Back To Artist
James Michael Taylor : NameDropper
Log in to add to your wishlist
James Michael taylor's answer to the Moon River Anthology.
Genre: Folk: Modern Folk
Release Date: 2007
NameDropper
James Michael Taylor
Record Label: txh2o records & stuff
  • Buy CD-R - $12.97
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
SPECIAL: 20% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!

Share This Album

| Share
Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Child of My Restless Dreams 2:15 + MP3 $0.99
2. Asa 3:10 + MP3 $0.99
3. Cedrich Allrunner/drunken Indian 3:25 + MP3 $0.99
4. Cry, Cry, Cristi 2:48 + MP3 $0.99
5. The Dena Wind 3:07 + MP3 $0.99
6. Last Night I Said Good-bye to Rose 3:27 + MP3 $0.99
7. Forever Young, Forever Foolish 2:56 + MP3 $0.99
8. Jonah Lives Under the Bridge 2:26 + MP3 $0.99
9. I Live With Rebecca 3:29 + MP3 $0.99
10. Oh, Scarlett 2:34 + MP3 $0.99
11. A Cloudy Day for Sonny 2:38 + MP3 $0.99
12. The Ballad of Theda Nell 3:06 + MP3 $0.99
preview all songs

Album Notes

One sunny afternoon in the fall of 2005 my oldest daughter, Wyn elan and her two boys and I were relaxing in the shade of a big pecan tree at a festival called Raz on the Braz, Terry Razor's annual birthday bash. I don't know what brought it up but Wyn suggested I put together a CD of name songs. So, back home, I went thru my songbook and assembled about 25 name songs. I burned a few CD copies and passed them out to people whose opinions I valued.. I got an email from Jeff Prince that went like this...
.
"i like the name songs that are about specific people, and each song ought to be entitled by the name of the protagonist. that would make an interesting theme. some of the songs on this cd don't fit that theme. for instance, "cowtown" is nice but the song is about a city, not a person, and doesn't fit the more limited theme i envision. nor do "gramma's shampoo" (gramma is a title, not a name), "cactus flower," "california xmas memories," "feathers in the wind," etc. but that's just my opinion....jeff

Jeff is pretty smart. Besides, he's the only one so far that has taken the time to give me some feedback so this is what it has all come to. Most of these songs were written many years ago and most of them have not been included on a previous CD. All are real people and only, Jonah, who's name I do not know, is not the name of the person I wrote it about. jmt

Read more...

REVIEWS

H&R Block Newsletter
author: Randy Brown
                            
Namedropper – James Michael Taylor This is perhaps JMTs most accessible CD. The delivery is straight forward and not bound up with layers of production as many of his past CDs have been. On Namedropper you can hear JMT with all the honesty, pain and glory of his relationships with folks, most of whom I assume (possibly wrongly) are real. Fictional or not, the depth of the characters and the view of the narrator will often make you cringe and squirm in your seat. JMT lives in a land of honesty, one that few of us can imagine or even tolerate. JMT is always a poet first, awkward phases be damned. His images are rich with subjective detail; some much like minimalist pencil sketches. The world of Namedropper is troubled and desolate. Populated by addicts, idiots, the homeless, barflies, drunks, the lonely and unwanted we are sucked into these hastily drawn pencil sketch stories. Their pain becomes ours and we live with them and mourn their mistakes. They are all as is stated in "Child of My Restless Dreams", "another soul thrown up on shore", flopping and gasping for air while slowly drowning in life and bad choices. My favorites on Namedropper include "Asa". This song finds us having a conversation with a man whose wife has a husband but as he says, "trouble is, that husband ain't me". A self proclaimed "washer of windows and painter of walls", who seems to almost innocent of the twists, turns and oddity of his own life. Another example of Namedropper's variety is Jonah, who "lives under a bridge" and spends his time "finding cardboard to burn up the hours and warm up the smoke in his eye." He lives his life like a human glacier watching the "world pass him by". My personal favorite on the CD is "A Cloudy Day for Sonny". Sonny is the eternally easy barfly who will go home with anyone who says they love her. The chorus says it all "The boys are all tired and the fun is all gone. Who's taking Sonny home? Who's taking Sonny home? Who's taking Sonny tonight." This song sums up the whole of Namedropper, every character has been used by themselves, others, society and love. All any of them wants is love and respect but none of them get anything remotely resembling it. If I have a complaint with Namedropper, it is the fact that all the characters seem to be drawn from a distance. We feel sorry for them for how we see them, but we never know what is in their head. JMT almost seems to be a God-like observer, forever reporting his observations but never judging. Letting the listener draw their own conclusions, but what does JMT think? Does he have an opinion. Perhaps we'll never know. He sure as heck won't tell us. -Randy Brown
Read more...
NAMEDROPPER
author: Randy Brown
                            
