Artist's albums
Homage
1995 · album
It's A Matter Of Pride
1994 · album
I Wish I Knew How: "Music Keep Us Young"
2022 · single
Music Keeps Us Young
2022 · album
Lover Come Back To Me (Music Keeps Us Young)
2022 · single
Wouldn't It Be Loverly (Music Keeps Us Young)
2022 · single
Arkadia Blues (Music Keeps Us Young)
2022 · single
Interlude
2022 · single
Taylor Made
2021 · album
Musicale Du Jour
2021 · album
Ten Fingers, One Voice
2021 · album
Joy Spring
2021 · single
A Touch of Taylor
2020 · album
At The London House
2011 · album
Live at MCG
2007 · album
The Billy Taylor Touch
2005 · album
OK Billy!
1970 · album
Separate Keyboards
1955 · compilation
One For Fun
1959 · album
Similar artists
Elmo Hope
Artist
Hank Jones
Artist
Junior Mance
Artist
Phineas Newborn Jr.
Artist
Kenny Drew Trio
Artist
Red Garland
Artist
Oscar Pettiford
Artist
Red Garland Trio
Artist
Benny Green
Artist
Barry Harris
Artist
Tommy Flanagan Trio
Artist
Wynton Kelly
Artist
Ray Bryant
Artist
Kenny Drew
Artist
Hampton Hawes
Artist
Tommy Flanagan
Artist
Cedar Walton
Artist
John Lewis
Artist
Jaki Byard
Artist
George Shearing
Artist
Biography
Billy Taylor was an amazingly articulate spokesman for jazz, and his profiles on CBS' Sunday Morning television program (where he was a regular beginning in 1981) were so successful at introducing jazz to a wider audience, that sometimes one could forget what a talented pianist he was for over half-a-century. While not an innovator, Taylor was flexible enough to play swing, bop, and more advanced styles while always retaining his own musical personality. After graduating from Virginia State College in 1942, he moved to New York and played with such major musicians as Ben Webster, Eddie South, Stuff Smith (with whom he recorded in 1944), and Slam Stewart, among others. In 1951, he was the house pianist at Birdland and soon afterward formed his first of many trios. He helped found the Jazzmobile in 1965. In 1969 he became the first Black band director for a network television series (The David Frost Show). He earned his doctorate at the University of Massachusetts in 1975 and founded and served as director for the popular radio program Jazz Alive. Despite his activities in jazz education, Taylor was rarely absent from performances and recordings, always keeping his bop-based style consistently swinging and fresh. He died of heart failure in New York on December 28, 2010, at the age of 89. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi