For other uses, see Donovan (disambiguation).
| Donovan |

|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
Donovan Phillips Leitch |
| Born |
May 10, 1946 (1946-05-10) (age 61)
Glasgow,
Scotland,
U.K. |
| Genre(s) |
Folk-rock, Psychedelic
pop, British Invasion |
| Occupation(s) |
Musician, Songwriter, Producer |
| Instrument(s) |
Voice, Harmonica, Guitar, Piano |
| Years active |
1965-Present |
Donovan (Donovan Philips Leitch,
born May
10, 1946, in
Maryhill,
Glasgow)
is a Scottish
singer, songwriter, and guitarist.
Emerging from the British folk scene, he developed an eclectic and
distinctive style that blended folk, jazz, pop, psychedelia
and world
music.
|
Contents
- 1 Career
outline
- 2 Early
Life and Career
- 3 A
Star is Born
- 4 Collaboration
with Mickie Most
- 5 Sunshine
Superman
- 6 Drug
Bust
- 7 International
Success, 1967–69
- 8 The
Split with Most, and Later Career
- 9 Discography
- 9.1 Albums
- 9.2 Singles
- 9.3 Compilations
- 9.3.1 1960s
- 9.3.2 1970s
- 9.3.3 1980s
- 9.3.4 1990s
- 9.3.5 2000s
- 9.4 Unreleased
albums
- 9.5 Tribute
albums
- 9.6 Covers
- 10 Filmography
- 10.1 Actor
- 10.2 As
himself
- 10.3 Composer
- 10.4 Music
DVD
- 10.5 Television
appearances
- 11 Trivia
- 12 External
links
|
Career outline
Donovan came to fame in the United Kingdom in early 1965 with
a series of showcase live performances on the pop TV series Ready
Steady Go! and his popularity soon spread to
the USA and other countries. After signing with the British label Pye
Records he began a long and successful collaboration with leading
independent record producer Mickie
Most, scoring a string of major hits in the UK, the USA and other
countries, including several British and American Number 1 hits and
million-selling records.
Donovan was one of the most popular British recording artists
of his day, producing a series of hit albums and singles between 1965
and 1970. He became a close friend of many leading pop musicians
including Joan
Baez, Brian
Jones, and The Beatles, and was one of
the few artists to collaborate on songs with the Beatles. He influenced
both John
Lennon and George Harrison when he
taught them his finger-picking guitar style in 1968.
Donovan's commercial fortunes waned after he parted ways with Mickie
Most in 1969, and he left the music scene for a time.
He continued to perform and record sporadically in the 1970s
and 1980s, but gradually fell from favour. His gentle musical style and
hippie
image was scorned by critics, especially after the advent of punk rock.
Donovan withdrew from performing and recording several times during his
long career, but he underwent a strong revival of interest in the 1990s
with the emergence of the rave scene in Britain. Late in the decade he
recorded a successful album with acclaimed producer and long time fan Rick Rubin
and released a new album, Beat Cafe, in 2004.
Early Life and Career
Donovan grew up in Maryhill, Glasgow, Scotland. He contracted polio as a child
when he was vaccinated (this was in the period before the introduction
of the safer Sabin
oral vaccine),
and the disease and subsequent treatment left him with a limp.
In 1956 his family moved to Hatfield, England.
Influenced by his family's love for Scottish and English folk music, he began playing guitar at
fourteen. He enrolled in art school but dropped out soon after,
determined to live out his Beatnik aspirations by going out on the
road. He spent the summer of 1964 in the small town of St
Ives in Cornwall,
often sleeping rough. It was here that he met his lifelong friend David
"Gypsy Dave" Mills (Gyp Mills) , and it was during
this crucial period that he began busking (street performing) and learning traditional
folk songs on the guitar.
Returning to London, he spent several months playing in local
clubs, absorbing the music of the British folk scene around his home in
St
Albans, learning the cross-picking guitar technique from
visiting players like Bert Jansch and Derroll
Adams, and writing his first original songs.
In late 1964 he was offered a management and
publishing contract. He went to London where he recorded a ten-track demo tape
(recently rediscovered and released on iTunes), which included the original
recording of "Catch The Wind", his first
single. That song revealed the influence of Woody
Guthrie and Ramblin' Jack Elliott, who had
also influenced Bob Dylan. Although Dylan comparisons
followed him for some time, the tape also made it clear that Donovan
was already a performer of considerable skill and originality. He is a
very fine acoustic guitarist and
self-accompanist, a talent that is often overlooked.
Other significant influences in his formative years included Jesse
Fuller, Derroll Adams and British guitarists Mac
MacLeod, Bert
Jansch, John Renbourn and Davey
Graham, and American blues and jazz artists including Muddy
Waters, Leadbelly
and Billie
Holiday. In an interview with KFOK radio on June 14, 2005,
MacLeod stated "...the press were fond of calling Donovan a 'Dylan
Clone' as they had both been influenced by the same sources: Ramblin'
Jack, Jesse Fuller, Woody Guthrie and many more."
