Copperline

Album: New Moon Shine (1991)
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Songfacts®:

  • Copperline is an area near Chapel Hill in North Carolina where James Taylor grew up, and the song is a nostalgic look back at his childhood, complete with a mention of his dog, Hercules. Taylor visited Copperline before he wrote the song, and discovered that pre-fabricated homes had popped up in the area, destroying its charm. He sings about this in the lyrics, "I tried to go back, as if I could, all spec houses and plywood, tore up and tore up good."
  • Morgan Creek, which Taylor mentions in the song, is on Morgan Creek Road, where Taylor's childhood home was located. In 2003, the Morgan Creek Bridge was renamed the "James Taylor Bridge" in a ceremony celebrating the singer.
  • Taylor wrote this song with Reynolds Price, who was a professor of English at Duke University, and also a playwright, author and lyricist. Taylor met Price when he worked on the score for a 1982 PBS production of a play Price wrote, and the two became friends. The two wrote "Copperline" when Price was visiting Taylor's home in Connecticut. Price died on January 20, 2011 at age 77.
  • Speaking with Rolling Stone in 2015, Taylor said: "This is another song about home, about my father, about a childhood that was very peaceful, which is a rare thing today. I felt like I was part of a landscape in those days - the trees, the streams and the rivers, the animals that lived there."

Comments: 6

  • Sally Gilmore from Joplin, MissouriYou can't get any better than James Taylor. He is the greatest!!!!!
  • Bill Morris from Kansas City Or ThereaboutsThis song is in my regular set list, and is always well received by the audience.
  • Tommy C from Los Angeles, CaLove this song because it could well have been said about my home in the hills of West Virginia. The coal mining, the farming, and the familiarity of a quiet, peaceful hillbilly community among the rivers and streams, shacks that were HOME to so many of us. Appalachia! Live Forever! I’m longing for home again!
  • Jim from Oh….and the angels sigh
  • Frankd from Reseda, CaGreat song and maybe another lyric in Sandy's comments. The farms and ranches of our childhood are all covered with asphalt and concrete now.
  • Sandy from Enterprise, FlOne of my all-time faves. How cool that JT wrote an evocative song about something so many of us feel, but never gets said. How many people re-visit their childhood home, only to find it "tore up, tore up good?" Ah, progress in America! More shopping malls, more subdivisions, more roads, more 7-11s, more of everything but less open space, less childhood play, less water, less woods, less peace, less quiet. All in the name of "growth." Which simply means, political greed.
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