The Rising Sons, The Rising Sons: featuring Taj Mahal
& Ry Cooder (Recorded 1966, issued by Sony, 1992)
Taj Mahal, Taj Mahal (Sony 1967, re-issued 2000)
Taj Mahal, The Natch'l Blues (Sony 1968, re-issued 2000)
Taj Mahal, Giant Step/De Old Folks At Home (Sony 1969, re-issued 2000)
Taj Mahal, Happy To Be Just Like I Am (Columbia 1971, re-issued Mobile
Fidelity 1991)
Taj Mahal, Recycling the Blues & Other Related Stuff (Columbia
1972, re-issued Mobile Fidelity 1991)
Taj Mahal, The Real Thing (Sony 1972, re-issued 2000)
Taj Mahal, Mo' Roots (Sony 1974, re-issued 2000)
Taj Mahal, Evolution: the Most Recent (Warners 1975, re-issued Rhino/Handmade
2000)
Taj Mahal, Music Fuh Ya' (Warners 1976, re-issued Rhino/Handmade 2000)
Taj Mahal, Satisfied 'n' Tickled Too (Columbia, 1976)
Taj Mahal, Taj (Gramavision, 1987)
Taj Mahal, Mule Bone (Gramavision, 1991)
Taj Mahal, Live & Direct (Delta, 1991)
Taj Mahal, Like Never Before (Private Music, 1991)
Taj Mahal, Dancing the Blues (Private Music, 1993)
Taj Mahal & Vishnu Bhatt, Mumtaz Mahal (Water Lily Acoustics, 1995)
Taj Mahal, An Evening of Acoustic Music (Independent, 1996)
Taj Mahal, Phantom Blues (Private Music, 1996)
Taj Mahal, Live at Ronnie Scott's (Drg, 1996)
Taj Mahal, Senor Blues (Private Music, 1997)
Taj Mahal, In Progress & In Motion 1965-1998 (Sony, 1998)
Taj Mahal, Sacred Island [aka Hula Blues] (Private Music, 1998)
Taj Mahal, Blue Light Boogie (Hannibal, 1999)
Taj Mahal & Toumani Diabate, Kulanjan (Hannibal, 1999)
Taj Mahal, Sing A Happy Song: the Warner Recordings (Rhino Handmade,
2000)
Taj Mahal, Shoutin' In Key (Hannibal, 2000)
Taj Mahal, Hanapepe Dream (Tradition & Moderne, 2002)
![]()
Whew! Just listing his albums requires effort! Anybody named
after one of the most beautiful buildings in the world has to be special!
Born Henry Saint Clair Fredericks in 1942 Taj Mahal has produced an impressive
body of work and has maintained a reputation of one of the music world's "all
'round good guys" even amongst his ex-wives!
While studying animal husbandry at the University of Massachusetts young Henry
began to be interested in folklore and ethnomusicology. These terms make an
essentially exciting study sound dry and dull, but Henry found the excitement
there and began to play the blues at folk clubs around Boston. Moving to the
West Coast, and now calling himself Taj Mahal, he found himself playing in
an integrated blues-rock band with Ry Cooder, Gary Marker, Jesse Kincaid and
Ed Cassidy (later to move on to Spirit, and leave room for Kevin Kelley).
The Rising Sons were legendary. But their music was watered down when Terry
Melcher produced their first album and tried to turn them into a pop success.
Although recorded in 1966, The Rising Sons album was not to see the
light of day until 1992 when Taj added vocals to complete some of the tracks.
After a 30 year wait the album was both revelatory, and somewhat disappointing.
Cooder's bottleneck guitar would have been unheard of, the jazz influences
of Marker mixed with Kincaid's pop songs and Taj's blues growl...well...it's
no wonder Columbia didn't know what to do with them! They were sure no Paul
Revere & the Raiders.
The next year Columbia Records would issue the first Taj Mahal album. Simply called Taj Mahal, it simpified things by presenting what is essentially a blues record. Jesse Ed Davis played guitar, Cooder made an appearance, some of the songs from the Rising Sons were revisited, and Mr. Fredericks became Mr. Mahal for good! This sound was maintained for the second album, The Natch'l Blues, another solid collection of blues tunes. In 1968 Taj mixed things up a bit by releasing a double album with 2 titles. Giant Step/De Ole Folks At Home was basically two different approaches, in one package: one an acoustic blues album and the other another attempt at pop music. Giant Step was in fact "Take A Giant Step" which had been covered by the Monkees! Taj's version is not like that at all.
The Real Thing followed in 1971, a live double album
which showcased an experimental Taj, playing with a band of horn players.
The bass guitar was replaced by tubas! And the sound they achieved was extraordinary.
That same year Taj released a studio version of the same experiment; Happy
To Be Just Like I Am continues to be this reviewer's favorite Mahal record.
The songs are joyful, and the sound is thrilling, as Taj mixes a touch of
Caribbean rhythms with his blues! He would continue to do this in different
ways for years to come.
Recycling the Blues and Ooh So Good'n'Blues continued the tradition
of blending different rhythms with Taj's blues-based approach. He would introduce
a variety of musicians -- including the Pointer Sisters, who made their first
appearance on Recycling the Blues. Or he would simply play solo on
dobro, banjo, kalimba, or even conch. You haven't heard anything til you've
listened to a conch solo! On 1974's Mo' Roots he introduced the International
Rhythm Band, a loose group of musicians who would accompany him for many years
in one form or another. 1976's Satisfied 'n' Tickled Too marked the
end of his years with Columbia with a ragtag collection of outtakes. Even
Taj's leftovers are interesting and entertaining.
Taj celebrated 1975 with a strong and powerful collection of "West Indian
blues" now on the Warners label. He recorded three albums on Warners.
Evolution, Music Fuh Ya' and the soundtrack to a film called
Brothers. the Warners years are marked by an ebullient energy and a
brightness of sound. The three albums were re-issued [with the addition of
unreleased contemporaneous material] in a limited edition double-disc package
by Rhino-Handmade that deserves to be heard.
The next few years found Taj without a major label deal. A couple
of recordings appeared on small independent companies, some recorded direct-to-disc,
but are almost impossible to find. Taj never stopped playing though. A drummer
friend of mine backed him up at the Edmonton Folk Festival, and again at a
gig in Montreal during these years, and she has nothing but praise for his
tireless commitment to music. The two albums from the eighties were released
on the Gramavision label. Perhaps the most interesting is Mule Bone,
Taj's musical settings of a play by Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes.
It's a fantastic combination of history, poetry and music. Private Music enabled
Taj Mahal to go public once again!
Now Taj was looking for a different sound, while maintaining his own identity...he
added a real rock influence. Dancing the Blues, Phantom Blues
and Senor Blues form a trilogy of this rock'n'blues music. Music you
could dance to, but not the kind played in uptown dance clubs. No, this was
more the kind of thing you might hear in juke joints and night-clubs in New
Orleans. Taj's smokey vocals, his ringing Dobro, (or National) and a rockin'
band makes this set a triple threat. Senor Blues even won Taj his first
Grammy Award!
There are several Best of albums available, but the one I recommend
is 1998's In Progress & In Motion, which covers his career from
1965-1998. Three discs long with not a weak cut, this is the collection to
get if you don't know where to start! Of course you'll also need representation
from the Private Music years, and you'll want to hear the newer stuff too.
Blue Light Boogie (1999) is an anthology of tunes from this era, many
of which were recorded for tribute albums and other compilations.
Taj Mahal spent the '90s living in Hawaii, and there he was influenced by
the sounds of slack key guitarists, and the sweet steel, too. He made two
marvelous albums with a group he calls the Hula Blues Band. These recordings
were first available from a small German label called Tradition & Moderne,
but in 1998 Sacred Island received broader release from Private Music.
Both Sacred Island and Hanapepe Dream are easy rolling delights,
perfect for lazing around on those hot summer days; each one features originals,
blues, and covers with great picking, smoldering saxes and Taj's vocals. Taj's
other attempts at World Music include a duet recording with Toumani Diabate
(Kulanjan, 1999) and Mumtaz Mahal, recorded in 1995 with Indian
slide player Mohan Vishnu Bhatt.
The live albums are a mixed bag. From the tuba experiments of The Real
Thing, to the Intergalatical Soul Messenger recordings of the Direct-to-disc
era; from the bonus cuts of the Rhino/Handmade release to the independent
Evening of Acoustic Music, Taj always plays his best in front of an
audience. In 2000 he won his second Grammy Award for Shoutin' In Key,
an album which kicked off Taj's new millenium while at the same time summing
up his first golden era.
Where will the road take him next? No one but Henry Saint Clair Fredericks
knows. Wherever he goes, whatever new direction he takes one can be certain
that there will be blues there, and that ringing brass guitar, and those gruff
yet tuneful vocals which are his trademark. And, mark my words, there'll be
a beat to make you dance...for sure!
Visit Taj Mahal here
