Jane Taylor (musician)

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Jane Taylor
Born (1972-07-19) 19 July 1972
Nocton Hall, Lincolnshire
Genres Folk, Vocal
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter
Instruments Guitar, piano
Years active 1977–present
Associated acts Robin Davies (Double Bass), Lizz Lipscombe (Violin), Robert Bray (Percussion & Uke), Kate Robey (Chello)

Jane Taylor (born 19 July 1972) is an English Bristol-based guitarist, pianist, songwriter and vocalist. She won the UK and International Songwriting Competition in 2003 with her song Blowing This Candle Out. Her second album Compass was awarded the Best Album title in the Folk / Singer-Songwriter category at the 2010 Independent Music Awards.

Career synopsis

Summary

Jane Taylor's debut album hit BBC national radio when Johnnie Walker decided to play the opening track from an album entitled Montpelier that he found on his desk, because he liked the cover (a charcoal sketch of her street which Jane had doodled herself). The response from the listeners was enormous, highly unusual for an 'unknown' and Johnnie Walker played the track over 15 times, despite it not actually being on the play list and invited Jane into the studio to perform a live session on the show.[1]

Her first album Montpelier had been made on a shoe-string, in a barn, with all manufacturing costs financed by pre selling the album to her dedicated fan base (which she had home grown from the city of Bristol). Taylor, producer Bill Lovelady and her band recorded the album in nine days in a freezing October. Once it was made she just posted it to BBC Radio 2 and crossed her fingers.

Because of the response to the airplay she was invited into the BBC to perform a live session on the show. From there she went on to support Jools Holland, Bill Wyman, Seth Lakeman, Paul Buchanan, Andy Fairweather Low and Paulo Nutini. She secured a distribution deal, had "Fall on Me" played on MTV, and toured the UK and Germany, spreading the word and connecting her music to even more people.

Two years later, Taylor released her second album, Compass which was financially backed by two fans of her music whom Taylor now refers to as 'The Angels'. Taylor had never met her benefactors before, but they are now friends indeed. She made the album with Mercury nominated producer Colin Elliot (famous for his work on the Richard Hawley albums) in Sheffield's Yellow Arch Studios.

The album featured the Grimethorpe Colliery Brass Band (who performed in the film Brassed Off), a gospel choir made up of some of the finest songwriters and musicians in Bristol and Bath, a rhythm track featuring everything from a rustling bin to the cellists impression of the sound of a dolphin, and classical string arrangements from her resident band Robin Davies, Bethany Porter and Feargus Heatherington.

Tracks from Compass received BBC Radio 2 airplay. The album recently won an award for Best Album in the Folk / Singer-Songwriter category in the 2010 Independent Music Awards.[2]

After taking some time out to give birth to her son, she booked a concert at St George's Hall, Bristol, which was sold out. Taylor invited musicians to join her on stage including Lizz Lipscombe on violin, Robert Bray on percussion and uke, Robin Davies on double bass and Kate Robey on cello. Other guests included marimba player Alphonse Daudet Touna, singer-songwriter Roger Tarry, The JT Brass Players (Andy Davies, Matt Davies and Chris Sanders) and the Barefoot Collective & Original Sing choirs. The concert was a success and was voted one of the top three gigs in the South West for 2010 by Bristol's Venue Magazine.[3][4] A recording of the concert was released as Live Album in November 2011. In December 2011, Taylor released her new single "Oh December".

Taylor continues to create music with her band and tour under her own independent label Bicycle Records. She is supported by her fan base, who in 2010 raised over £9000 to help her promote her work and fund her tours.

Quotes

"Without the people who buy my music and support the gigs and concerts I would never have got this far. Being an independent artist, making the kind of music I do, and competing with the more commercial and larger labels can be fiercely overwhelming at times! But then I'll get an incredible email from someone who's connected with the music or have the most wonderful feedback after a gig and I couldn't ever think about doing anything else!!" Jane Taylor

"Classic, timeless songwriting. A quintessentially English Gem." Time Out

"Beautiful." Johnnie Walker, BBC Radio 2

"A very talented artist." Bob Harris, BBC Radio 2[5]

Biography

Growing up

Taylor was born in Lincolnshire in 1972, in an RAF hospital at Nocton Hall. As well as being in the RAF, her father was an artist, songwriter and guitarist. His musical talent and love of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and Simon and Garfunkel influenced the young Jane, as did her mother's love of classical music.

She picked up her father's guitar at the age of five and composed her first song. Brought up in a village near Newark, Nottinghamshire, she attended Brownies and Sunday School at the local Church Hall. She continued to play the guitar and piano and composed throughout her childhood, winning school competitions and gaining a reputation for playing her music to the school. At the age of 19, Jane went to Keele University, Staffordshire, where her music took on a political flavour. In particular, a song entitled "Tiananmen Square" became a much loved anthem for many of the students visiting the folk club there in the 1990s.

