondillo: string arrangement

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: runrudolph ()
Date: January 17, 2019 20:02

Yeah, thats a Great song.
thanks

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 20:14

[www.youtube.com]


She's Just 14 - Payback and Follow - Keith on Slide Guitar Nice

[www.youtube.com] - 2001 - Keith All Over the song

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 17, 2019 21:21

[www.youtube.com]



The Rolling Stones - Montreux Rehearsals 1972 - Jam Session # 2 aka John's Jam


Love Taylor's noodling at start as Keith waits to get into the jam . Nice chords Taylor was playing.

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: keithsman ()
Date: January 17, 2019 21:26

HAPPY 70TH BIRTHDAY MICK TAYLOR smileys with beer

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: Hairball ()
Date: January 17, 2019 21:44

Happy Birthday MICK TAYLOR and THANK YOU for making the 50 and Counting tour so GREAT!!!

_____________________________________________________________
Rip this joint, gonna save your soul, round and round and round we go......

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: chriseganstar ()
Date: January 18, 2019 02:50

Indeed, hope you and Marliese had a great day together.

Satisfied since 1976

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: hopkins ()
Date: January 18, 2019 03:38

Happiest Birthday Mick!
Thank you for a handful of the very Best and most crucial
rock and roll recordings ever made, or ever to be made.
Your contributions are inestimable and deeply inspirational
from your very first session not yet the Rolling Stone you will
Always be in History, and in practical application every day.
you just might have saved the band, at least the prime-level
epoch they were riding after YSMR,
Taylorized into your own distinctiveness...and saved many a 'day,'
and dark night, for a rock and roll fan kid...
one of the Rolling Stones concerts you aced remains the very Best,
hottest, most casually genius-level stuff I've every, to this day
almost half an active Century later, the very most propulsive,
brilliant and SATISFYING evenings in my entire Life.
there's no one else with your particular feel and dynamic
and your woven all through some of the best and most personally
important music to me I've ever heard. and i KEEP listening,
old and new. a beautiful kid grown to a wonderfully accomplished
ole soldier; we especially LOVE you right here
keep on rolling old Stone



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2019-01-18 03:42 by hopkins.

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: S.T.P ()
Date: January 18, 2019 22:34

What happened to micktaylor.net?

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Posted by: OpenG ()
Date: January 18, 2019 23:07

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now... new
Posted by: S.T.P ()
Date: January 18, 2019 22:34

What happened to micktaylor.net?


Replaced By Social Media - Facebook which seems to control the internet these days the good and the very bad for society.

ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: exilestones ()
Date: January 20, 2019 16:39

[www.loudersound.com]

Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
By Rob Hughes



The Rolling Stones’ secret weapon throughout their golden period, in 2010 Mick Taylor looked back on his time with the band...

One of the more endearing moments of 2010's Classic Rock Awards came when Exile On Main Street won Reissue Of The Year. Enter Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood to accept. Never mind that Wood never actually riffed on the band's original 1972 masterwork. "I've played these songs for the last 30 years and it's about time that I collected something," he said. "So thanks a lot!"

Mick Taylor, the man who actually did play on Exile, has always remained an elusive figure: The Man Who Dared Leave The Rolling Stones, an effrontery which prompted Keith Richards, similarly appalled by Bill Wyman’s departure years later, to state that “no one should leave this band except in a pine box”.

Quite why he left in December 1974 has also been subject to conjecture. Taylor has calibrated his answers in subtly different ways down the years. There were rumours of fights, arguments over alleged songwriting credits, marriage problems, road-weariness, drugs (chiefly a burgeoning heroin addiction) and even plain old boredom. Perhaps it was all down to simple chemistry. As proficient a guitarist as Taylor was, he was never an out-and-out rock’n’roller, much less a showman.

Ronnie Wood, who replaced him in March 1975 (though it wouldn’t be made official until the following year), suited the Stones’ lad-jack image much better. But few would contend Wood was in the same league as a guitarist. Drummer Charlie Watts had admitted that “the Mick Taylor period was a creative peak for us. A tremendous jump in musical credibility.”

