
Tapestry is a Folk album by Carole King, originally released in 1971. On Gatefold: 442 pressings tracked, owned by 131 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Folk
- Singer-Songwriter
- warm
- earnest
- confessional
About
<b>100 Best Albums</b> It would all sound trite, if it weren’t so true: In the late 1960s, a seasoned professional New York songsmith moves to Laurel Canyon, finds her voice in a whole new way, and emerges with one of the biggest records of the 1970s. That’s the shorthand history behind Carole King’s 1971 hit <i>Tapestry</i>, an iconic entry in the canon of genre-agnostic singer-songwriters, and the album that marked the dawning of King’s second act. Working alongside like-minded West Coast artists James Taylor and Joni Mitchell, the hitmaking singer narrowed her scope, stripping down and getting personal as a songwriter and a performer—and, in doing so, creating a timeless standard for confessional expression. In a decade dominated by monolithic pop albums, <i>Tapestry</i> became one of the biggest, eventually selling more than 14 million copies. Even before the album’s release, King had helped reshape American pop music as a songwriter, her work often speaking for women as a group: She articulated previously masked vulnerability on The Shirelles’ “Will You Love Me Tomorrow,” and expressed daring, earthy sensuality on Aretha Franklin’s “(You Make Me Feel Like) a Natural Woman.” But on <i>Tapestry</i>, her second album as a soloist, King reclaims those songs, using them to tell her own story along with a slew of new compositions. Her previous hits had been co-written with her ex-husband, Gerry Goffin, but on <i>Tapestry</i>, King accepted one new songwriting collaborator: Toni Stern, who provided lyrics for “It’s Too Late” and “Where You Lead.” Besides Stern’s sterling contributions, King centered her own words, voice, and piano-playing. And throughout <i>Tapestry</i>, her gutting honesty and earnest optimism are channeled with the easy fluency of a veteran pop songwriter. Individually, the songs have long since been woven into pop music’s unconscious: “I Feel The Earth Move” became an instant R&B classic; “You’ve Got A Friend” remains a somehow-never-saccharine pledge of loyalty; and “It’s Too Late” is the break-up anthem to end all break-up anthems. Together, they weave a <i>Tapestry</i> about the power of vulnerability, one that King performs with unflinching and carefree power, wrapping everything in an unpretentious and lovely musical package.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
Side A
- A1I Feel The Earth Move2:57
- A2So Far Away3:55
- A3It's Too Late3:51
- A4Home Again2:27
- A5Beautiful3:05
- A6Way Over Yonder4:42
Side B
- B1You've Got A Friend5:07
- B2Where You Lead3:18
- B3Will You Love Me Tomorrow?4:10
- B4Smackwater Jack3:39
- B5Tapestry3:11
- B6(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman3:47
Credits
Performers
- Danny KortchmarACOUSTIC GUITAR CONGAS ELECTRIC GUITAR
- James TaylorACOUSTIC GUITAR ELECTRIC GUITAR BACKING VOCALS
- Carole KingBACKING VOCALS KEYBOARDS PIANO
- Julia TillmanBACKING VOCALS
- Merry ClaytonBACKING VOCALS
- The Mitchell/Taylor Boy & Girl ChoirBACKING VOCALS
- Curtis AmyBARITONE SAXOPHONE FLUTE SOPRANO SAXOPHONE
- Charles LarkeyBASS ELECTRIC BASS ELECTRIC GUITAR
- Perry SteinbergBASS CONTRABASS STRINGS
- Terry KingCELLO STRINGS
- Joel O'BrienDRUMS
- Russ KunkelDRUMS
- Ralph SchuckettELECTRIC PIANO ELECTRIC GUITAR KEYBOARDS
- David CampbellVIOLA STRINGS
- Barry SocherVIOLIN STRINGS
- Julia Tillman WatersBACKING VOCALS
- Joni MitchellBACKING VOCALS VOCALS
- Gerry GoffinVOCALS
131 collectors on Gatefold own this · 442 pressings tracked on Gatefold