Early career

Following university, she landed a job in the music industry working for one of the few independents at the time, The Grapevine Label Ltd. Grapevine had signed Emmylou Harris, Christy Moore, and Joan Baez. There she learned how to make and manufacture a record, and most importantly how to promote and sell a record..

Professional musician

In 2003, Taylor decided to give up her normal job and become a full-time singer-songwriter. A month later, she recorded her first single with Massive Attack guitarist Angelo Bruschini. The track was called "Blowing This Candle Out" and went on to win Best Song in the 'International Songwriter of the Year' competition, and landed Taylor her first major gig at Ronnie Scotts.[6] She also went on to tour in Germany and Italy, gathering more fans along the way.

Sony TV requested permission to play the track "Getting To Me" (which was just a demo at the time) on the TV series Dawson's Creek. Taylor set up her own record label, Bicycle Records.

Montpelier (2006)

Together with Bill Lovelady, Taylor and her band created her first album Montpelier. When Johnnie Walker played the song "Fall on Me" on his BBC Radio 2 show in 2006, he was inundated with emails wanting to know who this new singer-songwriter was, where they could find out about her, and most importantly would he "Please play more".[7] Walker invited Taylor to play a live session on his show. Taylor has since appeared on the Radio 4 show Loose Ends, secured an international distribution deal with Pinnacle, had a track from the album included on The Word magazine, and landed support slots opening for Jools Holland, Bill Wyman, Paolo Nutini, Seth Lakeman, Midge Ure, Andy Fairweather-Low and Paul Buchanan of The Blue Nile.

Compass (2008)

Compass was released in 2008, with a number of special album preview shows in Scotland. The first official launch was in Bristol's converted church, Circomedia. Shortly afterwards Taylor discovered she was pregnant, so plans for a re-release of the album were made for 2010. Meanwhile, songs from the album have been played on the Bob Harris show on BBC Radio 2.

Get Rhythm said: "Jane Taylor is no ordinary singer songwriter. She has this intangible magic in her voice. The kind that draws you in and holds you right there until the moment you notice that you've forgotten to breathe and then you hear her words (which bizarrely seem to have been written for you), and stand there transfixed like it's a bit of fate that brought you here and I will defy anyone not to leave without a CD or at least humming one of her songs."

In January 2011, Compass won Best Album in the Singer-Songwriter Category at the 10th Annual Independent Music Awards.[8]

Radio airplay

Jane Taylor live

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

Discography

Barefoot EP (Bicycle Records Ltd, 2005, JT001)

Track listing

  1. Fall on Me
  2. Blowing This Candle Out
  3. I'm Fine
  4. 16 Points
  5. Chef

Montpelier (Bicycle Records Ltd, 2006, JT002)

Track listing

  1. Fall on Me
  2. My Street
  3. Hit The Ground
  4. 16 Points
  5. Chef
  6. Mirror Mirror
  7. Blowing This Candle Out
  8. Landslide
  9. Feels Good
  10. Brother
  11. Getting To Me

New Stuff We're Still Messing With EP (2007)

Track listing

  1. All Things Change
  2. Old Friends
  3. Cracks
  4. Home
  5. Hallelujah

Compass (Bicycle Records Ltd, 2009, JT003)

Track listing

  1. Cracks
  2. Hallelujah
  3. Old Friends
  4. All Things Change
  5. Compass
  6. Home
  7. I'm Fine
  8. Lay Down Your Sword
  9. Where Is Your Grace
  10. I Will Get There

The Live Album (Bicycle Receords Ltd, 2011)

Track listing

  1. Home (with brass)
  2. Chef
  3. Compass
  4. The Spanish Song (with Roger Tarry)
  5. Cracks (with the choir)
  6. Lay Your Sword on the Ground
  7. The Rooster (with Alphonse)
  8. Hallelujah
  9. I'm Fine
  10. Where is your grace
  11. I Will Get There (with everyone)
  12. Fall on Me (encore)
  13. Crazy for the Boy (encore)

The Winter Single: Oh December (Bicycle Records Ltd, 2011)

Track listing

  1. "Oh December"
  2. "Violet"
  3. "Crazy For the Boy" (live)

References

  1. "Biography". Jane Taylor. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  2. "10th Annual Independent Music Awards Winners Announced!". The Independent Music Awards. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  3. "Best of the bunch". Venue.co.uk. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  4. "Top '10 hits". Venue.co.uk. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  5. "Biography". Jane Taylor. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  6. "de beste bron van informatie over theprom. Deze website is te koop!". theprom.co.uk. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  7. "Jane Taylor – Free listening, videos, concerts, stats and pictures at". Last.fm. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  8. "Jane Taylor". Independentmusicawards.com. 20 April 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
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