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Saturday, October 5, 2013

Where Were you on this Day in Music History: October 5th!

A Day in Music History        
October 5th...

Jud Strunk
June 11, 1936 - October 5, 1981 (aged 45)
Births
1907: Mrs. Miller
1924: Bill Dana
1935: Margie Singleton
1938: Carlo Mastrangelo (Dion and the Belmonts)

1938: Johnny Duncan
1939: Abi Ofarim
1942: Richard Street (The Temptations)
1943: Steve Miller
1947: Brian Johnson (AC/DC)
1948: Lucius Ross (Funkadelic)
1949: B.W. Stevenson
1949: Brian Connolly (sweet)

Deaths
1981: Jud Strunk
1992: Eddie Kendricks (The Temptations)
1997: Arthur Tracey
2005: Michael Gibbins (Badfinger)

Events
1947: The first taped radio show is broadcast on ABC, a performance by Bing Crosby that demonstrated the capabilities of the new Ampex 200 recorder.
1957: Cliff Richard plays his first gig with the Shadows at Hanley, England's Victoria Hall.
1959: The legendarily bad movie Girls Town, featuring Paul Anka and Mel Torme, premieres in US theaters.
1962: The Beatles release their first single, "Love Me Do" b/w "P.S. I Love You," in the UK. That night, it is played on Radio Luxembourg, owned by EMI, representing the first time a Beatles song is ever heard on the airwaves.
1966: The Jimi Hendrix Experience forms in London.
1975: The three original Wailers -- Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Bunny Wailer -- perform together for the last time at Stevie Wonder's benefit concert, the Wonder Dream Concert, in Kingston, Jamaica.
1999: After breaking up "permanently" in 1983, the Who reform with an announcement by singer Roger Daltrey that the trio will re-form for a Las Vegas concert.
2000: The book The Beatles Anthology, some twenty years in the making, is published in the US. Price: $60.
2006: Jeffrey Borer, owner of company that sold Michael Jackson his private Gulfstream jet, is sentenced to six months in prison for ordering employee Arvel Jett Reeves to install two videocameras in it in order to catch Jackson saying something for which he could be blackmailed.
2007: A federal jury finds a Minnesota woman guilty of online music file sharing through the public service KaZaa, fining her $220,000.

Releases
1961: The Marcels, "Heartaches"
1975: Harry Chapin, "Cat's In The Cradle"
1999: Paul McCartney, Run Devil Run

Recording
1939: Ted Weems, "I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now"
1961: Neil Sedaka, "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen"
1968: The Beatles, "Savoy Truffle," "Martha My Dear"

Charts
1959: Paul Evans' "Seven Little Girls (Sitting in the Back Seat)" enters the charts
1959: Bobby Darin's "Mack The Knife" hits #1
1974: The Beach Boys' LP Endless Summer hits #1
1974: Olivia Newton-John's "I Honestly Love You" hits #1

Certifications
1965: Henry Mancini's soundtrack LP The Pink Panther is certified gold
1976: Hall and Oates' LP Abandoned Luncheonette is certified gold
1979: The Who's LP soundtrack LP The Kids Are Alright is certified platinum

Friday, October 4, 2013

Where Were you on this Day in Music History: October 4th!

A Day in Music History        
October 4th...

Janis Joplin
January 19, 1943 - October 4, 1970 (aged 27)
Births
1929: Leroy Van Dyke
1937: Perkle Lee Moses (The El Dorados)
1942: Helen Reddy
1944: Marlena Davis (The Orlons)
1947: Jim Fielder (Buffalo Springfield, Mothers of Invention, Blood, Sweat and Tears) 
1963: Lena Zavaroni

Deaths
1970: Janis Joplin
1991: J. Frank Wilson
1996: Jerry Rivers (Hank Williams Sr.)
1999: Art Farmer
2004: Michael Gibbins (Badfinger)
2004: Bruce Palmer (The Buffalo Springfield)

Events
1957: Elvis Presley comes in second as England's most popular vocalist in the annual New Musical Express (NME) music poll, coming in just behind... Pat Boone.
1961: Bob Dylan debuts at Carnegie Hall, playing for a grand total of 53 fans.
1961: Popular "recording" group Alvin and the Chipmunks get their own TV show when The Alvin Show debuts on CBS.
1963: A 17-year-old Eric Clapton, late of the Roosters and Casey Jones and the Engineers, joins the Yardbirds for tonight's gig at the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, England, replacing original guitarist Anthony "Top" Topham.
1964: Dusty Springfield interviews the Beatles on this, their first appearance on England's ITV television program Ready Steady Go!
1968: Cream begins their announced farewell tour with a performance at Alameda County Coliseum in Oakland, CA.
1974: Thin Lizzy debut their new twin-guitar attack with new additions Scott Gorham and Brian Robertson at tonight's concert in Wales.
1978: Country singer Tammy Wynette is allegedly kidnapped at a Nashville shopping center by an unknown man in a ski mask, beaten, and forced at gunpoint to drive roughly 90 miles. Doubt still exists as to whether this incident took place, due to a puzzling lack of physical evidence.
1980: For their work on the recent Fleetwood Mac single "Tusk," the University of Southern California Country marching band is presented with a platinum version of the album of the same name by three members of the rock band.
1980: On stage during a concert in Pittburgh, PA, Carly Simon collapses from "nervous exhaustion."
1988: Determined to finally clean his system of the alcohol and drugs he's been abusing for years, Ringo Starr, along with wife Barbara Bach, flies to Tucson, AZ to enter the Sierra Tucson Rehabilitation Clinic. He will stay six weeks.
1994: Singer Glenn Frey's stomach surgery causes the Eagles to postpone their much-anticipated reunion tour, puckishly titled Hell Freezes Over.
1996: The major motion picture That Thing You Do!, which deals with a fictional 1964 band attempting to break big, and starring Tom Hanks and Liv Tyler, opens in US theaters.
1999: Jimi Hendrix's half-sister Janie announces her plans to exhume the body of her famous brother and move it to a mausoleum where curious onlookers can view it for a price. The public outcry forces her to shelve the idea.

Releases
1943: Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five, "Is You Is Or Is You Ain’t My Baby?"
1974: John Lennon, Walls and Bridges

Recording
1939: Ted Weems, "That Old Gang Of Mine"
1968: The Beatles, "Martha My Dear," "Honey Pie"

Charts
1969: Creedence Clearwater Revival's LP Green River hits #1
1975: Pink Floyd's LP Wish You Were Here hits #1

Certifications
1966: Bobby Hebb's "Sunny" is certified gold

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Where Were you on this Day in Music History: October 3rd!

A Day in Music History        
Woody Guthrie 
July 14, 1912 - October 3, 1967 (aged 55)
October 3rd...

Births
1938: Eddie Cochran
1940: Alan O'Day
1941: Chubby Checker
1945: Antonio Martinez (Los Bravos)
1949: Lindsey Buckingham (Fleetwood Mac)
1950: Ronnie Laws (Earth Wind and Fire)

Deaths
1967: Woody Guthrie

Events
1901: The first record company, The Victor Talking Machine Company, is incorporated, later merging with the Radio Corporation of America to become RCA-Victor.
1952: The long-running radio hit The Adventures Of Ozzie and Harriet, now featuring a 12-year-old Ricky Nelson, debuts on CBS-TV, where it will run for another 14 years, bringing the total life of the show to 22 years!
1955: The Mickey Mouse Club, featuring a 12-year-old Annette Funicello, debuts on ABC-TV.
1957: ABC-TV premieres The Pat Boone Chevy Showroom variety show, later featured in Michael Moore's documentary Roger and Me. The show runs for three years.
1964: John Lennon writes "I Feel Fine."
1965: Johnny Cash is stopped by US Customs officials at the Mexican border on suspicion of heroin smuggling and found to be holding over 1,000 prescription narcotics and amphetamines. He receives a suspended sentence.
1977: The TV event Elvis In Concert, filmed just weeks before the King's death, is shown on CBS, with good friend Ann-Margret hosting. It shocks many with the depiction of a bloated and drug-addled Elvis Presley in his final days.
1978: Aerosmith posts bail for 30 fans convicted of smoking pot during their show at the Fort Wayne Coliseum in Ft. Wayne, IN.
1980: At tonight's show in Ann Arbor, MI, the first of his new tour, Bruce Springsteen forgets the words to his anthem "Born To Run."
1987: Lithonia, GA declares today "Brenda Lee Day" in honor of the native singer. A new street is named Brenda Lee Lane in her honor.
1988: Hollywood premiers the acclaimed documentary Imagine: John Lennon.
2000: After being questioned for nearly an hour by his parole board, John Lennon's killer is denied release on his first eligible parole, with the board stating that letting him free would "deprecate the seriousness of the crime."
2003: The film of the benefit concert The Concert For George, an all-star tribute to the recently deceased ex-Beatle George Harrison, opens in US theaters.
2007: The Rolling Stones' "A Bigger Bang" tour, named after their latest album, sets a new world record for grosses when the two-year jaunt rakes in nearly 560 million dollars.

