TAXI

Bryan Ferry - 10 March 1993

A masterclass in moody sophistication, blending art-pop, jazz-tinged balladry and late-’80s electronic textures into a rich, cinematic whole. Crafted with meticulous attention to detail, Taxi features collaborations with some of the era’s finest musicians, including guitarist Johnny Marr (The Smiths), whose co-writing credit on the brooding lead single “The Right Stuff” brings an edgier undercurrent to Ferry’s signature style.

Tracklist

1. I Put A Spell On You
2. Will You Love Me Tomorrow
3. Answer Me
4. Just One Look
5. Rescue Me
6. All Tomorrow's Parties
7. Girl of My Best Friend
8. Amazing Grace
9. Taxi
10. Because You're Mine

DEEP DIVE

Explore additional content related to Taxi, including writing from Hal Normal, musician credits and more!

Hal Norman Essay

Six years elapsed between the release of Taxi, Bryan Ferry's eighth solo album, and his previous release, Bete Noire. It was the most protracted artistic silence of his career, and in the intervening time he had become a father again, twice over, experienced the sad passing of his mother Mary Ann (to whom the record is dedicated),released two 'Greatest Hits' collections and witnessed the dissolution of the world's largest nation state.

In spite of all this, Taxi was in fact the most swiftly realised Ferry collection since 1978'sThe Bride Stripped Bare, and proved vital to reigniting his creative energies-a further two albums would see the light of day during the next seven year stretch. To understand this paradox, one must investigate the circumstances that surround the record's creation.

After finishing the mammoth Bete Noire tour, Ferry began work on his next project, titled Horoscope. Sadly, after a significant financial and emotional toll had been taken, the nearly-completed album was rejected by Virgin records on the grounds of its' uncommercial' material, leaving the artist back at the drawing board. As a welcome respite, he quickly worked-up a cover of Elvis Presley's 'Are You Lonesome Tonight?' for the soundtrack to Andrew Bergman's film, 'Honeymoon In Vegas'. Prompted by the relative ease of this recording, and (reportedly) by the suggestion of his then-wife Lucy that he return to the 'readymades' concept of his earliest solo albums, Ferry set the Horoscope project aside in order to reconnect with his music collection.

Revitalised by the new focus, the resulting record was made in only five months, mainly at London's storied Matrix studios, using atypically stellar cast of contributors: alongside Robin Trower, who co-produced the album with Ferry (after initially being brought in to keep an eye on the Horoscope sessions), there are also notable turns fromDavid Williams, Neil Hubbard, Carleen Anderson, Steve Ferrone, Greg Phillinganes and Maceo Parker, to mention just a few.

Taxi represents the perfect confluence of Ferry's high-gloss and painstaking production and the unerringly precise and muscular playing of his session cohorts. As with those early solo albums, songs aren't so much 'covered' as converted. 'Just One Look', a Motown ballad best known for the Hollies' uptempo interpretation, here becomes sombre and reflective giving the lyric a pathos entirely absent from its forebears, with a masterful vocal performance cast against a radically reworked arrangement that makes it, to all intents and purposes, an entirely new composition.

The same can also be said of the album's opener, a moody and magisterial take on Screamin' Jay Hawkins' 'I Put A Spell On You', that finds the groove and elegance one expects from Ferry enhanced by subtle, synthetic atmospheres, giving it a sang froid that suits the vocal perfectly. These two examples foreground the album's greatest assets-Ferry's voice, and the panoramic arrangements-that elevate the songs from tribute to triumph. The vocals exude the kind of mannered cool that will be instantly familiar to fans, but in the interval between Taxi and Bete Noire Ferry found an undercurrent of warm sincerity that is deployed here to devastating effect: the 'remodel' of the Shirelles classic 'Will You Love Me Tomorrow', taken at near-funereal pace, attains its emotional power from the dignified vulnerability that the singer imbues it with, and 'Girl Of My Best Friend' shows how Ferry's experience as a singer allows him the assurance to play with the spaces around the music in a manner reminiscent of the great jazz stylists like Jimmy Scott.

-Hal Norman, 2010

Musician Credits

Bryan Ferry– lead vocals, piano, keyboards
Patrick Leonard– keyboards, synthesizers
David Gilmour– guitars
Neil Hubbard– guitars
Dann Huff– guitars
Chester Kamen– guitars
Johnny Marr– guitars
Bill Rupert– guitars
David Williams– guitars
Abraham Laboriel– bass
Marcus Miller– bass
Guy Pratt– bass
Vinnie Colaiuta– drums
Andy Newmark– drums
John Robinson– drums
Rhett Davies– drum machines
Paulinho da Costa– percussion
Jimmy Maelen– percussion
Courtney Pine– saxophone
Dan Wilensky– saxophone
Mario Abramovich– violin
José Libertella– bandoneon
Luis Stazo– bandoneon
Tawatha Agee– backing vocals
Michelle Cobbs– backing vocals
Yanick Etienne– backing vocals
Siedah Garrett– backing vocals
Paul Johnson– backing vocals
Albert Sanchez– backing vocals
Fonzi Thornton– backing vocals

Credits

Steve Jackson– Engineer
Kevin Killen– Engineer
Ian Eales– Engineer
Alan Meyerson– Mix Engineer
Bruce Lampcov– Mix Engineer
Bob Ludwig– Master Engineer
Patrick Leonard– Producer
Bryan Ferry– Producer
Chester Kamen– Producer

Official Music Video

I Put A Spell On You

Official Music Video

Will You Love Me Tomorrow

Official Music Video

The Girl Of My Best Friend