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Taj Mahal

 
Artist: Taj Mahal
 
  • Born: May 17, 1942, New York, NY
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Slide Guitar, Harmonica, Banjo
  • Representative Albums: "The Best of Taj Mahal," "Taj Mahal," "The Natch'l Blues"
  • Representative Songs: "Fishin' Blues," "Queen Bee," "Cakewalk into Town"

Biography

One of the most prominent figures in late 20th century blues, singer/multi-instrumentalist Taj Mahal played an enormous role in revitalizing and preserving traditional acoustic blues. Not content to stay within that realm, Mahal soon broadened his approach, taking a musicologist's interest in a multitude of folk and roots music from around the world -- reggae and other Caribbean folk, jazz, gospel, R&B, zydeco, various West African styles, Latin, even Hawaiian. The African-derived heritage of most of those forms allowed Mahal to explore his own ethnicity from a global perspective and to present the blues as part of a wider musical context. Yet while he dabbled in many different genres, he never strayed too far from his laid-back country blues foundation. Blues purists naturally didn't have much use for Mahal's music and according to some of his other detractors, his multi-ethnic fusions sometimes came off as indulgent, or overly self-conscious and academic. Still, Mahal's concept seemed somewhat vindicated in the '90s, when a cadre of young bluesmen began to follow his lead -- both acoustic revivalists (Keb' Mo', Guy Davis) and eclectic bohemians (Corey Harris, Alvin Youngblood Hart).

Taj Mahal was born Henry St. Clair Fredericks in New York on May 17, 1942. His parents -- his father a jazz pianist/composer/arranger of Jamaican descent, his mother a schoolteacher from South Carolina who sang gospel -- moved to Springfield, MA, when he was quite young and while growing up there, he often listened to music from around the world on his father's short-wave radio. He particularly loved the blues -- both acoustic and electric -- and early rock & rollers like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley. While studying agriculture and animal husbandry at the University of Massachusetts, he adopted the musical alias Taj Mahal (an idea that came to him in a dream) and formed Taj Mahal & the Elektras, which played around the area during the early '60s. After graduating, Mahal moved to Los Angeles in 1964 and, after making his name on the local folk-blues scene, formed the Rising Sons with guitarist Ry Cooder. The group signed to Columbia and released one single, but the label didn't quite know what to make of their forward-looking blend of Americana, which anticipated a number of roots rock fusions that would take shape in the next few years; as such, the album they recorded sat on the shelves, unreleased until 1992.

Frustrated, Mahal left the group and wound up staying with Columbia as a solo artist. His self-titled debut was released in early 1968 and its stripped-down approach to vintage blues sounds made it unlike virtually anything else on the blues scene at the time. It came to be regarded as a classic of the '60s blues revival, as did its follow-up, Natch'l Blues. The half-electric, half-acoustic double-LP set Giant Step followed in 1969 and taken together, those three records built Mahal's reputation as an authentic yet unique modern-day bluesman, gaining wide exposure and leading to collaborations or tours with a wide variety of prominent rockers and bluesmen. During the early '70s, Mahal's musical adventurousness began to take hold; 1971's Happy Just to Be Like I Am heralded his fascination with Caribbean rhythms and the following year's double-live set, The Real Thing, added a New Orleans-flavored tuba section to several tunes. In 1973, Mahal branched out into movie soundtrack work with his compositions for Sounder and the following year he recorded his most reggae-heavy outing, Mo' Roots.

Mahal continued to record for Columbia through 1976, upon which point he switched to Warner Bros.; he recorded three albums for that label, all in 1977 (including a soundtrack for the film Brothers). Changing musical climates, however, were decreasing interest in Mahal's work and he spent much of the '80s off record, eventually moving to Hawaii to immerse himself in another musical tradition. Mahal returned in 1987 with Taj, an album issued by Gramavision that explored this new interest; the following year, he inaugurated a string of successful, well-received children's albums with Shake Sugaree. The next few years brought a variety of side projects, including a musical score for the lost Langston Hughes/Zora Neale Hurston play Mule Bone that earned Mahal a Grammy nomination in 1991. The same year marked Mahal's full-fledged return to regular recording and touring, kicked off with the first of a series of well-received albums on the Private Music label, Like Never Before. Follow-ups, such as Dancing the Blues (1993) and Phantom Blues (1996), drifted into more rock, pop, and R&B-flavored territory; in 1997, Mahal won a Grammy for Señor Blues. Meanwhile, he undertook a number of small-label side projects that constituted some of his most ambitious forays into world music. 1995's Mumtaz Mahal teamed him with classical Indian musicians; 1998's Sacred Island was recorded with his new Hula Blues Band, exploring Hawaiian music in greater depth; 1999's Kulanjan was a duo performance with Malian kora player Toumani Diabate. Maestro appeared in 2008 from Heads Up Records. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Discography: Taj Mahal
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Maestro

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Songs for the Young at Heart

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Rising Sun Collection

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Blues with a Feeling: The Very Best of Taj Mahal

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Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: Taj Mahal

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Evening of Acoustic Music

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Shakin' a Tailfeather

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Oooh So Good N'Blues/Recycling the Blues

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In Progress & in Motion: 1965-1998

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Live at Ronnie Scott's [DVD]

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Live at Ronnie Scott's [DualDisc]

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Mule Bone

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Real Blues

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Real Blues

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Mumtaz Mahal

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Mumtaz Mahal

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Collection

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Sugar Mama Blues

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Shoutin' in Key: Taj Mahal & the Phantom Blues Band Live

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Senor Blues

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Taj's Blues

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Live at Ronnie Scott's

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Live at Ronnie Scott's

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Hanapepe Dream

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Take a Giant Step: The Best of Taj Mahal

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Take a Giant Step: The Best of Taj Mahal

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World Music

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World Blues

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Big Blues: Live at Ronnie Scott

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Live at Ronnie Scott's, London

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Phantom Blues

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Sing a Happy Song: The Warner Bros. Recordings

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Essential Taj Mahal

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Kulanjan

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Blue Light Boogie

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Best of the Private Years

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Sacred Island

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In St. Lucia

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Live in San Francisco '66

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Best of Taj Mahal [Sony Remaster]

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Dancing the Blues

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Like Never Before

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Peace Is the World Smiling

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Shake Sugaree

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Live & Direct

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Taj

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Best of Taj Mahal, Vol. 1

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Brothers

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Brothers

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Evolution (The Most Recent)

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Satisfied 'N Tickled Too

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Music Keeps Me Together

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Mo' Roots

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Ooh So Good 'N' Blues

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Real Thing

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Recycling the Blues & Other Related Stuff

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Happy Just to Be Like I Am

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Happy Just to Be Like I Am

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Giant Step

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Giant Step/De Ole Folks at Home

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Giant Step/De Ole Folks at Home

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Natch'l Blues

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Taj Mahal

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Black Biography: Taj Mahal
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blues musician; songwriter

Personal Information

Born Henry Saint Claire Fredericks on May 17, 1942, in New York, NY; son of Henry Saint Claire Fredericks (a musician and musical arranger) and Mildred Shields (a school teacher); married Inshirah Geter, January 23, 1976; children: Aya, Taj, Gahmelah, Ahmen, Deva, Nani
Education: University of Massachusetts, BA, 1964.

Career

Performing and recording artist, 1964-; joined Rising Sons, mid-1960s; composed soundtracks beginning with Sounder, 1973; wrote music for the play Mule Bone, 1991.

Life's Work

Taj Mahal has spent 40 years exploring the roots and branches of the blues. Grounded in the acoustic pre-war blues sound but drawn to the eclectic sounds of world music, he revitalized a dying tradition and prepared the way for a new generation of blues men and women. While many African Americans shunned older musical styles during the 1960s, Mahal immersed himself in the roots of his past. "I was interested in the music because I felt something [got] lost in that transition of blacks trying to assimilate into society," he told Art Tipaldi in Blues Review. He had no intention of repeating what had come before, however, and drew deeply from the wells of the ethnic music of Africa, South America, and the Caribbean. "Mahal began as a blues interpreter," noted Ira Mayer in the New Rolling Stone Record Guide, "but his music has since encompassed rock, traditional Appalachian sounds, jazz, calypso, reggae and a general tendency toward experimentation and assimilation."

Absorbed European and African Influences

Mahal was born Henry Saint Claire Fredericks in New York City in 1942. His father, who had emigrated from the Caribbean, wrote arrangements for Benny Goodman and played piano. His mother, Mildred Shields, had taught school in South Carolina. "Even though I have Southern and Caribbean roots, my background also crossed with indigenous European and African influences," Mahal told John Ephland in Down Beat. "My parents introduced me to gospel, spiritual singing, to Ella, Sarah, Mahalia Jackson, Ray Charles." Mahal also listened to music from around the world on his father's short-wave radio, and developed a love for blues artists like Leadbelly and Lightnin' Hopkins, and early rock-n-rollers like Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley.

Mahal's family moved when he was a young boy and he grew up in Massachusetts. Tipaldi wrote, "Growing up in Springfield, Mass., Mahal was a rarity--a young African American who immersed himself in the study of his cultural heritage." At age 11 he witnessed the death of his father in a farming accident, but he found solace in music. When his mother remarried, he discovered his stepfather's guitar in the basement and learned to play it with a broken comb. He also took lessons from Lynnwood Perry and absorbed the radio sounds of jazz players like Illinois Jacquet and Ben Webster. Although he is primarily known as a guitarist, Mahal mastered an arsenal of instruments including piano, banjo, mandolin, and harmonica.

Mahal studied agriculture and animal husbandry at the University of Massachusetts. A dream inspired him to change his name from Fredericks, and he formed Taj Mahal and the Elektras in the early 1960s. "I was lucky enough to have my ideas coincide with the '60s and the resurgence of the blues," Mahal told Curt Wozniak in the Grand Rapids Press. He attended the Newport Folk Festival in the early 1960s to witness the folk and blues revival first hand. The opportunity to watch traditional blues players perform and meet the artists in person reinforced his decision to play acoustic guitar.

Authentic Yet Unique Musical Course

After graduating in 1964 Mahal moved to Los Angeles and formed the Rising Songs with Ry Cooder. The group signed with Columbia, but the label was unsure how to market the eclectic group. In Turn! Turn! Turn!, Richie Unterberger declared that "their eclecticism was unmatched on the L.A. scene, with a repertoire including electrified country blues and traditional folk tunes." Although the Rising Sons released one single, the rest of the band's recorded material remained locked away in Columbia's vaults until 1992.

After the Rising Sons broke up, Mahal remained with Columbia and recorded his self-titled debut album, Taj Mahal. The album "was a startling statement in its time and has held up remarkably well," according to Bruce Eder in All Music Guide. The follow-up album, The Natch'l Blues, was equally well received. Mahal, however, soon revealed his penchant for going his own way, recording the half electric, half acoustic double album Giant Step in 1969. "Those three records built Mahal's reputation as an authentic yet unique modern-day bluesman," praised Steve Huey in All Music Guide.

Mahal continued to explore new directions in the 1970s. Happy Just to Be Like I Am surveyed Caribbean rhythms, while The Real Thing added New Orleans tuba. In 1973 he recorded the soundtrack for the movie Sounder, and the following year released Mo' Roots, an album heavily influenced by reggae. In 1976 Mahal left Columbia for Warner Brothers, where he recorded three albums in 1977 alone.

Became Grammy Winner

After remaining relatively silent through much of the 1980s, Mahal recorded the well-received Taj in 1987. He then released Shake Sugaree, the first of several children's albums, and recorded a musical score for Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston's lost play, Mule Bone, for which he received a Grammy nomination. He signed with Private Music and released Dancing the Blues in 1993 and Phantom Blues in 1996. "Mahal is a fine interpreter," declared Roberta Penn in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, "breezy and light on love tunes, righteous and randy on cheatin' songs, and soulful and shouting on the dance numbers." Phantom Blues also included high-profile guest appearances by guitarist Eric Clapton and singer Bonnie Raitt. Mahal told Jim McGuinness in the Bergen County, New Jersey, Record, "The album is designed to go down some familiar trails, but to look at new things." In 1997 he won a Grammy for Señor Blues.

If the mixing of genres such as blues, Zydeco, gospel, and Latin music seems natural today, it is because of pioneers like Mahal. He opened up myriad possibilities for young artists who wanted to expand their musical palette beyond traditional blues. Robert Christgau wrote in the Village Voice, "In the '90s, Guy Davis, Keb' Mo', Corey Harris, and Alvin Youngblood Hart, all flowing out of the surge in cultural consciousness that ensued as the offspring of the civil rights generation came into their own, prove Taj Mahal a prophet." While proud of his accomplishments, Mahal has remained more interested in pursuing current projects. He has recorded 30 albums and traveled throughout the world, continuing to explore new musical veins, playing as many as 200 dates a year, and releasing a steady stream of albums. Allan Orski noted in Music Hound Folk, "Whether he's with a full band playing pop arrangements or stripped-down roots, Mahal has asserted himself ... as a keeper of the faith and a still vital force that continues to roam past musical boundaries."

Awards

Grammy, Contemporary Blues, 1997.

Works

Selected discography

  • Taj Mahal, Columbia, 1968.
  • The Natch'l Blues, Columbia, 1968.
  • Giant Steps, Columbia, 1969.
  • Happy Just to Be Like I Am, Columbia, 1971.
  • Mo' Roots, Columbia, 1974.
  • Taj, Gramavision, 1987.
  • Shake Sugaree, Music for Little People, 1988.
  • Taj's Blues, Columbia, 1992.
  • Señor Blues, Private Music, 1997.
  • Kulanjan, Hannibal, 1998.

Further Reading

Books

  • Marsh, Dave, and John Swenson, eds., New Rolling Stone Record Guide, Random House, 1983, p. 310.
  • Unterberger, Richie, Turn! Turn! Turn!, Backbeat Books, 2002, p. 214.
  • Walters, Neal, and Brian Mansfield, eds., Music Hound Folk, Visible Ink, 1998, p. 510.
Periodicals
  • Blues Revue, April 2000, pp. 11, 12.
  • Down Beat, November 1999, p. 42.
  • Grand Rapids Press, August 27, 2002, p. B4.
  • Record (Bergen County, NJ), April 5, 1996, p. 3.
  • Seattle Post-Intelligencer, March 29, 1996, p. 8.
  • Village Voice, September 15, 1998.
On-line
  • "Taj Mahal," All Music Guide, www.allmusic.com (February 3, 2003).
  • "Taj Mahal," Biography Resource Center, www.galenet.com/servlet/BioRC (May 5, 2003).

— Ronnie D. Lankford Jr

 
Wikipedia: Taj Mahal (musician)
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Taj Mahal

Background information
Birth name Henry Saint Clair Fredericks
Also known as Taj Mahal
Born May 17, 1942 (1942-05-17) (age 67)
Harlem, New York
United States
Genre(s) Blues
World music
Occupation(s) Musician
Singer-songwriter
Instrument(s) Guitar
Banjo
Harmonica
Years active 1964-present
Label(s) Columbia Records
Warner Bros. Records
Gramavision
Hannibal Records
Private Music
Associated acts The Rising Sons
The Phantom Blues Band
The Hula Blues Band
The Taj Mahal Trio
Website tajblues.com
Notable instrument(s)
National Steel[1]
Dobro[1]

