Country Road

Album: Sweet Baby James (1970)
Charted: 37
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Songfacts®:

  • "Country Road" is, at first glance, a simple little tune about taking a walk. But in that wonderfully James Taylor-esque way, it's actually about much more: freedom, solitude, the quiet pull of nature, and even a brush with the divine.
  • Taylor released "Country Road" as the third single from Sweet Baby James, an album that helped turn him into the gentle troubadour of introspective folk-rock that we know and love today.
  • Sail on home to Jesus
    Won't you, good girls and boys?
    I'm all in pieces
    You can have your own choice
    But I can hear a heavenly band full of angels
    And they're comin' to set me free


    There's a spiritual undercurrent here. "I have a very strong spiritual need," Taylor once said. "And getting into nature is going to church for me."

    For him, a walk through the woods was less about stretching his legs and more about reconnecting with the grand, breathing thing that is the planet. He saw nature as something alive, something sacred.
  • The song was inspired by a real road: Somerset Street in Belmont, Massachusetts, which ran near McLean Hospital, where Taylor had spent time being treated for depression in 1965. It was a quiet, wooded stretch that seemed tailor-made (Taylor-made?) for contemplation.
  • Taylor's longtime friend and guitarist Danny Kortchmar says when James playing "Country Road" for him, it instantly reminded him of their hitchhiking days on Martha's Vineyard. "It really captured the feeling of that," Kortchmar told Uncut magazine. "Such a great song, very evocative."
  • The whole Sweet Baby James album has that evocative quality thanks in part to producer Peter Asher, who wisely decided that Taylor's voice, a guitar, and a bit of space were all the album really needed. This approach let Taylor's themes of solitude and freedom breathe.
  • "Country Road" isn't the only Taylor song that celebrates wandering alone with one's thoughts. There's "Carolina In My Mind" (1968), which is practically a love letter to nostalgia and a longing for peaceful solitude. "Sweet Baby James" (1970) reflects on the simple joy of traveling solo, and "Walking Man" (1974), inspired by Taylor's own father, is about the deep-rooted freedom of those who prefer to walk their own path - sometimes literally.

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