Recording
1945: Stan Kenton, "Painted Rhythm"
1963: The Beatles, "Little Child," "I Wanna Be Your Man"
1968: The Beatles, "Savoy Truffle"

Charts
1964: The Supremes' "Baby Love" enters the charts
1964: The LP The Animals enters the charts

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Where Were you on this Day in Music History: October 2nd!


A Day in Music History        
October 2nd...
Gene Autry
September 29, 1907 - October 2, 1998 (aged 91)


Births
1933: David Somerville (The Diamonds)
1939: Lolly Vegas (Redbone)
1941: Ron Meagher (The Beau Brummels)
1945: Don McLean
1950: Mike Rutherford (Genesis)

Deaths
1998: Gene Autry

Events
1928: The first professional recordings in Nashville take place as DeFord Bailey lays down eight tracks in Victor Records (later RCA) Studios.
1945: Elvis Presley, then just ten years old, makes his first public appearance at the Mississippi-Alabama Fair and Dairy Show singing "Old Shep" in a talent contest. He comes in second.
1954: Elvis Presley bombs at the Grand Ole Opry, which does not approve of his take on traditional country music. The Opry's talent director, Jim Denny, famously tells Presley he should go back to driving a truck. Elvis swears never to return.
1965: Manfred Mann plays Prague in Czechoslovakia, becoming the first Western band to take the stage behind the infamous Communist "Iron Curtain."
1967: The entire Grateful Dead are arrested for marijuana possession in San Francisco.
1968: Motown sues their most prolific songwriting team, Holland-Dozier-Holland, for their refusal to write more songs until their royalty rate is increased. The trio are eventually released from the label and go on to start their own Invictus and Hot Wax labels.
1971: The syndicated half-hour dance show Soul Train, sort of an American Bandstand of R&B, premieres, with special guests Gladys Knight and the Pips, Eddie Kendricks, and the Honey Cone.
1976: In response to John Belushi's popular caricature of himself on Saturday Night Live, Joe Cocker appears on the show, singing a dual-Cocker duet with Belushi on "Feelin' Alright."
1977: After a plot is uncovered to steal it, Elvis Presley's body is moved from its Memphis mausoleum to its final resting place in the Meditation Garden at Graceland.
1983: ABBA's Agnetha Faltskog is involved in a car crash in Skane, Sweden, and suffers a concussion, but soon recovers.
1986: The Everly Brothers are awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7000 Hollywood Blvd.
2000: Paul Anka files papers to end his 37-year marriage to former fashion model Anne de Zogheb.
2004: 55-year-old Billy Joel causes a stir by marrying his third wife, the 22-year-old cooking student Katie Lee, at his Long Island home.

Releases
1961: The Crystals, "There's No Other Like My Baby"
1962: The Cookies, "Chains"
1976: Rod Stewart, "Tonight's The Night"

Recording
1937: Benny Goodman, "Flying Home"
1957: Connie Francis, "Who's Sorry Now"
1967: The Beatles, "Hello Goodbye"
1968: The Beatles, "Honey Pie"

Charts
1960: Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs' "Stay" enters the charts
1965: The McCoys' "Hang On Sloopy" hits #1
1971: Rod Stewart's "Maggie May" b/w "Reason To Believe" hits #1
1971: Rod Stewart's LP Every Picture Tells A Story hits #1
1971: John Lennon's LP Imagine enters the charts

Certifications
1977: The LP Gene Simmons is certified platinum

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Taylor Swift: Cheating Isn't Necessarily a Deal Breaker!?!

True love has been elusive for Taylor Swift.
The country singer, 23, has had a string of high-profile relationships with some of Hollywood's biggest heartthrobs. However, despite those cute PDA pix and the sweet love songs she's written (not to be confused with those scathing breakup songs she's also know for), she has never felt a true connection to any of them.

Talking relationship deal breakers in the November issue of Glamour U.K., Swift — whose exes include Jake Gyllenhaal, John Mayer, Harry Styles, Taylor Lautner, Conor Kennedy, and Joe Jonas (whew!) — said that she actually doesn't have any. The Nashville resident keeps an open mind about everything when she is getting to know a potential mate.

"If you have enough natural chemistry with someone, you overlook every single thing that you said would break the deal," said Swift, sounding like a hopeless romantic.

But what about guys who cheat? That's a deal breaker for sure, right? Not necessarily.

"I've seen my friends take someone back after they've cheated because they fit perfectly. But I don't know, because I’ve never had a perfect fit with someone," admitted the "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" singer, who has built a career off of songs about her relationship ups and downs.

What she does know is she's not going to count out any potential prospects — even if the guy is famous. 

"You can't say, 'I'm never gonna date a high-profile person in the arts!' But whoever I date, famous or not — whether I ever date again! — all chaos will break loose with fabrication and frantic obsession and who likes who more and how it ended," she said. "But right now is easy because I'm single and happy, and it's very relaxing."

And don't think she's ever sitting at home searching her name on the Internet.

"I never read one hateful thing said about me by some 12-year-old," she told the mag. "So I got to live an actual life. And I've kept that mentality. Just because there's a hurricane going on around you doesn't mean you have to open the window and look at it.

"You can be obsessed with the bad things people say and the good things, either way you’re obsessed with yourself and I’m not," she continued. "You can become unhinged so easily. Vanity can apply to both insecurity and egotism. So I distance myself, because I feel everything. The little I am exposed to hurts my feelings. The only things I can really control are my songs and my behavior. The rest? If I focused on it, that would lead to insanity."



Who is Lionel Richie?

Lionel Richie
Lionel Richie
Lionel Richie spent his youth on the campus of the Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama where he was born. His grandfather's house was across the street from campus, where he once worked with founder and renowned educator and activist Booker T. Washington. After his family relocated to Joliet, Illinois, Richie returned to Tuskegee on a tennis scholarship and graduated with a degree in economics. But his interest in music soon brought about big changes in his life.

In 1968, Lionel Richie formed the eclectic R&B/soul group The Commodores along with several other freshmen at the Tuskegee Institute. The group first signed with Atlantic, jumping quickly to the influential Motown Records after just one record. They toured extensively with groups like The Jackson 5, Stevie Wonder and The Rolling Stones, perfecting their live show and building a strong fan base. The group had chart success with funkier tracks like "Machine Gun" and "Brick House," but it was ballads like "Easy" and "Three Times A Lady," written by and featuring Lionel on lead vocal, that truly propelled them to the pinnacle of fame and success.

Monday, September 30, 2013

Random Cash Facts!!!

Johnny Cash, the greatest cowboy of them all, was born on this day back in 1932. We’re celebrating the Man in Black’s would-be 81st birthday with some interesting facts. Revel in the random Cash-related miscellany — from what he nicknamed his tour bus to which president was his all-time favorite — after the jump.

1. Johnny Cash started smoking when he was 12 years old.

2. The Masons rejected Cash’s application for membership “on moral grounds.”

3. Cash learned how to hypnotize himself from country singer Johnny Horton.

4. To commemorate his birthday, Cash’s family wants you to wear black.

5. Cash adopted his signature all-black suits as a good luck charm after he wore a black t-shirt and jeans to his first public performance.

6. His first gig with the Tennessee Two was playing for a group of elderly ladies in a church basement.

7. When he was a child working in the cotton fields, Cash used to eat young cotton buds, despite his mother’s warnings that they would give him bellyaches.

8. He took only one voice lesson, after which the teacher advised him not to let anyone change the way he sang.

9. His parents named him J.R. Cash as a compromise between the names “John” and “Ray.” When he enlisted in the Air Force, Cash gave his name as “John R. Cash.”

10. The first song he remembers singing was the hymn “I Am Bound for the Promised Land.”

11. Though he was never in prison, Cash served a total of 7 nights in jail for different incidents.

12. After being arrested for trespassing in Starkville, Mississippi, Cash broke his toe trying to kick out the bars of his jail cell.

