Beautiful Road

Beautiful Road is singer Kate Taylor's fourth album, released in 2003.

Beautiful Road
Studio album by
Released2003
GenreFolk
Length45:40
LabelCBS
ProducerCharlie Witham, Tony Garnier
Kate Taylor chronology
It's in There
(1979)
Beautiful Road
(2003)
Kate Taylor Live at The Cutting Room
(2005)

After Taylor's previous album, 1979's It's in There failed to reach its public, Taylor took a break from the music industry for the next two decades, during which time she appeared sporadically as a performer and back-up singer for various other artists, not releasing another album until Beautiful Road in 2003.

The album contained new material, and not the primarily covers of her previous work. Most of the songs were written by Taylor's husband and manager, Charlie Witham. Unfortunately, Witham fell ill while the album was being recorded and would die shortly before it was released in April 2003.

The album closes with a version "Auld Lang Syne", arranged by Taylor's brother James. Taylor covered the song himself the following year as the last song on James Taylor: A Christmas Album (2004).

Track listing

All tracks composed by Charlie Witham; except where indicated

  1. "I Will Fly" – 5:28
  2. "Beautiful Road" (Erica Wheeler) – 3:53
  3. "Blue Tin Suitcase" – 4:23
  4. "The Golden Key" – 6:19
  5. "Rain on the Water" – 4:58
  6. "Flying in the Face of Mr. Blue" (Randall Bramblett, Davis Causey, Bucky Jones) – 5:26
  7. "Shanty Song" – 4:05
  8. "He's Waiting" (Kate Taylor) – 2:42
  9. "Shores of Paradise" – 5:18
  10. "Auld Lang Syne" (Robert Burns; Traditional) – 3:08

Personnel

  • Kate Taylor – Vocals
  • Kevin Barry – Acoustic guitar
  • Richard Bell – Piano
  • Peter Calo – Acoustic guitar
  • Larry Campbell – Electric guitar
  • Clifford Carter – Synthesizer
  • Shannon Ford – Percussion, drums
  • Tony Garnier – Bass, tambourine
  • Vance Gilbert – Acoustic guitar
  • Tom Hambridge – Drums, tambourine
  • Levon Helm – Mandolin
  • Mindy Jostyn – Guitar, violin
  • Stuart Kimball – Acoustic guitar
  • Chuck Leavell – Organ, piano
  • Dennis McDermott – Drums
  • Arlen Roth – Acoustic guitar, electric guitar, Fender telecaster
  • Mavis Staples – Vocals
  • James Taylor – Vocals
gollark: I mean, they're not very granular, and probably weird and arbitrary to some extent.
gollark: Why divide by states, though, and why with the exact representative counts which got picked?
gollark: It's the simplest one but also moronically bad.
gollark: Ranked ones are subject to Arrow's theorem which is bad.
gollark: So is score voting.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.