While recording the demo at a studio in Denmark Street,
Donovan met and befriended Brian Jones of The Rolling Stones, who
was recording in a nearby studio. Coincidentally, he had also recently
met Jones's ex-girlfriend, Linda Lawrence. (She had already had a son
by Jones, but when she met Donovan her relationship with Jones was
effectively over.) Donovan and Jones became close friends and their
relationship lasted until Jones' untimely death in 1969.
The meeting between Linda and Donovan was pivotal. They began
an 'on-again-off' romantic relationship that carried on sporadically
for the next five years, and exerted a huge influence on Donovan's
music. Linda refused to marry Donovan, and moved to America for several
years in the late 1960s. Although he had other relationships in between
— one of which resulted in the birth of his first two children, Donovan
Leitch Jr and Ione Skye Leitch — he remained
strongly drawn to Linda, and she effectively became his muse. His confused
feelings about her inspired dozens of songs, including "Catch The
Wind", "Legend Of A Girl Child Linda", "Season Of The Witch", and many
others.
A Star is Born
Donovan had a meteoric rise to stardom. Within weeks of
recording his demo tape, it was heard by Elkan Allen, producer
of the pop show Ready Steady Go!,
who was so impressed that he invited the unknown 18-year-old to appear
on the show. Donovan made his television debut on 30 January
1965 — a
remarkable feat, considering that he had been a penniless vagrant only
months before. Unusual for pop programmes of this time, where
performers typically lip-synched to a pre-recorded backing
track, Donovan played and sang live. His performance was so well
received that he appeared weekly until the end of April, and
immediately afterwards he was signed to a recording contract with Pye
Records, whose other major pop acts included The
Kinks and Petula Clark.
Donovan's first UK single, a new version of "Catch The Wind",
was released soon after his third TV appearance. It was a successful
debut, rising to No. 4 on the UK charts and selling more than 200,000
copies. On 11
April, he performed with the biggest stars of the day at the annual New
Musical Express poll winners' concert at the Empire
Pool in Wembley.
The single was subsequently released on the small Hickory label in the
USA, where it achieved an impressive No. 30 chart placing.
Donovan's early musical style and dress style (including a
cloth cap) led to him being perceived and promoted as a British version
of Bob Dylan, a perception no doubt enhanced by the slogan emblazoned
on his guitar "This Machine Kills", which was a shortened version of
the famous slogan on Woody Guthrie's guitar, "This Machine
Kills Fascists".
The Dylan connection brought a certain degree of criticism
from folk music purists, some of whom assumed him to be merely a Dylan
imitator. His meeting with Joan Baez during his first UK tour led to
a meeting with Dylan himself, and not surprisingly, that meeting in
April 1965
made headlines. Dylan was intrigued by the young musician, as can be
seen in D.A. Pennebaker's film of Dylan's
1965 UK tour, Don't Look Back
(released in 1967); they became friends and met on many other occasions.
Donovan's second single, "Colours" was released in May 1965,
reaching No. 4 in the UK, accompanied by his debut LP for Pye, What's Bin Did and
What's Bin Hid, which reached No. 3 in the UK
album charts. Retitled Catch the Wind
for the US market, it reached No. 30 there. He made his first trip to
the US at this time, performing in New York with Pete
Seeger and Reverend Gary Davis, and
appearing on The Ed Sullivan Show,
Hullabaloo
and Shindig!,
as well as performing to critical and audience acclaim at the July 1965
Newport Folk Festival.
The compilation Universal
Soldier
Donovan's next recording was a four-track EP called Universal
Soldier, which included his classic cover of the Buffy
Sainte-Marie-written title track, as well as three other tracks with
overt anti-war
content. Two of those songs -- "The War Drags On" and "Ballad Of A
Crystal Man" -- were among the few protest songs of the period that went
beyond generalized anti-war sentiments and made explicit references to
the war
in Vietnam. (In the U.S., it was Phil Ochs, rather than the better known
Bob Dylan, who stood out in that regard.) This was a radical move for
an emerging pop performer. Donovan's pioneering pacifist
stance is often overlooked by his critics: the Vietnam War still had
majority support in 1965, and he was one of the few British pop
musicians who expressed direct opposition to the war in their music.
Despite the contentious subject matter, the EP was a commercial
success, topping the British EP chart for eight weeks, reaching No. 14
on the British singles chart and No. 17 on the Australian
singles chart.
"Colours" was also released in the US, but it charted poorly,
reaching No. 40 on the Cash
Box charts but only No. 61 on the Billboard
chart. At this stage Donovan had greater success in sales than in radio
airplay, since American Top 40 radio tended to avoid folk recordings,
preferring more highly arranged pop records. The Catch the Wind
LP set the pattern for most of his American releases, which tended to
chart better in Cash Box than Billboard, reflecting the fact that
Billboard's charts factored in radio airplay, whilst Cash Box did not.
A single version of "Universal Soldier" was issued in the US
in late August 1965 and it repeated the mediocre chart performance of
"Colours", reaching only No. 45 in Cash Box and No. 53 in Billboard.
Pye released Donovan's second UK album, Fairytale,
in October 1965, along with his next single, "Turquoise". These too
were less successful than his previous releases, with the album only
reaching No. 20 and the single peaking at No. 30. Donovan made a second
US tour in November, and Pye licensed this to the Nashville-based
Hickory label, which released the American version of Fairytale
later that month. As in the UK, it charted much lower than the first
LP, reaching only No. 85.
Collaboration with Mickie Most
In late 1965, Donovan split with his original managers and
signed with Ashley Kozak, who was working for Brian
Epstein's NEMS Enterprises. Kozak introduced
Donovan to American impresario Allen Klein (who would later take over
management of The Rolling Stones and The
Beatles). Klein in turn introduced Donovan to producer Mickie
Most, who was then riding high on the success of his chart-topping
productions with The Animals, Lulu
and Herman's Hermits.
Mickie Most was the nominal producer of almost all of
Donovan's best recordings, although Donovan asserts in his
autobiography that some of his recordings in this period were
self-produced, with little or no input from Most. The tracks they cut
together represent some of the finest UK pop releases of the period,
and feature the cream of the London session scene, including Big
Jim Sullivan, Jack Bruce, Danny
Thompson, and future Led Zeppelin members John Paul Jones
and Jimmy
Page. Many of these recordings were backed by jazz musicians,
the most regular players being Danny
Thompson (from Pentangle) or Spike Heatley on
upright bass, Tony
Carr on drums and congas,
John
Cameron on piano and Harold McNair on saxophone and flute.
Carr's conga style and McNair's distinctive flute playing are an
intrinsic feature of many of Donovan's recordings, and both players
toured the US with Donovan.
It has been claimed that Donovan introduced Page and Jones to
each other and that this essentially created Led Zeppelin. in fact,
Jones and Page had already known each other for several years since
they were at the time two of the top freelance studio musicians in
London. They worked on literally hundreds of well known British
recordings in that period, until Page retired from session work in 1968
to join The Yardbirds. Donovan has
stated that the 'heavier' sound of his 1968 single "Hurdy
Gurdy Man" had a definite influence on Page and Jones, although it is
now generally accepted that the duo's work on the Jeff
Beck single "Beck's Bolero" (with drummer Keith
Moon) was the genesis of the Led Zeppelin style. Contradicting an
assertion in Donovan's 2005 autobiography that three of the four future
Zeppelin members (Page, Jones and Bonham) played on the track "Hurdy
Gurdy Man" -- John Paul Jones has stated that neither Page nor Bonham
played on that track. In 2005, Jones (who arranged the track and was
Musical Director for the session) identified the full line-up on that
session as: Donovan - Acoustic Guitar. Alan
Parker- Lead (electric) Guitar. John Paul Jones - Bass Guitar. Clem
Cattini - Drums. (Cattini has concurred with Jones'
recollection.)
Sunshine Superman
By 1966 Donovan had shed the overt Dylan/Guthrie influences
and become one of the first British pop musicians to adopt a "flower
power" image. More importantly, his music was developing and changing
rapidly as he immersed himself in jazz, blues, Eastern music, and the new generation
of US West Coast bands
such as Jefferson Airplane and The
Grateful Dead. He was now entering his most creative and original phase
as a songwriter and recording artist, working in close collaboration
with Mickie Most and especially with arranger, musician and jazz fan John
Cameron.
Their first collaboration was the track "Sunshine Superman". One of
the first overtly psychedelic pop records, it was an
innovative and eclectic blend of folk, rock, pop and jazz. The
arrangement was augmented by prominent harpsichord,
and set against a funky conga-driven backbeat. It also contained
subtle, but unmistakable, references to LSD — notably, the line, "I could've tripped out
easy, but I've changed my ways".
Donovan's rapid rise stalled temporarily in December 1965,
when Billboard
broke news of the impending production deal between Klein, Most and
Donovan, and then reported that Donovan was about to sign with CBS
Records in the U.S. Despite Kozak's strenuous denials, Pye Records
abruptly dropped the new single from their release schedule, and a
contractual dispute ensued. As a result of this dispute, Donovan's
subsequent UK and US record releases differed markedly, with most of
his LPs being released in different forms on either side of the
Atlantic; several significant album tracks from the late sixties were
simply not available in the UK for many years.
The legal dispute continued into early 1966. During the hiatus
Donovan holidayed in Greece, where he wrote the wistful song,
"Writer In The Sun", which was inspired by the rumours that his
recording career was over. He also toured the USA, playing some lightly
attended gigs. He returned to London, collaborating with The Beatles
and contributing lyrics (and uncredited backing vocals) to the song "Yellow Submarine", recorded
at Abbey Road Studios on 26 May 1966.
By late 1966 the American contractual problems had been
resolved, and Donovan signed a $100,000 deal with the CBS subsidiary Epic
Records. Donovan and Most went to CBS Studios in Los Angeles, where they
recorded the tracks for a new LP, much of which had been formulated and
composed during the preceding year. Although folk elements were still
prominent, the album showed the increasing influence of jazz, American
west coast psychedelia, and folk rock, especially The Byrds,
whose records Donovan had been listening to constantly throughout 1965.
The LP sessions were completed in May and "Sunshine Superman"
was released in the US as a single in June. It was a huge success,
providing Donovan with a crucial American chart breakthrough, selling
800,000 copies in just six weeks and eventually reaching No. 1. The LP
followed in August, preceded by advance orders of 250,000 copies, and
it reached No. 11 on the US album charts.