Mick Jagger stopped just short of an enormous self-made hole when telling Rolling Stone about Taylor in 1995: “He was a very fluent, melodic player, which we never had, and we don’t have now… Some people think that’s the best version of the band that existed.” Asked if he agree with those people, Jagger replied: “I obviously can’t say if I think Mick Taylor was the best, because it sort of trashes the period the band is in now.”

It’s in Life, Keith’s recent autobiography, where the double strands of the Taylor effect are most tellingly articulated, if a little sourly. Richards admits he was sometimes in awe of Taylor’s playing - “the melodic touch, a beautiful sustain and a way of reading a song” - but also calls him shy to the point of being “very distant”.

There’s a distinct tang of bitterness when Richards claims his departure “left us in the lurch”, more so when he delights that, post-Stones, Taylor “didn’t do anything”. Which just isn’t true. Taylor teamed up with Jack Bruce, toured and played with Bob Dylan and other notables like Alvin Lee, Little Feat and the Grateful Dead, made solo records and even reunited with mentor John Mayall in the Bluesbreakers.

But you can see Keith’s point. Pine box or not, there’s no getting away from the Stones. I was earmarked to accompany Taylor to the Classic Rock bash at the Roundhouse, the idea being for him and Ronnie to collect the award together. Old chums reunited and all that. But some tricksy dental surgery had apparently left him with a badly swollen face and no voice, forcing him to stay home.

Perhaps fitting, some might venture, for a man often regarded in hindsight as the enigma that even the Stones couldn’t crack. That said, the Mick Taylor who answered the phone to Classic Rock a few days earlier is talkative, if guarded. What does he recall of those heady days in the South of France in 1971, recording Exile On Main St at Nellcôte, Keith’s waterfront pile? It may have been all coke, cognac and Cote d’Azur upstairs, but what about down in the basement, where all the work was done?



“It was a dingy little basement, quite damp,” says Taylor. “It wasn’t a proper recording studio at all. We ran all these cables down into the basement, which was divided up into small rooms. And there was only one room which we could all fit into and where we could play together. There was a place where Charlie played the drums, but it was in a separate section of the room. For vocal overdubs, Mick had to do them in a tiny room along the corridor. It was like a labyrinth, really.”

Did the atmosphere in the basement seep into the sound itself – songs like Shine A Light, Rip This Joint, Rocks Off and Taylor’s only official Stones co-write, Ventilator Blues?

“I think it did. It was a bit rough ’n’ ready. There were none of the refinements of Basing Street or Olympic Studios, but there was a sort of intimacy and closeness about playing together then, even though sometimes it used to drive us insane. I mean, we were there for a long time. It’s a very bluesy, earthy kind of record. The Stones never made another album that way. Ventilator Blues was a song that, to be honest, I didn’t expect to get any credit for. I probably had a lot more input on one or two of the other songs.”

The Stones had initially decamped to France as tax exiles. And while Jagger settled in Paris with new bride Bianca, the others found places in the hills surrounding Nellcôte.

“We’d usually start recording in the evening and go on all night,” Taylor remembers. “I’d emerge into the driveway and be blinded by sunlight. Then I’d drive home with my first wife, Rose, to our little house up in the hills near Grasse, where Bill Wyman had actually bought a house. We had Tolstoy’s old writing desk. Madame Tolstoy would occasionally come down from Paris to check up on us. It really was idyllic, but I spent a great deal of time at Nellcôte. We brought a lot of London with us. There were friends and family coming over all the time. Everybody descended on Keith’s house and treated it like a holiday camp. I’m sure for people who weren’t involved in making the record it was a 24-hour party.”

Taylor’s memory of Nellcôte’s revolving cast of celebrity boarders is a little fuzzy. “There were a lot of people who came to visit that I don’t remember, for whatever reason. I don’t remember John Lennon and Yoko coming, but apparently they did. I do remember Gram Parsons though. He and Keith got on very well. I’d met Gram Parsons in 1969, when he was with the Flying Burritos, but knew him originally from when I’d been playing in Los Angeles with John Mayall in 67 or 68.”

John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers had been Taylor’s first professional calling in 1966, when the 17-year-old replaced the Fleetwood Mac-bound Peter Green. Taylor developed into a formidable guitarist under Mayall’s tutelage.

