Coming Up: "Hurdy Gurdy Songs - Words & Music By Donovan 1965-1971"

Out from Ace Records on June 4. Order from Amazon.

Details:

The latest in Ace Records’ popular Songwriters series is a kaleidoscopic trip into the craft of one of the most covered and influential artists of the 60s. The body of work he wrote and recorded during the golden period we celebrate on “Hurdy Gurdy Songs” has become one of the most critically and commercially successful of the era, and continues to attract new listeners and demand reappraisal; proof that Donovan – the psychedelic minstrel whose records coloured the late 60s pop landscape – was one of a kind. 

Painted by the pop press as a knock-off Dylan during his mid-60s breakthrough, Donovan could easily have contented himself with that opening brace of transatlantic hit singles, ‘Catch The Wind’ and ‘Colours’. Instead he began a startling reinvention that saw the Woody Guthrie and Ramblin’ Jack Elliott stylings jettisoned in favour of a poetic, experimental ideology inspired by his embrace of Zen Buddhism, esoteric writing and the burgeoning drug culture.  

What followed was a flood of songs that mirrored the kaleidoscopic thinking of the times. In December 1965, he recorded ‘Sunshine Superman’ at Abbey Road under the tutelage of producer Mickie Most, utilising a crack band of UK session players. The template had been set and would prove to be a winning formula that birthed five studio albums and 10 hit singles over the next four years. His esoteric new agenda increased his appeal and success instantly. His songs began attracting cover versions from every corner of the music world. High-profile folk artists, rock bands and pop acts plundered his catalogue with glee.  

His popularity soared in 1967, particularly in the US where the “Sunshine Superman” and “Mellow Yellow” albums were released in their intended form. UK listeners had to wait until the hybrid “Sunshine Superman” set to hear key Donovan recordings such as ‘Season Of The Witch’, ‘Celeste’ and ‘Young Girl Blues’ for the first time. A prolific writer, he gifted a number of songs to other artists: ‘You Just Gotta Know My Mind’ and ‘Snakeskin’ appear on our collection and serve to illustrate the widespread appeal of his material to female interpreters as diverse as Eartha Kitt, Peggy Lipton and Bridget St John.  

Donovan’s whirlwind journey through the second half of the 60s left him beaten and bruised but the music he created ­– in which the eclectic influences of pop, spirituality, poetry, magic and the spirit of the age found their way into these unique and enduring songs – continues to thrill and beguile today.  

Track list:

  1. Museum - Herman's Hermits
  2. Superlungs - Terry Reid
  3. Sunny Goodge Street - Tom Northcott
  4. The Pebble And The Man - Bridget St John
  5. Sunshine Superman - The Standells
  6. Hurdy Gurdy Man - Eartha Kitt
  7. Young Girl Blues - Marianne Faithfull
  8. Poor Cow - Noel Harrison
  9. Celeste - Paul Jones
  10. Season Of The Witch - Lou Rawls
  11. Translove Airways (Fat Angel) - Big Jim Sullivan
  12. You Just Gotta Know My Mind - Dana Gillespie
  13. Oh Gosh - Sandie Shaw
  14. There Is A Mountain - Dandy
  15. Try And Catch The Wind - The Gosdin Brothers
  16. Skip-A-Long Sam - The Sugar Shoppe
  17. Snakeskin - Julie Felix
  18. Hey Gyp (Dig The Slowness) - Keith Shields
  19. Three King Fishers - Gábor Szabó
  20. Hampstead Incident - Bojoura
  21. Wear Your Love Like Heaven - Peggy Lipton
  22. Jennifer Juniper - The Sandpipers
  23. Legend Of A Girl Child Linda - Joan Baez with Judy Collins & Mimi Fariña
  24. Laleña - Deep Purple

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