NEW YORK — Something happens when James Taylor covers a song. It gets all James Taylor-y.
"People often tell me, 'It sounds like you wrote that song' or 'That sounds like a James Taylor song.' And that's because basically it's been translated into my language," the singer-songwriter told The Associated Press in an interview this week.
"Not all songs work in my language, but the ones that do — if they're interesting or worthy of being recut — it's because it's nice to hear them in James Taylor."
Fans are getting more classics translated into James Taylor on Friday with the digital release of three songs — "Over The Rainbow" from "The Wizard of Oz," "I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face" from "My Fair Lady" and "Never Never Land" from "Peter Pan."
The trio of tunes never made it to Taylor's "American Standard" album earlier this year, which contained such covers as "Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat" and "God Bless the Child." Instead of leaning on a piano, they are guitar-led reinterpretations, often wistful and airy.
Taylor, 72, says he was intimately familiar with the songs picked for the album and new EP, having first heard many of them from his parents' record collection growing up in North Carolina.
"I'd just try them on for size," he says. "It was so easy and natural to pick up an instrument and start learning songs and reinterpreting songs and developing a sort of a simple guitar technique."
The new batch of songs lean heavily on Broadway musicals, like the songwriting teams Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II, as well as Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner. "I think they had a profound effect on my songwriting. They basically are my teachers," says Taylor.