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Backstage n In-depth interviews n Musings

Entertainment Weblog

by Jim Drake

 

June 10, 2009

An interview with Eric Taylor

Jim:

 Thanks for being in touch. There are several of Steve's [Steve Young] songs that I wish I'd written. Any case, here we go. You may have to correct some soiling. The guitar thing....I know that I sound somewhat vague, but I don't have permission to use names at this point. I'll just hope you'll understand.

It's a very heartfelt story, but I want to protect the privacy.

 

1. You seem to be a regular here in The Gorge, playing The Dalles every year or so, and I’m sure I’ve seen one of your past shows. Where does this current tour take you around the Northwest?

I've come up to Oregon every year for the last four or five years. I like the countryside and I like the people and the shows. I've made some good friends. I'm hitting Idaho, as well. The Boise area, Pocatello, Blackfoot and Salmon. In Oregon, it's Joseph The Dalles. Sisters and Richmond. It's all on the website. bluerubymusic.com. Any case, I'm looking forward to it.

2. OK, let’s talk about guitars. My friend, Craig Wilson, recently restored a pretty special instrument for you. How did you come across that instrument and how is it working out for you?

 Yes, Craig Wilson at White Salmon Guitar over in Washington did a beautiful job. He did all the research on the rebuild and stayed as close to perfecting this 1943 Gibson Texas Jumbo as a person can get.

The guitar is a story all to itself, and I'm still looking to find out more about it. I can assure you that I feel more like a caretaker for this guitar and its story than a feeling of ownership. Well, here's part of the story...........

A wonderful woman from your area spent a lot of time in Texas and loving the music, years ago. Much of this time was spent with her close friend, a woman that played the circuit of towns and joints and blues halls and icehouses and Sunday blues picnics.....man, it goes on and on.

 This wonderful woman from your area made a promise to her ailing friend that she would, someday, get her guitar back to Texas and have it once again make music in Texas. I can tell you that I was honored to tears to be given this job of caretaker.

There's some thought that the guitar came from a pawnshop in Lubbock, Texas. There's some irony, I suppose, that the first song being written by me with this guitar is a song about Lubbock. I'm sure the story will continue. My plan is have as many Texas writers and singers play it, most probably in the studio.

  

3. You’ve worked with the likes of Steve Earle and Nanci Griffith. Do you guys keep in touch and do you get to see each other as often as you’d like?

 Everybody's on the road so we don't get to see much of each other, but we do talk from time to time. Steve and I talked on the phone as he was thinking about the Townes record. Nanci and I talk from time to time and she sang with Todd Snider and Peter Cooper when they covered a couple of my songs. Small world spinnin' faster and faster, I guess.

  

4. Last month, Texas band The Flatlanders came to Portland, and I was lucky enough to go and enjoy that show. It seems like you may be in the same circles as those guys. Do you get to cross paths with any of them?

 Pretty much the same answer. We might run the same circles, but we all runnin' the different directions.

 

5. What new and upcoming artists do you listen to?

 There's not that many, to be truthful. I love the work of Malcolm Holcolmb and David Jacobs-Strain. They may be up and coming. Kelly Joe Phelps is always somewhere in my head but he's not up and comin', he's up and swingin' and dodgin' and weavin'. Lowell George. Keith Richards. Lightnin' Hopkins.

  

6. Tell us a little about your songwriting process – does the music or lyrics come first?

 I don't seem to have any hard and fast rules of process. I keep piles of notes and I keep pieces of music around in notebooks and tapes. Since most of my work is story and history, it remains a challenge to understand how it comes together. I can say that I wouldn't trust any writer that tells me they know exactly what they're doin'.

  

7. In addition to playing music, what else do you like to spend your time doing?

 When I'm home and off the road, a typical life of crime suits me. When I come to Oregon, I fly-fish.

 

Thanks Eric, and good luck with your shows!