The US version of the Sunshine Superman LP
is probably the best, most consistent and durable of Donovan's albums;
it remains one of the keynote records of the psychedelic era. It
features some of Donovan's strongest material, showcased in restrained
but imaginative chamber-style folk-jazz arrangements.
It also features an eclectic range of instruments including acoustic
bass, sitar,
saxophone, tablas and congas, harpsichord, strings and oboe. Highlights
include the swinging "The Fat Angel", which (Donovan's book confirms)
was written for "Mama" Cass Elliott of The Mamas And The Papas. The
song is also notable for name checking, the cult, San
Francisco, acid
rock band Jefferson Airplane, well before
they became known internationally. Other notable tracks include "Bert's
Blues", (a tribute to his mentor Bert Jansch), the stately "Gueneviere"
and "Legend Of A Girl Child Linda", an innovative track featuring
voice, acoustic guitar and a small orchestra, and which runs for over
six minutes.
The album is also probably the first pop recording to feature
extensive use of the sitar,
which was played by American folk singer Shawn
Phillips. Donovan had met Phillips in London in 1965 and Phillips
became a close friend and an important early collaborator, playing
acoustic guitar and sitar on several major recordings including the Sunshine
Superman album, as well as accompanying Donovan at numerous
concerts.
In contrast to the pastoral tone of the rest of the album,
several songs, including the title track, had a decidedly harder edge.
The driving, jazzy "The Trip" was titled after the L.A. club of the
same name; chronicling an LSD
trip he took during his time in L.A., it was loaded with references to
Donovan's sojourn on the West Coast, and name-checked both Dylan and
Baez. The third "heavy" song, destined to become one of his most
enduring recordings, was a brooding and portentous number called
"Season Of The Witch". Recorded with a mixture of American and British
session players, it features Donovan's first recorded performance on
electric guitar. The song was covered by Brian
Auger on his first LP in 1967, and Al Kooper and Stephen
Stills recorded an 11-minute version of the song on the classic 1968
album Super Session. Donovan's version is also
heard in the closing sequence of the Gus
Van Sant film To Die For.
Because of contractual problems the album was not released in
the UK for another nine months, and then in an altered form — it had a
different track order and omitted three important tracks, "The Fat
Angel", "The Trip" and "Ferris Wheel", replacing them with "Hampstead
Incident", "Young Girl Blues", "Writer In The Sun" and "Sand And Foam".
On 24
October 1966 Epic released the rollicking, brass-laden single "Mellow
Yellow", arranged by John Paul Jones
and purportedly featuring Paul McCartney on
uncredited backing vocals. It was rumoured that the phrase "electrical
banana" referred to the practice of smoking banana peels to get high,
(see Berkeley
Barb, perhaps because of this song). The phrase has also been
considered to be a coded reference to a vibrator. Another line in the
song that has caused speculation about its meaning is "I'm just mad
about Fourteen", and in the version heard on the 1968 In
Concert album, he sings, "I'm just mad about fourteen year
old girls; they're mad about me."
The song became Donovan's signature tune and was a huge commercial
success—it reached No. 2 in Billboard, No. 3 in Cash Box and earned a
gold record award for sales of more than one million copies in the US.
During the first half of 1967 Donovan worked on an ambitious
double-album studio project, which he produced himself. In January he
gave a major concert at the Royal Albert Hall accompanied by a
ballerina who danced during a twelve minute performance of the song
"Golden Apples". On 14 January New
Musical Express reported that he was to write incidental music for a
National Theatre production of As
You Like It, but did not come to fruition. His
version of "Under the Greenwood Tree" did appear on "A Gift From A
Flower To A Garden".
Later that month Epic released a new LP, Mellow
Yellow, which reached #14 in the album charts, and a new
non-album single, "Epistle To Dippy", a Top 20 hit in the US. Written
in the form of an open letter to an old school friend, the song had a
strong pacifist sub-text, in spite of its florid psychedelic imagery.
The real "Dippy" was at the time serving in the British
Army in Malaysia.
According to Brian Hogg, who wrote the liner notes for the Donovan
boxed set Troubadour, Dippy heard the song,
contacted Donovan and left the army as a result.
On 9
February 1967 Donovan was one of the guests invited by The Beatles to
join them at Abbey Road Studios for the final orchestral overdub
session for the Lennon-McCartney collaboration "A
Day in the Life", the grand finale to their new opus Sgt. Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band.
Drug Bust
In mid-1966 (evidently some time prior to June 11, when the
case was reported in the press), Donovan became the first high-profile
British pop star to be arrested for possession of marijuana.
Donovan's drug use appears to have been moderate, and was mostly
restricted to pot smoking — with occasional use of LSD and mescaline.
Although he was not indulging on the scale of friends like John
Lennon, Jimi Hendrix, and Brian
Jones, his use of LSD is referred to in many of his lyrics,
including "The Trip", "Sunshine Superman", "Wear your love like
heaven", "Epistle To Dippy", and "Hurdy-Gurdy Man".