“It was quite a nerve-wracking experience when I was really young, following in the footsteps of Eric Clapton and Peter Green, but after a month or two I fitted in really well. It was basically all down to John Mayall’s stewardship and everything I learned from him about the blues. Travelling around with him in America made me become a good blues player and I developed my own style. We were playing in lots of iconic places like Winterland [in San Francisco] and the Fillmore East and West. One night at Winterland, Jimi Hendrix was top of the bill, John Mayall and myself and the Bluesbreakers opened the show, and Albert King was in the middle. It was incredible, especially when you consider the fact I was only about 18 years old.”

In June 69, Mick Jagger was casting for a replacement for Brian Jones, and asked Mayall for advice. Mayall recommended Taylor. “Live With Me was the very first track I ever played on,” Taylor recalls, “when they were putting the finishing touches to Let It Bleed. We actually recorded that the night I went for my audition at Olympic Studios, or maybe the night after.

"Then I overdubbed guitar on Honky Tonk Women. But Live With Me was special, because it was the first Stones song I ever played on. I remember [producer] Jimmy Miller jumping up and down in the control room and getting all excited about how good it sounded, having two guitars playing off each other. Because I think they’d missed that with Brian Jones in the two-year hiatus since their last live performance. The Stones actually hadn’t played together for a long time, so when I joined them it was like a new beginning. It was a new phase in their career, a new chapter.

“They were very creative days with the Stones. And then there was the twin-guitar thing, with me and Keith not playing strictly lead or rhythm, but floating around each other. There wasn’t too much talking about who should play what, it was a very instinctive kind of relationship.”

And what of the personal relationship between Richards and Taylor? It’s something he considers slowly, especially when discussing Exile On Main St, his words as deliberate as if he were picking out an untried solo: “Keith wasn’t at his most communicative then [pause]. He wasn’t as outgoing. I’m choosing my words carefully here. But instinctively, yeah, we got on.”

If anything, Taylor’s fondest Stones memories are reserved for Sticky Fingers, the album they made in London (and, for a few days, in Muscle Shoals, Alabama) the previous year. “Unlike Exile On Main St, we didn’t labour over it day and night, month after month. Most of it was done in the studio, though some of it was done at Jagger’s house, Stargroves in Berkshire.” It’s generally acknowledged that Taylor’s creative input came to bear on two Sticky Fingers songs – Sway and Moonlight Mile. Again, he chooses his words prudently.

“I had an influence on them. I mean, would Sway have existed without my contribution? Probably, but not the way it does. And the same goes for Moonlight Mile. I remember Mick writing that one in a train carriage on the way from Paddington to Bath. Touring in those days, even with the Stones, was often like that. We didn’t have private planes or trains.

"I remember it vividly. He started playing the song on acoustic guitar. Sway was done very quickly. Mick actually played rhythm guitar on that; Keith wasn’t even around when we did that. I don’t think Keith is on Moonlight Mile either. I started playing the solo in an open tuning, which is why it sounds off the wall. And Paul Buckmaster did the string arrangement based on the riff I came up with.”

Taylor says he’d followed the Stones’ career with interest before becoming part of the setup. He was still at school in Hatfield when they hit big in the early 60s – he was born five years after youngest Stone Keith – though he’s admitted his sister was much more of a fan. After he joined, she would constantly remind him of the time she put Little Red Rooster on the home turntable, only for Taylor to rebuke her with: “Turn that rubbish off and put Revolver on.”

Today he considers the extra dimension he brought to the band: “It’s interesting because a lot of the songs they did before Beggars Banquet were singles geared more towards pop – things like Ruby Tuesday or Let’s Spend The Night Together. But really, the Stones had always been a blues band. So in one sense, I was on very familiar ground, but in another way it was a real departure for me. Once I’d joined and we’d recorded Let It Bleed and Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out, I was a part of the band. Being an improviser, I noticed there would always be a space for a guitar solo, which had not always been the case on Stones records.”