Henry Saint Clair Fredericks (born May 17, 1942), who goes by the stage name Taj Mahal, is an internationally recognized blues musician with two Grammy Awards to date who folds various forms of world music into his offerings. A self-taught singer-songwriter and film composer who plays the guitar, banjo and harmonica (among many other instruments)[2], Mahal has done much to reshape the definition and scope of blues music during his 40+ year career by fusing it with nontraditional forms, including sounds from the Caribbean, Africa and the South Pacific.[3]

Contents

Early life

Born Henry Saint Clair Fredericks on May 17, 1942 in Harlem, New York, Mahal grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts. Raised in a musical environment, his mother was the member of a local gospel choir and his father was a West Indian jazz arranger and piano player. His family owned a shortwave radio which received music broadcasts from around the world, exposing him at an early age to world music.[4] Early in childhood he recognized the stark differences between the popular music of his day and the music that was played in his home. He also became interested in jazz, enjoying the works of musicians such as Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk and Milt Jackson.[5] His parents came of age during the Harlem Renaissance, instilling in their son a sense of pride in his West Indian and African ancestry through their stories.[6]

Blues musician Taj Mahal at the Museumsquartier in Vienna (Jazz-Fest Wien)

Because his father was a musician, his house was frequently the host of other musicians from the Caribbean, Africa, and the United States. His father, Henry Saint Clair Fredericks Sr., was called "The Genius" by Ella Fitzgerald before starting his family.[7] Early on he developed an interest in African music, which he studied assiduously as a young man. His parents also encouraged him to pursue music, starting him out with classical piano lessons. He also studied the clarinet, trombone and harmonica.[8] At age eleven Mahal's father was killed in an accident at his own construction company, crushed by a tractor when it flipped over. This was an extremely traumatic experience for him.[7] His mother later remarried. His stepfather owned a guitar which Taj began using at age 13 or 14, receiving his first lessons from a new neighbor from North Carolina of his own age that played acoustic blues guitar.[8] His name was Lynwood Perry, the nephew of the famous bluesman Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup. In high school Mahal sang in a doo-wop group.[7]

For some time Mahal thought of pursuing farming over music. He had developed a passion for farming that nearly rivaled his love of music—coming to work on a farm first at age 16. It was a dairy farm in Palmer, Massachusetts, not far from Springfield. By age nineteen he had become farm foreman, getting up a bit after 4:00 a.m. and running the place. "I milked anywhere between thirty-five and seventy cows a day. I clipped udders. I grew corn. I grew Tennessee redtop clover. Alfalfa."[9] Mahal believes in growing one's own food, saying, "You have a whole generation of kids who thinks everything comes out of a box and a can, and they don't know you can grow most of your food." Because of his personal support of the family farm, Mahal regularly performs at Farm Aid concerts.[9]

Taj Mahal, his stage name, came to him in dreams about Gandhi, India, and social tolerance. He started using it in 1959[10] or 1961[7]—around the same time he began attending the University of Massachusetts. Despite having attended a vocational agriculture school, becoming a member of the Future Farmers of America, and majoring in animal husbandry and minoring in veterinary science and agronomy, Mahal decided to take the route of music instead of farming. In college he led a rhythm and blues band called Taj Mahal & The Elektras and, before heading for the West Coast, he was also part of a duo with Jessie Lee Kincaid.[7]

Career

In 1964 he moved to Santa Monica, California and formed The Rising Sons with fellow blues musician Ry Cooder and Jessie Lee Kincaid, landing a record deal with Columbia Records soon after. The group was one of the first interracial bands of the period, which likely made them commercially unviable.[11] An album was never released (though a single was) and the band soon broke up, though Legacy Records did release The Rising Sons Featuring Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder in 1993 with material from that period. During this time Mahal was working with others, musicians like Howlin' Wolf, Buddy Guy, Lightnin' Hopkins, and Muddy Waters.[8] Mahal stayed with Columbia after The Rising Sons to begin his solo career, releasing the self-titled Taj Mahal in 1968, The Natch'l Blues in 1969, and Giant Step/De Old Folks at Home (also in 1969).[1] During this time he and Cooder worked with the The Rolling Stones, with whom he has performed at various times throughout his career .[12] In 1968, he performed in the film The Rolling Stones Rock and Roll Circus. He recorded a total of twelve albums for Columbia Records from the late 1960s into the 1970s. His work of the 1970s was especially important, in that his releases began incorporating West Indian and Caribbean music, jazz and reggae into the mix. In 1972 he wrote the film score for the movie Sounder, which starred Cicely Tyson.[12]