Public attention was first drawn to his marijuana use by the
TV documentary A Boy Called Donovan, broadcast in
early 1966, which showed the singer and some friends smoking cannabis at a
party thrown by the film crew. However it now appears that the Drug
Squad were already planning to target many major British pop stars, and
indeed Donovan's arrest proved to be merely the first in a long series
of high-profile busts, including members of The
Beatles and The Rolling Stones.
Donovan's drug arrest garnered a great deal of publicity, and in early
1967, Donovan was the subject of an expose by the British tabloid News
of the World.
According to Donovan's autobiography, the article was based on
an unauthorised interview given by an ex-girlfriend of his closest
friend, Gypsy Davy. It was the first instalment of a three-part series
"Drugs & Pop Stars - Facts That Will Shock You". Although some
claims were probably true, others were completely false. The most
notorious instance was that of the News Of The World
reporter who claimed to have spent an entire evening with Mick
Jagger, who (he alleged) openly discussed his drug use and
offered drugs to his companions. Only after publication was it
discovered that the reporter had actually mistaken Brian Jones for
Jagger, who promptly sued the paper.
Among the other supposed revelations were claims that Donovan
and other leading pop stars including members of The Who,
Cream,
The Rolling Stones and The
Moody Blues regularly smoked marijuana, used other illicit
drugs, and held parties where the recently banned hallucinogen LSD was
used, specifically naming The Who's Pete
Townshend and Cream's Ginger Baker as LSD users.
It emerged later that the News Of The World
reporters were using their access to pop stars to gather information
and then pass it on to the police. In the late 1990s, an article
published in The Guardian revealed that it was News
Of The World reporters who had alerted the police about the party at
Keith Richards' house, Redlands, which was raided in the early hours of
12
February 1967, just after George Harrison and his
wife Pattie
Boyd had left.
Although Donovan's bust was not as sensational as the later
arrests of Jagger and Richards, it had one unfortunate outcome: because
of the charges, he was refused entry to the U.S. until late in 1967,
and thus was unable to perform at the Monterey
International Pop Festival in June of that year.
International Success, 1967–69
In July Epic released the single "There Is A Mountain", which
went Top Ten in the US and was later used as the basis for The
Allman Brothers monumental Mountain Jam. In September he embarked
on a tour of the US. Donovan was backed by a small jazz group and
accompanied by his father, who introduced the show.
Later that month Epic released Donovan's fifth album, an
ambitious 2-disc set entitled A Gift from a
Flower to a Garden, one of the first rock music
boxed sets, and only the third pop-rock double album ever released. It
was split thematically into two halves. The first record, subtitled "Wear Your Love
Like Heaven", was written for the people of his generation that would
one day be parents; the second, subtitled "For
Little Ones", was a collection of songs Donovan had written especially
for the coming generation. Worried that it might be a poor seller, Epic
boss Clive
Davis insisted that the albums be split and sold separately in the USA,
but his fears were unfounded -— although it took some time, the boxed
set sold steadily, eventually peaking at #19 on US album chart and
achieving gold record status in the US in early 1970.
The psychedelic and mystical overtones of the work were
unmistakable -- the front cover (photographed at Bodiam
Castle) featured an infra-red photograph by
psychedelic album cover photographer Karl Ferris of Donovan dressed in a robe
holding flowers and peacock feathers, while the back cover photo by
Ferris showed him holding hands with Indian guru Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi. Surprisingly, the liner notes included an appeal from
Donovan for young people to give up the use of all drugs—a decidedly
'un-hip' stance for a rock musician at the height of the Summer
of Love. His early public disavowal of drugs was no doubt motivated in
part by his drug bust, but he was (and remains) strongly opposed to
hard drugs— a belief that was no doubt reinforced by the rapid physical
and mental decline of his friend Brian Jones.
In late 1967 Donovan contributed several songs to the
soundtrack of the Ken Loach film Poor Cow.
The title track (Originally called "Poor Love") was released as the
B-side of his next single, "Jennifer Juniper", a song inspired by Jenny
Boyd, sister of George Harrison's wife Pattie
Boyd. It was another Top 40 hit in the USA.
Like The Beatles, Donovan developed a strong interest in
eastern mysticism, and in early 1968 he travelled to India where he spent
several weeks at the ashram of the Maharishi in Rishikesh.
The visit gained worldwide media attention thanks to the presence of
(for a time) all four Beatles as well as Beach Boys
lead singer Mike
Love, actress Mia Farrow and her sister Prudence (who
inspired John Lennon to write "Dear Prudence"). According to a 1968
Paul McCartney interview with Radio Luxembourg [1] it was during this time that
Donovan taught John Lennon and Paul McCartney various finger picking
styles like the claw hammer (note that in the UK Travis Picking by Merle
Travis is often referred to as claw hammer) which he had learned from
his St Albans buddy Mac MacLeod. Lennon went on to use the
technique on songs including "Julia" and McCartney with "Blackbird".
His next single was released in May 1968, the swirling
psychedelic "The Hurdy Gurdy Man". In the liner notes from EMI's
reissues it is revealed that the song was originally intended for
Donovan's old friend and guitar mentor Mac
MacLeod, who had a heavy rock band called Hurdy
Gurdy. After hearing MacLeod's power trio version, Donovan considered
giving it to Jimi Hendrix, but when Mickie Most heard it, he convinced
Donovan that the song was a sure fire single that he should record.
Donovan tried to get Hendrix to play on the recording, but was on tour
and unavailable. Jimmy Page was also considered to play on the track
but he was out of the country touring with The Yardbirds. They then
brought in a brilliant young British guitarist, Alan
Parker. It is possible Jimmy Page did play on other tracking sessions
for the Hurdy Gurdy Man LP, although not on the
title track. John Paul Jones played bass with Clem Cattini on drums.
Jones and Page have stated that Led Zeppelin was formed during the
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" sessions.
The heavier sound of "Hurdy Gurdy Man" was a deliberate
attempt by Most and Donovan to reach a wider audience in the US, where
the new hard rock sounds of groups like Cream
and The Jimi Hendrix
Experience were having a major impact. In this case Most's commercial
instincts were spot-on, and the song became one of Donovan's biggest
hits, going to Top 5 in both the UK and the US, and Top 10 in Australia.
The same month, he recorded an even rockier single, the
snarling, funky, freakbeat classic "Goo Goo Barabajagal", a song which
gained him an avid following on the rave scene decades later. This time
he was backed by the original incarnation of The Jeff
Beck Group, featuring Beck on lead guitar, Ron Wood on
bass, Nicky Hopkins on piano and Micky
Waller on drums.
The Beck group was under contract to Most at the time, and it
was Most's idea to team them with Donovan in an attempt to bring a
heavier sound to Donovan's work, while also introducing a more lyrical
edge to Beck's. These recordings languished for quite some time. The
two tracks cut with the Beck Group— ("Barabajagal" and the single's
eventual B-side "Trudi") —plus three others, "Happiness Runs",
"Superlungs (My Supergirl)", and "Where Is She?", were shelved for
almost a year.
In July 1968, Epic released Donovan in Concert,
the recording of his Anaheim concert in September 1967. Featuring a
cover painting by Fleur Cowles, it is notable for its long running
time, its mellow jazzy feel and excellent sound, with Donovan being one
of the first major pop artists of his era to release a live LP. Among
the tracks (which include only two of his big hits) is "Epistle To
Derroll", a tribute to one of his formative influences, Derroll Adams,
as well as lengthy versions of "Young Girl Blues" and "The Pebble And
The Man", a song later reworked and retitled as "Happiness Runs".
During the summer of 1968 Donovan worked on a second LP of
children's songs, subsequently released as the double album HMS
Donovan. In September Epic released a new
single, "Lalena", a subdued acoustic ballad which reached the low 30s
in the US charts. The album The
Hurdy Gurdy Man followed; it continued the
style of the Mellow Yellow
LP and reached a creditable No. 20 in America, despite containing
several earlier hits including the title track and "Jennifer Juniper".
After another US tour in the autumn he again collaborated with
Paul McCartney, who was producing Post Card, the
debut LP by recently discovered Welsh singing sensation Mary
Hopkin. Hopkin covered three Donovan songs: "Lord Of The Reedy River",
"Happiness Runs" and "Voyage of the Moon". McCartney returned the
favour by playing tambourine and singing backing vocals on Donovan's
next single, the anthemic "Atlantis", which was released in
Britain (with "I Love My Shirt" as the B-side) in late November and
reached No. 23.
Early in 1969 the comedy film If It's Tuesday It
Must Be Belgium featured music by Donovan. On January 20,
Epic released the single, "To Susan On The West Coast Waiting", with
"Atlantis" as the B-side. The A-side, a gentle calypso-styled
song contained yet another pointed anti-war message, but still became a
moderate Top 40 US hit. However, when DJs in America and Australia
flipped it and began playing "Atlantis" heavily, that song became a
major hit, achieving the Top Ten in both countries in spite of its
subject matter, its lengthy spoken introduction and its running time of
five minutes. Ironically, the gentle "Atlantis" formed the musical
backdrop to what is arguably the most violent scene in Martin
Scorsese's ultra-violent Goodfellas. "Atlantis" received a low-key
revival in 2000 when Donovan performed a retooled version of the song
in an episode of Futurama
titled "The Deep South" (2ACV12) which first aired on 16 April of
that year. In the remake, Donovan describes the Lost City of Atlanta featured
in the episode.
In March 1969 (too soon to include "Atlantis" on the album)
Epic and Pye released Donovan's Greatest Hits,
which included several songs previously only available as
singles—"Epistle To Dippy", "There Is A Mountain" and "Lalena", as well
as "Colours" and "Catch The Wind", which had been unavailable to Epic
because of Donovan's contractual problems. It became the most
successful album of his career— and reached #4 in the US, and became a
million-selling gold record and stayed on the Billboard album chart for
more than a year.
In July Donovan performed at the famous Rolling Stones free
concert in Hyde Park, London, which was
in part a memorial to his old friend, Brian Jones, who had died only
days before. Also that month the long-delayed "Barabajagal" single was
released, reaching No. 12 in the UK but charting less strongly in the
US. The Barabajagal album followed in August,
reaching No. 23 in America.
The Split with Most, and Later
Career
Growing tension between Mickie Most and Donovan came to a head
in late 1969 when they argued about the conduct of a recording session
in Los Angeles. Most later explained that he had objected to
"hangers-on" in the studio and "a lot of goings-on that I didn't like"
and he gave Donovan an ultimatum— he was paying for the session, and
Donovan could either do it his way or take a walk. Donovan declared
that he wanted to record with someone else, and their successful
partnership came to an abrupt end. They would not work together again
until 1973's Cosmic Wheels.
After the rift Donovan disappeared, apparently to Greece,
re-emerging six months later to begin work on his next LP. The eventual
result, which was both titled and credited to Open Road,
came out in late 1970 and was a marked departure from his earlier work.
Stripping the sound back to a rock trio format, he dubbed the sound
"Celtic rock". The album was moderately successful but it marked the
start of a gradual decline in his popularity and commercial success,
and his concert appearances became increasingly rare.
The largely self-produced children's album HMS
Donovan was released in 1971 but failed to gain a wide
audience. It was followed in early 1973 by his reunion with Mickie
Most, the LP Cosmic Wheels. It was to be his last
major chart success, reaching the Top 40 in both America and Britain.
Later in the year he released Essence To Essence,
produced by Andrew Loog Oldham, and a live
album recorded in Japan, which featured an extended version of "Hurdy
Gurdy Man" that included an additional verse written by George
Harrison. Donovan also performed vocals on the Alice
Cooper song "Billion Dollar Babies".
Donovan's later output included the albums 7-Tease
(1974) and Slow Down World (1976). The 1978 LP Donovan
reunited him for the last time with Mickie Most but was not well
received at the height of the New Wave period. It was followed by Neutronica
(1980), Love Is Only Feeling (1981), Lady
Of The Stars (1984), and a 1990 live album featuring new
performances of his classic songs. In 1977, Donovan toured as the
opening act for the band Yes during their summer tour of
the USA following the release of their Going
for the One Album.
The punk era (1977-1980) had provoked a backlash in Britain
against the optimism and whimsy of the hippy era, of which Donovan was
considered a prime example. The word "hippy" became a pejorative and
Donovan's fortunes with the public and the media suffered in the
prevailing mood.
There was a brief respite for Donovan when he appeared
alongside many of the biggest artists of the era (including Sting,
Phil
Collins, Bob Geldof - and two 1960s stalwarts
whose popularity had sustained -- Eric
Clapton and Jeff Beck) in the Amnesty
International benefit show The Secret
Policeman's Other Ball. Donovan was accompanied
by favourite bass player Danny Thompson and
performed several of his biggest hits including Sunshine
Superman, Mellow Yellow, Colours,
Universal Soldier and Catch The Wind.
He also featured in the line-up of the all-star performance of Dylan's I
Shall Be Released for the show's finale. Donovan's
performances were seen and heard worldwide on the resulting album and
movie, released in 1982. The film captured one particular incident that
relayed Donovan's determination and good humour. His initial appearance
on the stage prompted one audience member to bellow "I
thought you were dead!", to which Donovan responded "Not
yet!". The audience's reaction to Donovan's rejoinder, as
witnessed in the film, was proof that he still enjoyed popularity
despite the anti-1960s sentiments of the time.
Sony's definitive 2-CD boxed set Troubadour
(1992) continued the restoration of his reputation, and was followed by
the long overdue 1994 release of Four Donovan Originals,
which saw his four classic Epic LPs released on CD in their original
form for the first time in the UK. He found a seemingly unlikely ally
in rap producer and Def Jam label owner Rick Rubin, who was in
fact a long-time fan. Rubin financed and produced Donovan's critically
acclaimed 1996 album Sutras.
Donovan also provided songs for the 1972 film The
Pied Piper, in which he also played the title
role, and for Brother Sun, Sister Moon
(1973), Franco Zeffirelli's film about St
Francis of Assisi. The title song from the Zeffirelli film provided
Donovan with an unexpected publishing windfall in 1974 when it was
covered as the B-side of the million-selling US Top 5 hit "The Lord's
Prayer", by Australia's
singing nun, Sister
Janet Mead.
Donovan and Linda have two children together, Astrella Celeste
(http://www.astrella-celeste.com)
and Oriole Nebula. Donovan previously had two children with his 1960s
American girlfriend Enid Stulberger, and both have become actors: his
namesake son, Donovan Leitch, Jr. (a cast
member of the medical drama E.R.) and his daughter,
Ione
Skye.
A new album Beat Café was
released on Appleseed Records in 2004. It marked a return to the jazzy
sound of some of his 1960s recordings and featured bassist, Danny
Thompson, and drummer, Jim Keltner, with production by John
Chelew (Blind Boys Of Alabama).
In November 2003, Donovan was awarded an honorary degree of
Doctor of Letters from the University of
Hertfordshire. He was co-nominated by his old friend and mentor, Mac
MacLeod.
In May 2004, Donovan played "Sunshine Superman" at the
pre-wedding concert for the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Denmark.
A tribute album to Donovan, Island
of Circles, was released by Nettwerk in
1991.
Donovan has also released his early demo tapes Sixty
Four and a re-recording of the Brother Sun, Sister
Moon soundtrack on iTunes.
