The rewards remain timeless: every home should have one....
Carole King - Tapestry
"Long ago, I reached for you and there you stood,
Holding you again could only do me good
How I wish I could
But you're so far away"
'So Far Away' - Carole King
If there was ever an album so full of yearning and trying to reach something just beyond reach, then Tapestry would be there or thereabouts.
I first remember hearing the song 'So Far Away' when I was a kid, on the radio in late summer after being back at school for a week after a long 6 week summer holiday. It held me captivated and still does today, like a strange moment of deja-vu every time I heard it from then on and even now today.
Carole Kings voice, almost straining, touches an emotional wave, when she sings, "If I could only work this life out my way".
Often classed as a classic break up song but certainly packing an emotional punch way above its weight, it often works on so many levels. Like staring out the window at school, wishing I was back home, school report reads, "often prone to daydreaming"...well that just suited me fine.
I'd already heard the Aretha Franklin version of Natural Woman, and the James Taylor version of You've Got A Friend. The Shirelles version of Will You Love Me Tommorrow. All radio friendly classics. What I didn't know at the time was that Carole King was the songwriter of those and many more earlier songs I heard growing up including, 'Up On The Roof' by The Drifters to 'Pleasant Valley Sunday' by The Monkeys.
Tapestry in a way is like finding the source, the creative spark as it were, being a mixture of songs some previously recorded by other artists as mentioned earlier. Sometimes it feels as though the curtains are being drawn back revealing a great songwriter playing the piano as the performers out at the front of the stage interpret her songs in the limelight. Well now was the time to shine; upon its release Tapestry revealed the songwriter in a glorious light to the wider world and was acknowledged as the arrival of a major solo recording artist.
"I never felt confident enough to perform my own songs", Carole King recited in interviews about her early career, even after working as a songwriter in the famous Brill building with in particular Gerry Goffin. If you listen closely you can still hear the nervousness and a vulnerability as she sings, which add to her performances on Tapestry. Admittedly a shy person who veered away from public performance, who took some coaxing from in particular James Taylor and her producer Lou Adler to be in the limelight herself and become a solo artist. This was alluded to in the title of her debut solo album, entitled 'Writer' released the previous year. However it wasn't until Tapestry that everything seemed to come together and such is the continued success and love for the album that it continues to be a career highlight.
It's a great gift and a credit to her natural song writing skills on the album that many of the songs can still be imagined being performed by other artists, even though Carole King herself performs them with so much emotion and feeling. Listening now again to the gospel feel of 'Way Over Yonder', with its slow expressive space for improvising vocalisations further would suit many a powerful soul...Ruby Turner, Etta James, Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Janis Joplin spring to mind.
"Way over yonder
Is a place that I know
Where I can find shelter
From a hunger and cold"
Another now classic song, 'It's Too Late', was of course covered by many at the time, including The Supremes. One of the key things about Carole King's songs is that they have such depth to give freedom of expression to further interpretations by others. This explains how successful a songwriter she was previously with Gerry Goffin in her Brill Building days which was such a solid foundation to blossom and flourish in her own right which came to a beautiful fruition on Tapestry.
The album itself seems to encapsulate much of that particular moment in the early seventies singer/songwriter era but with resolute timelessness, becoming such a huge influence on so so many; on the song 'Home Again', who can fail to imagine hearing the warm, sweet vocals of Norah Jones for example. Tori Amos, Judie Sill, Kate Bush, Regina Spektor, Fiona Apple, Alicia Keys... the list goes ever on of the artists who've been illuminated by the work of Carole King. In fact I can imagine that it almost was a key factor in many of these incredible artists learning piano and starting to write songs for themselves in the first place. What more of a recommendation can you give than that.
Tapestry holds a key to unlock a world that cries out to those who may feel alone or lonely to remember the love inside themselves.
"Your as beautiful as you feel"
sings Carole King on the song 'Beautiful'.
A reminder then; and in this day and age, more so than ever; that beauty itself is much more powerful within.