Namedropper – James Michael Taylor This is perhaps JMTs most accessible CD. The delivery is straight forward and not bound up with layers of production as many of his past CDs have been. On Namedropper you can hear JMT with all the honesty, pain and glory of his relationships with folks, most of whom I assume (possibly wrongly) are real. Fictional or not, the depth of the characters and the view of the narrator will often make you cringe and squirm in your seat. JMT lives in a land of honesty, one that few of us can imagine or even tolerate. JMT is always a poet first, awkward phases be damned. His images are rich with subjective detail; some much like minimalist pencil sketches. The world of Namedropper is troubled and desolate. Populated by addicts, idiots, the homeless, barflies, drunks, the lonely and unwanted we are sucked into these hastily drawn pencil sketch stories. Their pain becomes ours and we live with them and mourn their mistakes. They are all as is stated in "Child of My Restless Dreams", "another soul thrown up on shore", flopping and gasping for air while slowly drowning in life and bad choices. My favorites on Namedropper include "Asa". This song finds us having a conversation with a man whose wife has a husband but as he says, "trouble is, that husband ain't me". A self proclaimed "washer of windows and painter of walls", who seems to almost innocent of the twists, turns and oddity of his own life. Another example of Namedropper's variety is Jonah, who "lives under a bridge" and spends his time "finding cardboard to burn up the hours and warm up the smoke in his eye." He lives his life like a human glacier watching the "world pass him by". My personal favorite on the CD is "A Cloudy Day for Sonny". Sonny is the eternally easy barfly who will go home with anyone who says they love her. The chorus says it all "The boys are all tired and the fun is all gone. Who's taking Sonny home? Who's taking Sonny home? Who's taking Sonny tonight." This song sums up the whole of Namedropper, every character has been used by themselves, others, society and love. All any of them wants is love and respect but none of them get anything remotely resembling it. If I have a complaint with Namedropper, it is the fact that all the characters seem to be drawn from a distance. We feel sorry for them for how we see them, but we never know what is in their head. JMT almost seems to be a God-like observer, forever reporting his observations but never judging. Letting the listener draw their own conclusions, but what does JMT think? Does he have an opinion. Perhaps we'll never know. He sure as heck won't tell us. -Randy Brown
Read more...
NameDropper
author: Tom Geddie
                            
Namedropper – James Michael Taylor His daughter suggested that James Michael Taylor do a CD filled with name songs, so he did. Released the CD, NameDropper with homemade liner notes. Put his picture, taken in 1975, on the front. Taylor has been around the Fort Worth club scene and regional festivals since the 70s as a solo act or playing with TXH2O ( a trio with his wife and, yes, his e-wife). He's a poet, sculptor, juggler, stage hand, and backhoe operator. Not long ago Taylor gave me a copy. A couple of days later, a guitar teacher in East Texas gave me a copy and told me Taylor is a genius. A couple of weeks later, a music fan gave me a copy and said I might like one or two of the songs. So, it must be time to review it. The songs are acoustic and personal all but one based on the lives of people he knew or knows by name; one, "Jonah," is about a homeless man whose name he doesn't know. Taylor's voice is haunted by something, perhaps reality and experience as he sings about what often goes unspoken, about futile lives, about a woman who's hardly gone when she leaves, about the realization that "Hello" lasts forever while "good-bye" is a passing thing, etc. It's a pretty good serious listen in the American folk tradition. Like most CDs it's never going to top anybody's chart or sell a million copies. And, as someone once said, so it goes. -Tom Geddie - Buddie Magazine - March 2007
Read more...
Sell your music on CD Baby and iTunes! Minimize this Tab Open this Tab