But there was more required of a Stone than mere musicianship. You needed a strong backbone to survive life on the road with the world’s biggest band. If Taylor’s Hyde Park baptism wasn’t testing enough, five months later came Altamont. The disastrous free concert near San Francisco was marred by violent clashes between Hells Angels and the crowd, ending in the horrific murder of Meredith Hunter, captured on film by the Maysles brothers in Gimme Shelter.
“Altamont all happened so quickly,” recalls Taylor. “It was very surreal, a nightmare actually. The whole idea of doing a show at Altamont Speedway was an afterthought. We’d finished the tour and were at Muscle Shoals in Alabama, recording Wild Horses and Brown Sugar.

"I’ve never been able to discover why we actually did that show. We didn’t have any hands-on input into the organisation of it; it was all done based on trust. It didn’t feel right from the moment I arrived there. Some guy jumped out and threw a punch at Mick Jagger. It was chaos. And the fact that it was policed by the Hells Angels didn’t help. They took the law into their own hands and started throwing people off the stage. It was a relief to get out, but that was terrifying too. People wanted to get away so badly there were too many on the helicopter.”

Then there was the recreational side of being a Stone, including the band’s much-publicised drug use. Did that hamper things somehow? “I don’t know, maybe it even helped in some ways. It’s a strange thing to say, but it was just a part of so many people’s lives who used to hang out with the Stones, even from the early days. It wasn’t something I ever felt was unique to them though. It was part and parcel of the recreational drug-cultural view of life. I’m not saying it wasn’t dangerous, but it didn’t have the sinister, nasty qualities that are associated with it these days.

"We were all a lot younger then and you’d try different things. Some people ended up falling by the wayside, some people would try things once or twice and others simply faded away. But I don’t blame the Rolling Stones for my own personal problems.”

Everyone seems to have a theory as to why Mick Taylor quit the Stones. Late producer Jimmy Miller – the man behind that imperious run of albums that began with Beggars Banquet – once posited that the guitarist was somehow stifled by the band, “as they wanted him to fill that necessary part of the Stones. He added a dimension that Keith wasn’t comfortable with… I think Keith had a different vision than Taylor and wanted to protect his songs.”

When I bring up the subject of his departure, the first note of weariness creeps into Taylor’s voice: “Yeah, I could write a book about that. From the moment I joined John Mayall, right up until 1974, I’d been working all the time. I was completely used to either being in the studio or being on the road. If it wasn’t with the Stones, it was with somebody else. I just needed a break.”

So there you have it, for today at least. Taylor insists his time with the Stones was a great experience, with Exile On Main St particularly fresh in the mind. For 2010’s deluxe reissue, he added a new guitar part to one of the bonus songs, Plundered My Soul.

“Mick had to construct a vocal line,” he explains, “which I played to once it was done. It was very sparse and unfinished, but in the end I think it fits. More importantly for me, it was great fun to see Mick again, to be in the studio, playing guitar with him singing. It felt very comfortable and familiar. In a musical sense, it was almost like I’d never left the Stones.”




Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2019-01-20 19:58 by exilestones.

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: runrudolph ()
Date: January 20, 2019 17:00

thanks Exile.
NICE READ.
jeroen

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: Kurt ()
Date: January 20, 2019 17:09

Time warp today?!
I feel like I read this article eight years ago...

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: TKinOH ()
Date: January 20, 2019 17:39

Then and now... nice article!

Thanks!

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: exilestones ()
Date: January 20, 2019 18:01

Quote
Kurt
Time warp today?!
I feel like I read this article eight years ago...

The article was published four days ago as indicated in the linked page. It does seem like articles written back when Exile on Main Street Deluxe Edition



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2019-01-20 19:52 by exilestones.

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: Kurt ()
Date: January 20, 2019 22:23

Originally appeared in the January 2011 issue of Classic Rock #153...

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: January 21, 2019 00:23

2011.....!!!!!!!!!!



ROCKMAN

Re: ARTICLE: Mick Taylor: The Exiled Stone
Posted by: mtaylor ()
Date: January 21, 2019 08:02

Article from EOMS Delixe

Re: Mick Taylor Talk - what's on your mind right now...
Date: January 21, 2019 11:21

It's time for that article again?

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