Music
The best kept secret in music
Press
This band has no press
Discography
1970 Livingston Taylor Capricorn
1971 Liv Capricorn
1973 Over the Rainbow Capricorn
1978 Three Way Mirror Epic
1979 Echoes Capricorn
1980 Man's Best Friend Epic
1988 Life Is Good Critique
1991 Our Turn to Dance Vanguard
1993 3-Way Mirror Epic
1993 Good Friends Chesky
1996 Bicycle COBA
1997 Ink Chesky
1998 Carolina Day: The Collection (1970-1980)
Razor & Tie
2003 Ink [Bonus Track] Chesky
Photos
Feeling a bit camera shy
Bio
Livingston Taylor's career as a professional musician has rattled along for over thirty years.
He has toured-some might say, perpetually-with such major artists as Linda Ronstadt, Jimmy Buffett, Fleetwood Mac, and Jethro Tull.
He has recorded eleven albums, and currently maintains a performing schedule of more than a hundred shows a year, which include club, theater, college, and full symphony repertoire.
A strong television background includes hosting a daily syndicated pop music show This Week's Music for Viacom plus the occasional soap-opera cameo (reporter Sam Cocharan on the now-defunct soap Texas).
Now a full professor, Livingston has lectured regularly at the Berklee College of Music in Boston since 1985 and has taught a performance course there since 1989. The concept, and much of the inspiration, for Stage Performance come from those classes.
Born in Boston in 1950 and raised in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Livingston is the fourth of five children of Isaac and Trudy Taylor. He was sixteen when he moved back to Boston to finish high school. "Barely," he says, noting that the next year he began performing in the Boston coffeehouse circuit.
At eighteen he met Jon Landau, who later became Bruce Springsteen's producer and manager. It was Landau who produced Livingston's first recording in Macon, Georgia, for Atlantic Records when he was nineteen.
Livingston has written most of his music repertoire, including such Top Forty hits as "I Will Be in Love with You" and "I'll Come Running"; and for his brother James, "I Can Dream of You," "Going Round One More Time," and "Boatman" (off the double Grammy-winning album Hourglass). In 1988 he received the Boston Music Award for outstanding folk artist.
He is the author of two children's stories, Pajamas and Can I Be Good? Both were published by Harcourt Brace.
Describing himself as a pop singer, Livingston also includes his guitar, piano, and five-string banjo in most of his performances. "It's no mean feat, making a living as a professional musician for thirty years," he says. No mean feat. But to do it with style-ah, there's the beauty.
Livingston is currently Artist-in-Residence at Harvard University
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