FolkWax Sittin' In With
Dulcie Taylor
The Mirrors and Windows Interview
By
Kerry Dexter

Dulcie Taylor often jokes that the
person who had the greatest influence on her music wasn't a
musician at all. "It was the ten-year-old boy who wandered up
on the porch where we were staying at the beach and sat on my
ukulele and smashed it," she recalled with a chuckle. Dulcie,
ten years old herself at the time, was crushed. Her spirits
revived when, at Christmas time, her mother gave her a guitar.
Taylor spent her early years in small town
South Carolina. You can still hear the south in her accent and
in her voice as a musician. "I think it totally
influences that. I think my music would not be what it is had
I not been born and raised there. I think it is totally who I
am as a person, in music and everything else. Growing up in a
place where you have friends whose parents are friends with
your parents, their grandparents were friends with your
grandparents...the threads go back so far," she said.
Taylor mines that circumstance for musical
and lyrical inspiration, but in her case it's focused on the
intimacy and emotion of relationships rather than historical
narrative. "Blackberry Winter," a cut on her latest release
Mirrors and Windows, frames the uncertainty of
emotional challenges with the images of changing weather in a
southern spring, while "Miracle" offers comments on hope and
connection which begin in the noisy atmosphere of a workaday
bar.
"The things that matter to me, I think,
come from having been raised in a real small community and
seeing the same people day in and day out and caring about
their stories. I would think most southern musicians would say
something similar," Taylor reflected. "It infuses everything
you think," she continued, pointing up a love for language and
literature that perhaps began with reading the Bible during
her Southern Baptist childhood. "I was brought up strictly in
the church, reading the Bible, and I think that influences who
you are, regardless of how you look at things when you get
older," she said.

Mirrors and
Windows
By Dulcie Taylor
Click Cover For More Info
Music has been a constant in Taylor's life,
and that's included listening to a variety of styles from her
childhood up until now. "Mother adored Elvis, but then
she really liked Frank and Ella, too," Taylor
recalled. "I had an older sister who was into the Beatles
and Dylan, and a cousin who was into Broadway show
tunes. There was just so much stuff around." These days, she
relishes listening to the I Pod her guitar player received as
a holiday gift. "Ooh, what a wonderful thing!" she exclaimed.
"It's like the best radio station in the world: we have
Gladys Knight, and there'll be a Dylan tune, and then
Johnny Cash, and then something by The Blur!
It's just wonderful -- I should write his parents a thank you
note for giving it to him," she said, laughing.
That strong foundation in hearing different
styles and restless curiosity to hear more shows up in
Taylor's own work. "My first record [Diamond &
Glass, which won a Washington Area Music Award for Best
Folk Album] had a bit more of a Jazz leaning, I think,
especially some of the players I chose. But this one, I think
it's solidly in the Americana camp, it's Roots / Pop/ Alt
Country," she said. That Roots Rock, along with a strong sense
of the south, comes through especially on the cut "Seaboard
Train," while "Ice Melts" is "stone Country, just pure
Country," Taylor said. "Other Side of the Bed" could work as a
Pop ballad, while the "Woman I Used to Be" adds a touch of
Blues. Taylor's got a gift for melody as well as lyric, and an
ability to match her vocal style to the atmosphere of her
lyric that make the songs, different as they are, seem like
seeing different aspects of that small town community around
each corner -- related, somehow, but a new aspect revealed at
each turn.
Taylor explains that her songs come to her
in varied ways. "Sometimes it'll be an idea, and out of that
will come maybe one line, sometimes it'll be a line in the
verse, sometimes it'll be in the chorus, and work out from
there, or sometimes I'll go backwards and get the end first,"
she said. Taylor plays guitar, dulcimer, and harmonica.
"Sometimes a song will come from playing one of the
instruments, there'll be a musical riff that'll suggest a line
of lyrics," she continued. "I'm not generally one of those
people who sits down and writes out lyrics and then puts them
to music. It comes at the same time for me."
Taylor also writes poetry and prose, though
lately she's been mainly concentrating on music. She left
South Carolina for Los Angeles and lived on the west coast for
some time until her husband's job brought her back to the
south, northern Virginia where she's now based. "Based" is the
right word, at least for now, as Taylor is touring quite a bit
behind Mirrors and Windows, sometimes headlining and
sometimes opening for artists such as Steve Forbert,
Stacey Earle, and Mark Stuart. "I enjoy being an
opening act," Taylor said. "I can headline some places, but
I'm not to the point where I can fill the bigger clubs and the
only way to do that is to build your audience. I think if
people like people like Mark and Stacey, or Steve, they'll
like my music --it's similar, but enough different that it's a
change."
Kerry Dexter is a senior contributing
editor at FolkWax. Kerry may be contacted at folkwax@visnat.com.

This Week in FolkWax:
Dulcie Taylor
- In the E-zine:
Dulcie Taylor talks with Kerry Dexter about her latest work,
Mirrors and Windows.
- On our News
Page: Ben Shabalala Passes; Peace Songs For A
Better World; Box Set Celebrates 25 Years of Fairport
Convention and Friends; Dylan Accepts Honorary Degree; New
Bedford SummerFest; More Treasures From Alan Lomax; New Willie
Album; Willie and Bob To Tour Minor League Parks; Café au Go
Go Owner Passes; This Week's Americana Top Ten; McGuinn
Honored As Hero; Burrito Deluxe and Lucinda Williams Tour
News; and much more!
- On our Front
Porch feature page: Loretta Lynn is back in a big way.
P. Kellach Waddle thought she never left! Read his thoughts on
the Coal Miner's Daughter and her latest work.
- On the Pickin'
'n' Grinnin' page: Arthur Wood reviews Susan Werner's
latest, I Can't Be New, and Kristina Olsen's In Your
Darkened Room; Kerry Dexter reviews the latest from Linda
Ronstadt and great family CD from Putamayo; P. Kellach Waddle
listens to Righteousness and Humidity from Martin
Simpson; plus reviews Sarah McLachlan's first studio album in
six years.
- One
Year Ago Today In FolkWax: Arthur Wood told us of his
adventures at Kerrville!
- Don't forget to play the Folklore
Trivia Game: Remember, everyone who plays is in the
drawing for the prize! This week's prize package is Eliza
Gilkyson's Land of Milk and Honey, courtesy of Eliza
and Red House Records; One Moment More by Mindy Smith,
courtesy of Mindy and Vanguard Records; AND Livin' Reeltime
Thinkin' Old-Time by the Reeltime Travelers. Just playing
the FolkLore Trivia Game can win you this great package. Play
now!