Julian Taylor


Biography Julian Taylor



Julian Taylor
After 25 years in music, building an unimpeachable reputation as a truly independent artist and entrepreneur, Julian Taylor now owns his legacy. From the formative rock of Staggered Crossing to the genre fusion of Julian Taylor Band, and now his revered work as a solo singer-songwriter, Julian owns the right to it all and it couldn’t have happened at a better time.

It’s rare in this era to see an artist build slowly and reach a new level of widespread acclaim two decades into their career. But Julian’s ethos, work ethic, and artistry has always had a timeless quality to it. And so, he’s built things slowly in a DIY fashion, withstanding highs and lows along the way, ultimately reaching the peak of his powers with his latest solo work. Fans and critics have noticed, granting Julian the Solo Artist of the Year honour at the Canadian Folk Music Awards (and nomination in the English Songwriter category), plus two Juno Award nominations in 2021, as well as a Polaris Music Prize nomination.

Growing up in Toronto on a combination of soul music, hip-hop, blues, and Americana along with ‘90s alternative, Julian was still a teenager when he co-founded the alt-rock band Staggered Crossing in 1996. Within three years, the band signed a publishing deal with industry icon Frank Davies and a record deal with a major label, Warner Music Canada.

Staggered Crossing’s self-titled debut album was released in 2001 and instantly earned Julian his first hit song. “Further Again,” was one of the most played songs on Canadian rock radio in the early 2000s and remains a signature tune of the era in Julian’s home country. It, along with second single “A Million Works of Art," established Julian and Staggered Crossing as rock artists with infectious pop sensibilities.

“It was a really cool experience touring and having the whole juggernaut working for us. And we had management, we had a publisher, we had a record company, we had an agent, and off to the races we went — and we were pretty young,” Julian says now. But the early 2000s were a turbulent time for the music business and things veered into a different direction for Staggered Crossing despite early major label success.

The band parted ways with their label after the release of their first album, Julian founded Bent Penny Records to release Staggered Crossing’s next album — developing his DIY, entrepreneurial muscles that have carried him throughout his career ever since.

“I didn't really know what to do, so I started to learn how to operate throughout the business and became not only a musician, but a business person and a label guy,” he says.

Staggered Crossing’s sophomore record, Last Summer When We Were Famous, was released in 2002. It was produced by late multi-instrumentalist Jay Bennett, whose band, Wilco, has had a lasting influence on Julian.

“I think that the most cohesive and most interesting Staggered Crossing record to listen to was probably Last Summer When We Were Famous. It's a cool grunge record; it’s a little punky,” he adds.

The Staggered Crossing’s third and final LP was 2004’s Burgundy & Blue. “It was kind of an amalgamation of the previous two albums. I was finally getting quite good at producing and also quite good at the business side of music,” Julian recalls. “I was doing radio promotion, as well, for the band. I called every radio station in Canada every week. Jeremy [Elliot, drummer,] was the tour manager, Dan [Black, bassist,] was trying to do press, and Dave [Marshall, guitarist] was doing finances. So, we all learned how to do the whole business together. In fact, one of the songs on that record, ‘Perfect Prize,’ I ended up getting it into the top-20 on Canadian radio by myself as a radio plugger. It was the highest-charting independent rock song of the year in 2005, which not a lot of people know.”

In 2007 Staggered Crossing split up, leaving Julian and the rest of the band feeling burnt out and fed up with the music business. “We needed to sort of try to save each other's lives. Unfortunately, it didn't completely work. We lost one member down the road. I think everybody was pretty depressed and beat up by the music industry, so some people just decided that they would do other things, and we all really did,” Julian says.

For Julian, that meant stepping back completely from commercial music and working a bunch of bar gigs. At one bar, Dora Keogh in Toronto’s Danforth neighbourhood, Julian started an open stage night that fostered a close-knit music community in the city. It became a regular drop-in spot for well-known Canadian artists like Kim Mitchell, Big Sugar, Ron Hynes, and even international bands coming through the city on tour.“I think that, for me, it did save my life. It gave me a newfound perspective and love for music later on,” Julian says of these years away from the music industry.

Following the dissolution of Staggered Crossing, many of the songs Julian had left from those years appeared on two low-key solo releases, Black Tape Levy and Absence of the Sun. The former is not available on streaming services but now that Julian owns all his songs, he’s considering making it available. “I may just release it under the name Blank Tape Levy because it sounds so different from ‘Julian Taylor.’ It sounds more like Staggered Crossing,” he explains, while Absence of the Sun is an interesting preview of the acoustic sound that would propel him to greater stardom years later.

Meanwhile, during his under-the-radar years — working bars, running the open stage, and playing in a covers band — Julian was crafting the new songs that would form his first big post-Staggered Crossing release, 2014’s Tech Noir by the Julian Taylor Band. The eponymous band name wasn’t necessarily intentional for the new project (it’s the name they used when playing covers at weddings and such), but when the song “Never Gonna Give You Up” leaked out and became a radio hit, they were stuck with it.

Tech Noir was a hit with fans and critics and established the band’s sound — a skillful merging of rock and roll, funk, pop, and R&B. For proof of Julian Taylor Band’s irresistibly infectious sound, and Julian’s ability at writing a great pop hook when he wants, just listen to “Why Would You Do That.”

The second LP from Julian Taylor Band, Desert Star, was released in 2015 on Aporia Records. “We wanted a little bit more recognition at the time,” Julian says. “I really try hard to make the first song and the last song all stand out. I don't like any throwaway stuff…. and for Desert Star to come out with 22 songs and there not to be a real throwaway on it. Maybe some people would disagree, but most people actually don't. They say that this is a solid record from start to finish… I wouldn't say that it's flawless, because that's not true, but it's just a really great effort.”

When Tech Noir and Desert Star were surprisingly left out of the Juno Awards nominations (Canada’s version of the Grammy or Brit Awards), Julian felt it was because the band’s sound was hard to categorize. As such, when writing and recording 2019’s standout album, Avalanche, his focus was on making a cohesive, consistent record. “I like jumping around a lot, so Avalanche was the first real time I said, ‘I'm gonna try to really focus and just stay in one lane as best as I can.’”

After all, from his earliest demos in the late ‘90s through Staggered Crossing and Julian Taylor Band, acoustic songs were featured throughout and every song began with Julian writing on an acoustic guitar or piano. And Avalanche, in many ways, is the first in a trilogy of deeply-personal roots albums. “’Sweeter’ is a lot of people's favourite song at live shows. Once you get into that record, sonically it sounds really cool because it’s a live band playing. That, as well, is happening more than the next two records,” he says.

That brings us to the big breakout — 2020’s The Ridge. Though written and recorded before the pandemic, it was the balm for the soul that so many needed that year. Through the most personal songwriting and soulful singing of his career, Julian found a whole new audience that fell in love with him. Really, it’s rare for an artist to have a major critical and commercial breakthrough two decades into their professional career, but then again, it’s also rare to make an album that resonates with listeners like The Ridge did. It earned Julian his first two Juno Award nominations (Indigenous Artist or Group of the Year and Contemporary Roots Album of the Year), along with a Canadian Folk Music Awards for Solo Artist and nomination for English Songwriter of the Year, five Native American Music Award nominations, plus a nomination for Canada’s most prestigious music accolade, the Polaris Music Prize .

“I was making up for lost time,” he said simply when talking to the CBC in 2021 after receiving the Juno Award nominations.

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