Dulcie Taylor releases the visuals for her single titled ‘Halfway To Jesus’
California is one of the most beautiful places in the world. But because of climate change, itโs also one of the most threatened. Wildfires, droughts, landslides, animal extinctions, heat waves: all of these have been worsened by the global environmental crisis. As people in power continue to sit on their hands, itโs been left to other people to sound the alarm. Artists are increasingly adding their voices to the mix.
The celebrated Americana singer-songwriter Dulcie Taylor resides in Atascadero, a quintessentially Californian city thatโs almost exactly midway between the major population centers of Los Angeles and San Francisco. Sheโs got a pretty good view of the entire Golden State, and sheโs worried about what sheโs seeing. And when Dulcie Taylor is moved by something, itโs a safe bet that sheโs going to raise her voice about it.
โHalfway To Jesusโ is Taylorโs message to the globe. In the song, the singer asks us to confront the destructive consequences of our appetites before itโs too late. Sheโs no stranger to topical songs โ she has often tackled tough subjects with uncommonly direct language. โWhen the Cherokee Roamedโ, a standout from her prior set Wind Over Stone, was both an expression of compassion for Native Americans and a challenge for those of us who now share this continent with them. Yet sheโs never sounded quite as urgent, or as passionate, as she does here.
Taylor has the musical skills to back up her fiery arguments. Her vocals radiate toughness and sensitivity in equal measure, her writing is sophisticated but always approachable, and sheโs magnificent on the guitar and dulcimer. Her YouTube channel has now reached over 1.2 million views and rising! Most recently, she released the album Better Part Of Me, her seventh overall and sixth on Mesa / Bluemoon Recordings. Deep Roots said of Better Part Of Me, โThis level of craftsmanship and soulfulness simply doesnโt come along too often these days.โ
The clip for โHalfway To Jesusโ opens, appropriately, with a storm. Taylor shows us images with which weโve all become far too familiar: flooded neighborhoods, hurricane-wrecked coastal cities, glaciers melting, fires on forested hillsides. If โthousand-yearโ catastrophes now happen every year, how much more will the devastation accelerate? Taylor herself sings and strums her dulcimer in a field of fire-blackened tree stumps. Itโs an arresting site, and one that suggests encroaching peril. The singerโs seriousness throughout is evident โ but she does tip her cap to California governor Jerry Brown, who has been outspoken in his advocacy of action against climate change. When he speaks, Taylorโs video suggests, we ought to listen.






















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