In 1976 Mahal left Columbia Records and signed with Warner Bros. Records, recording three albums for them. One of these was another film score for 1977's Brothers; the album shares the same name. After his time with Warner Bros. Records he struggled to find another record contract, this being the era of heavy metal and disco music. Stalled in his career, he decided to move to Kauai, Hawaii in 1981 and soon formed The Hula Blues Band. Originally just a group of guys getting together for fishing and a good time, the band soon began performing regularly and touring.[1] He remained somewhat concealed from most eyes while working out of Hawaii throughout most of the 1980s before recording Taj in 1988 for Gramavision.[12] This started a comeback of sorts for him, recording both for Gramavision and Hannibal Records during this time. In the 1990s he was on the Private Music label, releasing albums full of blues, pop, R&B and rock. He did collaborative works both with Eric Clapton and Etta James.[12] In 1997 he won Best Contemporary Blues Album for Señor Blues at the Grammy Awards, followed by another Grammy for Shoutin' in Key in 2000.[13]

Musical style

Taj Mahal performing at the 1997 North Sea Jazz Festival

Mahal leads with his thumb and middle finger when fingerpicking, rather than with his index finger as the majority of guitar players do. "I play with a flatpick," he says, "when I do a lot of blues leads."[8] Early in his musical career Mahal studied the various styles of his favorite blues singers, including musicians like Jimmy Reed, Son House, Sleepy John Estes, Big Mama Thornton, Howlin' Wolf, Mississippi John Hurt, and Sonny Terry. He describes his hanging out at clubs like Club 47 in Massachusetts and Ash Grove in Los Angeles as "basic building blocks in the development of his music."[14] Considered to be a scholar of blues music, his studies of ethnomusicology at the University of Massachusetts would come to introduce him further to the folk music of the Caribbean and West Africa. Over time he incorporated more and more African roots music into his musical palette, embracing elements of reggae, calypso[1], jazz, zydeco, rhythm and blues, gospel music, and the country blues—each of which having "served as the foundation of his unique sound."[4] According to The Rough Guide to Rock, "It has been said that Taj Mahal was one of the first major artists, if not the very first one, to pursue the possibilities of world music. Even the blues he was playing in the early 70s — 'Recycling The Blues & Other Related Stuff' (1972), 'Mo' Roots' (1974) — showed an aptitude for spicing the mix with flavours that always kept him a yard or so distant from being an out-and-out blues performer."[1] Concerning his voice, author David Evans writes that Mahal has "an extraordinary voice that ranges from gruff and gritty to smooth and sultry."[2]

Taj Mahal in Niederstetten, Germany

Taj Mahal believes that his 1999 album Kulanjan, which features him playing with the kora master of Mali's Griot tradition Toumani Diabate, "embodies his musical and cultural spirit arriving full circle." To him it was an experience that allowed him to reconnect with his African heritage, striking him with a sense of coming home.[5] He even changed his name to Dadi Kouyate, the first jali name, to drive this point home.[15] Speaking of the experience and demonstrating the breadth of his eclecticism, he has said:

The microphones are listening in on a conversation between a 350-year old orphan and its long-lost birth parents. I've got so much other music to play. But the point is that after recording with these Africans, basically if I don't play guitar for the rest of my life, that's fine with me....With Kulanjan, I think that Afro-Americans have the opportunity to not only see the instruments and the musicians, but they also see more about their culture and recognize the faces, the walks, the hands, the voices, and the sounds that are not the blues. Afro-American audiences had their eyes really opened for the first time. This was exciting for them to make this connection and pay a little more attention to this music than before.[5]

