One Man Band

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (549 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

ALBUM INFORMATION
LIVE

Total Tracks: 19   Total Length: 77:44

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Barney Hoskyns

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Sweet Baby James mines his mellow gold in an (almost) unplugged setting.
Label: Hear Music / Concord

"James Taylor Marked for Death," proclaimed Lester Bangs in the title of a splendidly bracing 1971 manifesto in the protean '70s fanzine Who Put the Bomp? Back in the protopunk wars of the early '70s, we were all supposed to revile James Taylor and his kind — JT represented all that was smugly narcissistic about singer-songwriter bards of the time. Forget the fact that James may have been a worse junkie than Johnny Thunders: this music was wallpaper balladry for the new consumers of the post-counterculture.

But we all mellow as we "ripen and rot" — to quote Annie Hall — and what sounded wimpily self-satisfied in 1975 now soothes and even moves. A stripped-down performance from the old Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, One Man Band has local boy Taylor revisiting 19 of his greatest songs. JT's pretty picking — backed by keyboardist Larry Goldings and the Tanglewood Festival Chorus — is perfectly caught by the crystalline recording, which beautifully frames his honey-smooth voice.

From early pastoral gems — "Country Road," "Carolina in My Mind" — to later marvels like "Never Die Young" and "The Frozen Man," One Man Band might just melt the heart of the most hardened… read more »

Write a Review35 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Tremendous! My whole family loves it

whalle

We had to get the retail version as the emusic version had gaps between the songs on this live concert recording, but I would not have known of it, if not for emusic, so thanks! "Traveling Star" is a favorite.

user avatar

An Evening With JT

fhill_cpa

What can you say. The smooth delivery without pretense or pressure draws you into the rest that is the music of James Taylor. You'll find plenty to keep you glued to your player in here. Fire and Rain as well as Copperline. James' inimitable guitar style is thoroughly enjoyable and comes across loud and clear. Lots of old songs, some more arcane than others. All the old favorites. "The old jokes are the best, aren't they?" Even though this is not a greatest hits album, the live performance is one for the books. Post production is pretty good on this also.

user avatar

The Best Story teller

trxseanf

James Taylor is the best story teller from our generation.

user avatar

Intimate versions of classic JT

ketlers

Since this concert is only James and Larry Goldings, who serves as his one man band, this almost-unplugged set up is quite a nice up-close-and-personal approach. The only problem---- He uses a drum machine during Slap Leather, that seems to have the rhythmic precision of a 10-year-old kid taking his first drum lesson! Holy rhythmus stinkus, Batman, it makes this song so stiff and choppy! Otherwise, this album is very very good. Highly recommended even with the choppy drum synth.

user avatar

Memory Lane

DreamboatAnnie

A very pleasing and personal trip down memory lane with a treasured friend.

user avatar

What can I say ...

libertypoint

... anything by James Taylor is great.

user avatar

Nice!

lucyfan1111

Having seen JT several times in concert I think this cd is a must have. I especially like this version of "You Can Close Your Eyes" and "Something In The Way She Moves".

user avatar

selective downloads

beberebozo

I'm not a huge fan but I downloaded about 11 songs from this album and for the moment they are the extent of my JT collection. The quality is great, as is the performnace and the supporting musical cast. I'm enjoying the tunes.

user avatar

eMusic is shit

EMUSIC-00BFD30F

Wonder if this will get a response, since I can't contact customer service?

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

Don’t take the title of James Taylor’s One Man Band literally — this 2007 concert recording may be stripped-down but it’s not just James and a guitar, he’s supported by keyboardist Larry Goldings, whom Taylor dubs his “one-man band” in the liner notes, as that’s all the backing band he has here. Fair enough. But this isn’t just a question of clever semantics: as it turns out, Goldings has quite a presence on this intimate album, recorded at a three-night stint at the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield, MA, during July 2007. During this 19-song set, Taylor gives Goldings plenty of space to grace the songs with solos that show up his jazz chops. This freedom, coupled with Taylor’s deceptively easy delivery — he has a casual authority that comes from touring the same songs steadily for years — gives this album a unique character among Taylor’s catalog. This also makes for an album that relies heavily on standards. All the songs you’d expect are here, all the songs James always plays on tour, but there are also a couple of surprises, like “Chili Dog” from 1972′s One Man Dog, which are quite engaging. Perhaps these tunes are a shade too familiar to sound fresh, but given such lovely readings they certainly sound as comforting as a reunion with an old friend for those listeners who haven’t been keeping up with Taylor but might pick this up via its release on Starbucks’ HearMusic label. So, this can rope in casual fans who will be quite pleased, but this is different enough from 1993′s double-disc Live — as polished and professional as live albums come — to make this quite interesting for diehards, too. [One Man Band also contains a two-hour concert DVD.] – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »