Jesse Taylor
Biography
Best-remembered as the ferocious lead guitarist behind country maverick Joe Ely, Jesse Taylor was born in Lubbock, Texas, in 1950. Inspired by local boy-made-good Buddy Holly, he began playing guitar as an adolescent and by age 15 was serving in Jimmie Dale Gilmore's first group, the T. Nickel House Band. After pursuing a career as a Golden Gloves boxer, Taylor channeled all of his energies into music, becoming the first white act to earn a residency at Lubbock's renowned Stubbs Bar-B-Q. He joined Ely in time for the singer/songwriter's self-titled 1977 debut LP, a cult classic bettered by its follow-up, Honky Tonk Masquerade. While commercial country radio wanted nothing to do with these albums, Ely won much acclaim from rock & roll audiences and critics, and while touring the U.K. in support of Merle Haggard, he and Taylor befriended the legendary punk band the Clash, whom they supported on the road in 1979. Taylor's visceral, live-wire guitar work made an enormous impression on the Clash's punk audience, and a London gig later formed the basis of the 1980 concert LP Live Shots. Taylor nevertheless exited Ely's ranks two years later, settling in Austin and collaborating with Billy Joe Shaver, Butch Hancock, and Townes Van Zandt. During a stint in substance abuse rehabilitation, he also began painting, and in subsequent years was the subject of several gallery exhibits. Taylor released his first solo LP, Texas Tattoo, in 1998. South Side Guitars, a project with fellow guitarist John X. Reed, followed in 2001. Taylor died from complications of hepatitis C and cirrhosis on March 7, 2006. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
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