Taj Mahal has said he prefers to do outdoor performances, saying: "The music was designed for people to move, and it's a bit difficult after a while to have people sitting like they're watching television. That's why I like to play outdoor festivals-because people will just dance. Theatre audiences need to ask themselves: 'What the hell is going on? We're asking these musicians to come and perform and then we sit there and draw all the energy out of the air.' That's why after a while I need a rest. It's too much of a drain. Often I don't allow that. I just play to the goddess of music-and I know she's dancing."[6]

Views on the blues

Throughout his career, Mahal has performed his brand of blues (an African American artform) for a predominantly white audience. This has been a disappointment at times for Mahal, who recognizes there is a general lack of interest in blues music among many African Americans today. He has drawn a parallel comparison between the blues and rap music in that they both were initially black forms of music that have come to be assimilated into the mainstream of society. He is quoted as saying, "Eighty-one percent of the kids listening to rap were not black kids. Once there was a tremendous amount of money involved in it . . . they totally moved it over to a material side. It just went off to a terrible direction."[16] Mahal also believes that some people may think the blues are about wallowing in negativity and despair, a position he disagrees with. According to him, "You can listen to my music from front to back, and you don't ever hear me moaning and crying about how bad you done treated me. I think that style of blues and that type of tone was something that happened as a result of many white people feeling very, very guilty about what went down."[17]

Awards

Taj Mahal has received nine Grammy Award nominations (winning two) over his career.[2]

Discography

Studio Albums

Live Albums

Compilations

Various Artists Featuring Taj Mahal

  • 1968 - Rock and Roll Circus
  • 1968 - The Rock Machine Turns You On
  • 1970 - Fill Your Head With Rock
  • 1985 - Conjure - Music for the Texts of Ishmael Reed
  • 1990 - The Hot Spot - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
  • 1991 - Vol Pour Sidney- one title, other tracks by Charlie Watts, Elvin Jones, Pepsi, The Lonely Bears, Lee Konitz ...(nato)
  • 1992 - Rising Sons Featuring Taj Mahal and Ry Cooder
  • 1993 - The Source by Ali Farka Touré (World Circuit WCD030 / Hannibal 1375)
  • 1993 - Peace Is the World Smiling
  • 1997 - Follow the Drinking Gourd
  • 1997 - Shakin' a Tailfeather
  • 1998 - Scrapple Soundtrack
  • 1999 - Hippity Hop
  • 2002 - Will The Circle Be Unbroken, Volume III lead in and first verse of title song, with Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Alison Krauss, Doc Watson
  • 2004 - Musicmakers with Taj Mahal (Music Maker 49)
  • 2004 - Etta Baker with Taj Mahal (Music Maker 50)

Filmography

Live DVDs

  • 2006 - Taj Mahal/Phantom Blues Band Live at St. Lucia

Movies

  • 1972 - Sounder
  • 1991 - Bill and Ted's Bogus Journey
  • 1998 - Six Days Seven Nights
  • 2002 - 'Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood'
  • 1998 - Blues Brothers 2000

External links

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Buckley, et al., 1050
  2. ^ a b c Evans, et al., xii
  3. ^ Komara, 951
  4. ^ a b DiCaire, 9
  5. ^ a b c Tipaldi, 179-185
  6. ^ a b Deep African roots help shape Taj Mahal's blues (Straight.com)
  7. ^ a b c d e White, Billboard
  8. ^ a b c d Madsen, 60-73
  9. ^ a b George-Warren, et al., 129
  10. ^ Strong, 493-494
  11. ^ Weissman, 160
  12. ^ a b c d Vickers, album insert
  13. ^ a b c d Grammy Award Winners (The Grammy Awards)
  14. ^ Weissman, 117
  15. ^ Elam & Jackson, 301-302
  16. ^ Tianen, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  17. ^ Tianen, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  18. ^ 2006 Blues Music Awards (The Blues Foundation)

References


 
 

 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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