Information/Write-up
Anthology Vol. 2 is less a compilation than a long view of how Julian Taylor became the songwriter he is now. By placing recent solo material alongside early Staggered Crossing recordings, the album reveals a clear shift: from youthful momentum and band energy toward a more deliberate, stripped-back kind of storytelling where space, restraint, and emotional weight do more of the work.
The inclusion of ‘Hunger’ is especially telling. Sourced from Toronto cult favorites Pukka Orchestra (via songwriter Graeme Williamson), the song becomes a bridge between eras of Toronto music history — one generation handing a song to another. Taylor’s decision to record it live in England with his U.K. band gives it a raw, unpolished gravity that fits both the lyric and the larger ethos of this collection. It feels treated not as a “single,” but as a statement.
What makes Anthology Vol. 2 compelling is how it frames collaboration and evolution without turning either into marketing hooks. Appearances by artists like Jim James, Allison Russell, and Jim Cuddy don’t overwhelm the narrative — they underline it. These are not guest spots for visibility; they reflect Taylor’s long-standing place in a wider roots, folk, and soul conversation that extends well beyond Toronto.
By pairing the urgency of Staggered Crossing with the reflective depth of his solo years, Taylor effectively documents his own shift from motion to meaning. The anthology doesn’t try to define a “peak period.” Instead, it presents a career shaped by consistency, conscience, and a growing comfort with letting songs breathe.
Rather than functioning as a summary, Anthology Vol. 2 reads like a roadmap — showing where Taylor came from, how he arrived here, and why his voice continues to matter in Canadian songwriting culture.
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