by Charly Mann
Kate Taylor is a 60 year old late bloomer. She is the middle child, and only daughter, of the remarkable Issac and Trudy Taylor family of Chapel Hill. Now 45 years after her career in the music business started she has released one of the best albums of all original material in the new millennium. The album is entitled Fair Time! and opens with two very memorable songs. The opening number, Soap Opera Life, sounds like a #1 country hit, particularly if Carrie Underwood or Taylor Swift decided to do a cover. The next track, Things I Carry, is an instantly enjoyable affirmative rocking love song. Most of the album is an autobiographical record of her life starting with growing up in Chapel with her four brothers on the track, Sun Did Shine (On Carolina), but more accurately called Chapel Hill-Billies. Coinciding with the release of the album is a DVD biography of Kate entitled Kate Taylor: Tunes from the Tipi and Other Songs From Home that is beautifully filmed, produced, and directed by her daughter Liz Witham. Included in the film is some delightful color footage of UNC and downtown Chapel Hill from the early sixties. There is also an array of photos and film clips of the entire Taylor family growing up.

A 20 year old Kate Taylor
Kate Taylor was born on August 15th, 1949 in Boston, and grew up at 618 Morgan Creek Road in Chapel Hill on 28 acres of beautifully secluded land in a house that was designed by two of the most acclaimed architects of 1950s modern houses, George Matsumoto and John D. Latimer. She was named after Katherine Child, the head mistress of a school her mother attended in Boston. Every summer the family would leave Chapel Hill's heat and humidity to stay on the remote island of Martha's Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts. It was a perfect place for Kate and the rest of her clan, and all the Taylors would eventually make it their home. In the 1960s it was a bohemian paradise full of musicians, artists, and writers. The Taylors were all unconventional. Even their father, a respected academic, left his family and teaching position at UNC for two years, doing his service to his country by joining the Navy and being the resident doctor on a naval expedition to Antarctica. All of the Taylor children pursed music in favor of education from an early age, and all lived their late adolescent years as vagabonds.

Issac and Trudy Taylor's house at 618 Morgan Creek Road Chapel Hill, NC
Kate's older brother, Alex, was the only family member who passionately wanted to have a career as a singer, and he probably would have succeeded if he had not abused alcohol so much from an early age. James's surprise meteoric elevation to rock stardom in 1970 allowed Kate to showcase her own talents on her debut album Sister Kate, produced by James's friend and manager Peter Asher. The album is a masterpiece and tour de force of great songs, with back up musicians including Carole King, Linda Ronstadt, her brother James, J.D. Souther, and Bernie Leadon. After a brief career in music, Kate returned to Martha's Vineyard and met her soul mate, Charlie Witham , raised two daughters, and helped raise her stepdaughter. From 1976 to the present Kate has also pursued her interest in Native American art and culture. For several summers she lived with her family in a tipi on Martha's Vineyard. She and her husband revived the ancient craft of wampum bead making which the native peoples once used as a means of communication.

Kate Taylor and her late husband Charlie Witham, with daughters Aquinnah, Aretha, and Liz Witham
In 1976 brother James produced her excellent second album, Kate Taylor. This album features a duet with James of It's In His Kiss (The Shoop Shoop Song), originally a 1962 hit for Betty Everett. This is the only top-forty single Kate has had in her career. In 1978 Kate went to Muscle Shoals, Alabama to record her third album, It's In There and It's Got to Come Out, produced by Barry Beckett and using the famed Muscle Shoals Sound rhythm section. In 1999 her husband Charlie brought her and James together again to record a beautiful rendition of the Robert Burns 1788 poem, Auld Lang Syne, which was long ago made into song. It was subsequently issued on Kate's 2002 album, Beautiful Road.

Kate Taylor and her brother James Taylor October 1968, when James was recording his first album in London for the Beatle's Apple Records
The Taylor family is certainly the most noted and written about in recent Chapel Hill history. Even without James's celebrity status, Dr. Taylor's contribution as dean of the UNC medical school and the children's uniquely privileged and unconventional upbringing make all seven members of this tribe fascinating. It is noteworthy in Chapel Hill if even one child raised by a UNC professor does not attend college, but in this case all five did not. Also amazing is the array of musical talent that each of the five children have. There are debates among Chapel Hillians about each member's abilities, such as who had the best voice -- Alex usually wins this title, most gifted songwriter -- James hands down, best performer -- unquestionably Livingston, most balanced and underrated, and usually rated the second best singer -- Hugh, and for me the one I can never hear enough of -- Kate.

Kate Taylor and her brother Alex Taylor
Kate's new CD "Fair Time!" now available at katetaylor.com.
Amazon.com
CDBaby
iTunes
Kate's new DVD Kate Taylor: Tunes from the Tipi and Other Songs from Home now available at DocuTunes.TV.

What is it that binds us to this place as to no other? It is not the well or the bell or the stone walls. or the crisp October nights. No, our love for this place is based upon the fact that it is as it was meant to be, The University of the People.



If you are in the Chapel Hill area, you might be interested in this:
The Taylor Family in Chapel Hill
Tuesday, February 9
5:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Student Union Theater, UNC Campus
The very musical Taylor family lived in Chapel Hill in the 1950s and 1960s while Dr. Isaac Taylor was on the faculty, and eventually the dean of the UNC Medical School. Isaac and Trudy Taylor's children have all been musicians (Alex, James, Kate, Livingston and Hugh) as have many of their grandchildren. This program will feature a film by Liz Witham, award-winning documentary filmmaker and daughter of Kate Taylor, about her mother and other Taylors in Chapel Hill and the Taylors' long-time home, Martha's Vineyard, Mass. Kate Taylor also will perform, and she and Liz will answer questions. The event begins with a reception at 5 p.m. followed by the program at 5:30 p.m. For information, visit http://www.lib.unc.edu/blogs/news/ or call Liza Terll at (919) 962-4207.