March 9, 1970 The N. C. Essay Page 2 * D TeprinW CoVombia. Syex-VauVo^ James Taylor has a new album: it's on Warner Brothers and it's called Sweet Baby James. Very impor tant in and of itself, this album proves that there is a new, sig nificant talent in the realm of folk-rock. The first James Taylor album is also notable as a forerunner of Abbey Road. Paul McCartney was involved in the production of this album and it shows. In the musi cal bridges between songs, one glimpses the developing Beatle notion of an album side as an organ ic piece of music. This concept and its execution are, of course, what makes side two of Abbey Road a rock milestone. James Taylor subsequently left Apple, both for administrative and artistic reasons. He had not been signed to a regular contract and had trouble getting back into the studio to record his second album. Perhaps more importantly, Taylor differed with the organic production concept which implies, at bottom, a lot of production and planning. This, of course, does not mean that Taylor is against all that is organic and integrated. He evi dently felt that idea that the music in a song should relate integrally to the music in the next song was a conception not especially suited to folk-rock, or at least not to James Taylor music. There is, very definitely, a subject coherence which pervades this album. The album's title. Sweet Baby JameSy is no accident or whim. What is contained inside the jacket is a personal testament. Careful con sideration of the album will reveal James Taylor's outlook on life, poli tics, loneliness, emotional in volvement, alienation, as well as all those things that I didn't see. There are references to the ideas of others involved in making the'music we roughly refer to as rock. In short, there is an incredible amount happening on this record. The album opens with the title song, Sueet Baby James. We find James out in the country, alone by choice: "Deep greens and blues are the colors I choose." Which is to say that he chooses the pastoral setting and he chooses to be alone. The line "Good night you mooij light ladies" has, actually two objects; the cattle which had just been bedded down and the companionship James misses. His mind is in both places. Lo and Behold follows. The phrase "Down in my dreams" is repeated from the first song. It becomes apparent that he has set himself apart to thinking things out. "You can't kill for Jesus" harkens back to Dylan's With God On Out Side. Even if you're on the "right" side, killing isn't justi fied. The implicit question is this: What good is the revolution if we become, in the process, as human istically bankrupt as the establish ment? Taylor says "everyone's talking 'bout the gospel story, some shall sink and some shall rise." This refers to thinking and songs (such as The Times They ave a Changin’) which cataclysmically conceptualizes salvation as arriving through the clash of two groups. But if you wait for this sort of salvation, it'll be a "long time till it gets to you baby." The song Sunny Skies injects the thought that just keeping to oneself isn't necessarily a good thing, lest one think James antisocial. Unless social isolation is used to get one's head together, it can lead to lone liness and wasting away one's time. The song closes with the line "Wonder ing if where I've been is worth the things I've been through." Are lone liness revelations worth having been alone? Streamroller starts out as an acoustic blues. The first verse is about the counter culture's aspir ations concerning this society. "I'm going to inject your soul with rock 'n roll and shoot you full of rhythm 'n blues." The acoustic guitar becomes almost obscured, how ever, as the song moves into the following two verses, which deal with the destructiveness and inhuman- The Molly Maguires was a secret terrorist group dedicated to the over throw of the white society that ruled Pennsylvania's anthracite pits in the late nineteenth century. The Mollies were white by birth - Irish Catholic immigrants - but colored by trade. With coal dust on their faces and coal dust in their lungs, they played in a grisly underground minstrel show and wore flickering footlight on their caps. Contemporary parallels immediately suggest themselves, not only the most obvious ones with the Black Panthers, say, but parallels between slum life then and now, niggerhood then and now. And the more you reflect on these parallels, the more you regret the glum clumsiness of the drama. Writer Walter Bernstein and director Martin Ritt have centered their story on an informer (Richard Harris) who's hired by management to infiltrate the Mollies and finger their chief militants. The battle- lines are clear, and the clarity is useful enough until it becomes the ity which this society had dedicated its technology. And the youth culture is told "if I can't have your love, won't be nothing left behind." The therapy of travelling is the theme of Country Road, which recalls much of the work of Jerry Jeff Walker. Travelling, in the minds of both these song writers, can help to make clear which are your own thoughts and which you've borrowed slavishly from others. It can make clearer who you are and who you're not. "Sail on home to Jesus won't you good girls and boys" again raises the theme of }Jith God On Our. Side, this time warning the counter culture against it. In contrast, James is "all in pieces" - uncertain, self-analyzing, self-criticizing. You must choose which path to take, but as for James, he can feel in which direction his salvation lies. A very refreshing and very brief version of Stephen Foster's Oh Susanna closes the first side. One sees it in a new light, as an illustration of what the previous song was saying. Side two opens with Fire and Rain, which is a rather nice title for a song about a love which was deemed very important and is now (Cont. on page Z) I monotony of an unacknowledged moral ity play that culminates on Harris's Judas coming to Sean Connery's Christ for an absolution. Social consciousness is one thing. Social self-consciousness is another, and this movie is painfully aware of its own didactic self. Yet Harris plays the spy remarkably well as a hoarse, knowing volunteer who's down on his luck and his self - esteem. Samantha Eggar's work is attractive and intelligent as his girl. Connery gives a strong, re strained performance as the Mollies' leader, and Frank Finlay's company police captain is the perfect picture of a man whose sould has gone out. Ritt has done well by his limited dra matic material, and he and cinema tographer James Wong Howe have utilized their elaborate pictorial material: the bleak faces in the mole tunnels, the clattering carts of a freight roller coaster, the simmer ing green of trees in the grey town. It's not a successful movie, but in its darkly handsome way it sometimes looks like one. _ ' F'rom JjniSt