13. The title for “Walk the Line” was a suggestion from Carl Perkins.

14. During his act in the 1950s, Cash flaunted a killer Elvis impersonation.

15. During his stint in the Air Force, Cash learned to translate Russian Morse code.

16. He bought his first guitar in Germany for 20 deutschemarks ($5 American).

17. The first song he heard on a radio was “Hobo Bill’s Last Ride” by Jimmie Rodgers.

18. While in the Air Force, Cash traveled to London for Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation.

19. When he first tried to record for Sun records, Cash pitched himself as a gospel singer. After that didn’t work, he just sat on the steps of the recording studio until he could convince Sam Phillips to listen to his songs.

20. Roy Orbison was Cash’s next-door neighbor in Tennessee for over 20 years.
  
21. Cash advised Jerry Lee Lewis not to record “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Goin On,” preferring his rendition of Jack Clement’s “It’ll Be Me.”

22. Cash used to exchange birthday greetings with Elizabeth Taylor, whose birthday is the day after his.

23. “Blue Suede Shoes,” Cash claims, came from a story he told Carl Perkins about an airman who used to tell Cash not to step on his blue suede shoes.

24. Cash’s advice on living life on the road: “Back in 1957, there was no Extra Crispy. Other than that, it’s the same.”

25. When Cash first moved to Memphis, he enrolled in a radio class at Keegan’s School of Industry, hoping to become a DJ.

26. The first time Cash met honky-tonk pioneer Ernest Tubb, Tubb advised Cash, “Just remember this, son. The higher up the ladder you get, the brighter your ass shines.”

27. At the Carter Family Fold, a mountain music concert hall in Virginia, Cash was the only artist allowed to use an amplifier.

28. He met his first wife, Vivian Liberto, at a skating rink in San Antonio.

29. During his time in the Air Force, Cash wrote all his letters to Vivian in green ink.

30. After Johnny Carson moved to New York to start The Tonight Show, Cash bought Carson’s house in Encino.

31. The camper Cash used for his amphetamine binges in the desert was named Jesse James. It had its windows spray-painted black so Cash could sleep during daylight hours, “but also because I just liked to spray-paint things black.”

32. After an oil leak from Jesse James set the Los Padres National Wildlife Refuge on fire, Cash became the only person ever successfully sued by the U.S. for starting a forest fire.

33. The blaze Cash’s camper started killed all but 9 of the endangered condors at the refuge. When questioned about the birds at the deposition, Cash replied: “I don’t give a damn about your yellow buzzards.”

34. Country guitarist Merle Travis taught Cash how to sink a Bowie knife at twenty paces.

35. The first time Cash met songwriter Peter Le Farge, Cash gave him enough Thorazine that Le Farge slept for “three or four days.”

36. An ostrich attack left Cash with five broken ribs and internal bleeding.

37. During a hospital visit for surgery, Cash smuggled in a card of Valium in the bandages over his suture. (Half of the pills dissolved into the wound.)

38. At his house in Jamaica, Cash had a “Billy Graham room” with a guest bed specifically for Graham.

39. President Jimmy Carter was June Carter’s cousin, related to Cash by marriage.

40. Cash was also distantly related to King Duff, the first king of Scotland.

41. Carrie Cash, Johnny’s mother, worked at the gift shop for the “House of Cash” museum until her death.

42. Muhammad Ali wrote a poem for Cash called “Truth” which Cash kept locked in a vault.

43. The motto on the Cash family coat of arms reads “Better Times Will Come.”

44. In the 1985 miniseries North and South, Cash played the abolitionist John Brown.

45. He wrote, produced, and narrated Gospel Road, a movie about Jesus’ life, which featured June Carter Cash as Mary Magdalene.

46. The same night Cash got fired from the Grand Ole Opry, he crashed June Carter’s Cadillac into an electrical pole.

47. Cash collected 19th century guns and antique books.

48. At Dolly Parton’s first performance on the Grand Ole Opry stage, Cash coached her backstage.

49. When Cash was 5 years old, his dad shot his dog for eating the table scraps meant for the hogs.

50. When visiting the White House, Cash compared shoe sizes with President Clinton. Cash is a size 13, Clinton is a size 12.

51. Cash’s signature introduction (“Hello, I’m Johnny Cash”) debuted at his concert at Folsom prison.

52. According to his autobiography Cash, if he were stuck on a desert island, Cash would bring Bob Dylan’s The Freeweelin’ Bob Dylan, Merle Travis’ Down Home, Jimmie Davis’s Greatest Gospel Hits, Emmylou Harris’ Roses in the Snow, Rosanne Cash’s The Wheel, a gospel album by Rosetta Tharpe, “something by Beethoven,” and You Are There by Edward R. Murrow.

53. The tune for “I Walk the Line” was inspired by a recording of Bavarian guitar music Cash had accidentally played backwards.

54. Once, on tour in the late 1950s, Cash and his band members bought 500 baby chickens and a hundred of them loose on each floor of a hotel.

55. At another hotel, they flushed cherry bombs down the toilet and blew the plumbing out.

56. The 1962 crime drama Five Minutes to Live was Cash’s first role in a full-length feature film.

57. On his tours in the early 1960s, Cash was billed as “America’s Foremost Singing Storyteller.”

58. Cash spent a night in jail in El Paso for smuggling two socks full of amphetamines across the Mexico border.

59. During Cash’s divorce, he shared an apartment in Nashville with Waylon Jennings.

60. Before one meeting with his addiction counselor, Cash drove a tractor into the lake beside his house.

61. The scar on the right side of Cash’s face was from a botched surgical procedure while he was in the Air Force.

62. Cash guest-starred as Kid Cole on four episodes of Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman.

63. June Carter finally accepted Cash’s proposal for marriage at a hockey arena in Ontario.

64. In 1984, when Cash felt that his record label was ignoring him, he released an intentionally awful album called Chicken in Black, with a title song about Cash’s brain being transplanted into the body of a chicken.

65. He used to carry around a jar of instant coffee and ladle spoonfuls of it into the coffee he ordered in restaurants.

66. The first episode of The Johnny Cash Show featured Joni Mitchell and Bob Dylan as guests.

67. On Independence Day in 1976, Cash served as grand marshal for the federal government’s bicentennial parade.

68. In 1986, Cash published the novel Man in White based on the life of the apostle Paul.

69. Cash’s video for “Delia’s Gone” shows Cash tying up and burying Kate Moss.

70. Richard Nixon was Cash’s favorite president.

71. While checked into the Betty Ford Clinic in the 1980s, Cash met and befriended Ozzy Osbourne.

72. After his wife June died, Cash had her Wildwood Flower album cover painted on the elevator in his house.

73. Cash suffered from aviataphobia (fear of flying) and ophidophobia (fear of snakes).

74. In the Air Force, Cash wrote short stories under the pen name Johnny Dollar.

75. During his first two years touring, Cash clocked over 100,000 miles of road travel.

76. Cash once stuck a Bowie knife into a hotel room’s reproduction of the Mona Lisa that didn't meet his standards.

77. As a 22-year-old inmate, Merle Haggard saw three of Cash’s shows in San Quentin. He later credited Cash for inspiring him to work on his singing.

78. “The Man Comes Around” came from a dream Cash had about the Queen of England.

Girl with inoperable cancer gets her wish



High school freshman Aubry Glenn didn't let a tough cancer diagnosis get in the way of an early prom night with friends. A tomboy, she says it felt "weird" to be in a dress -- an event she had added to her bucket list. The big surprise of the night came from her favorite singer, country star Jason Brown. His performance was "cooler than awesome," Aubry told her mom.

Original Story found at this Link: http://news.yahoo.com/video/girl-inoperable-cancer-gets-her-154550969.html

Who is James Taylor?

James Taylor
James Taylor is a singer/songwriter who has earned 40 gold, platinum, and multi-platinum awards for his songs and albums. He's a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the prestigious Songwriter's Hall of Fame, and has received Billboard magazine's Century Award for distinguished creative achievement.

In 1971, Time magazine featured him on its cover and called him the harbinger of the singer/songwriter era.

Some of his most well-known songs include "Fire and Rain," "Country Road," "Something In The Way She Moves," "Mexico," "Shower the People," "Walking Man," "Sweet Baby James," "Never Die Young," "Copperline," and of course, "Carolina In My Mind."

Life in Chapel Hill

Born in Boston in 1948, James Taylor came to Chapel Hill with his family when he was three years old. He began writing music in the mid 1960's while a student at a New England boarding school, far removed from his family and friends in Chapel Hill. He eventually graduated from Chapel Hill High School. Isaac Taylor, James' late father, was for a time Dean of the UNC-Chapel Hill medical school.