Donovan playing in Washington D.C. January 2007 photo: Gene Carl Feldman
A major set of his Mickie Most albums was released on 9 May 2005. This EMI set has
dozens of extra tracks including another song recorded with the Jeff
Beck Group. In 2005 his autobiography The Hurdy Gurdy Man
was published.
In May/June 2005 Donovan toured the UK (Beat Cafe Tour) and
Europe with Tom Mason on Double Bass, former Damned drummer Rat
Scabies and Flipron
keyboard player, Joe Atkinson.
In spring/summer 2006 Donovan played at series of British
festivals and two dates at Camden's Jazz Café, London.
In January 2007 Donovan played concerts at the Kennedy
Center, in Washington, DC, at Alice Tully Hall, in New York City,
and at the Kodak Theatre, in Los Angeles,
California, in conjunction with a presentation by film maker David
Lynch supporting the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based
Education and World Peace. The concert at the Kodak
Theatre was filmed by Palm Springs production company Raven
Productions and is currently broadcast on PBS networks as a
pledge-drive special.
In March 2007 Donovan played at least two shows at the South by Southwest
music festival in Austin, Texas.
In April 2007 Donovan presented a 3 part series on Ravi
Shankar for BBC Radio 2.
In May 2007 Donovan is set to appear in concert and for a
series of workshops and discussions at the Second Annual David Lynch
Weekend, on the Maharishi University of Management campus in Fairfield,
Iowa.
Donovan had planned on the Spring 2007 release of a new album,
along with a UK tour. However, he subsequently announced on his website
(viewed on 29 March 2007) that the tour had been cancelled and the
album release delayed. He indicated on his website that he is in good
health but gave no other reason for the cancellation.
Discography
Albums
- What's
Bin Did and What's Bin Hid [UK] (1965) / Catch the Wind
[U.S.] (1965) #30 U.S.; #3 UK
- Fairytale
(1965) #85 U.S.; #20 UK
- Sunshine Superman
[U.S.] (1966) #11 U.S.
- Mellow Yellow
[U.S.] (1967) #14 U.S.
- A Gift from a
Flower to a Garden (1967) #19 U.S.; #13 UK;
double album also released separately as:
- Wear Your Love
Like Heaven [U.S.] (1967) and
- For Little Ones
[U.S.] (1967)
- Donovan in Concert
[Live] (1968) #18 U.S.
- The Hurdy Gurdy Man
[U.S.] (1968) #20 U.S.
- Barabajagal
[U.S.] (1969) #23 U.S.
- Open Road
(1970) #16 U.S.; #30 UK (extensive use of flanging sound effects at the
track Celtic Rock)
- H.M.S. Donovan
(1971)
- Cosmic Wheels
(1973) #25 U.S.; #15 UK
- Live in Japan:
Spring Tour 1973 [Japan] (1973)
- Essence to Essence
(1973) #174 U.S.
- 7-Tease (1974) #135
U.S.
- Slow Down World
(1976) #174 U.S.
- Donovan
(1977)
- Neutronica
[France][Germany] (1980)
- Love Is Only Feeling
[Germany] (1981)
- Lady of the Stars
(1984)
- Rising
[UK] / The Classics Live
[U.S.] / 25 Years in Concert
[Holland] [Live] (1990)
- One Night in Time
[Japan] (1993)
- The Children of Lir
(1994 Irish release) (Brian O' Reilly's musical legend)
- Sutras (1996)
- Rising Again
[Live] (2001)
- Greatest Hits
Live: Vancouver 1986 (2001)
- Pied Piper
(2002)
- Celtia
(2002) (very rare demo copies)
- Sixty Four (2004)
- Brother Sun, Sister
Moon (2004)
- Beat Cafe (2004)
- classic lives reworked
(2006) (France only)
- in
concert - the complete anaheim 1967 show (2006)
- Laleña 9 tracks reworked
(2006) (France & Germany only)
Singles
| Title |
Highest US
Chart Position |
Date |
Highest UK
Chart Position |
| "Catch The Wind" |
#23 |
1965 |
#4 |
| "Colours" |
#61 |
1965 |
#4 |
| "Universal Soldier" [EP] |
#53 |
1965 |
#1 |
| "Turquoise" |
- |
1965 |
#30 |
| "Josie" |
- |
1966 |
- |
| "Sunshine Superman" |
#1 |
1966 |
#2 |
| "Mellow Yellow" |
#2 |
1966 |
#8 |
| "Epistle To Dippy" |
#19 |
1967 |
- |
| "There Is A Mountain" |
#11 |
1967 |
#8 |
| "Wear Your Love Like Heaven" |
#23 |
1967 |
- |
| "Jennifer Juniper" |
#26 |
1968 |
#5 |
| "Hurdy Gurdy Man" |
#5 |
1968 |
#4 |
| "Laleña" |
#33 |
1968 |
- |
| "Atlantis" |
#7 |
1968 |
#23 |
| "Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)" |
#36 |
1969 |
#12 |
| "Riki Tiki Tavi" |
#55 |
1969 |
- |
| "Celia of The Seals" |
#84 |
1970 |
- |
| "I Like You" |
#66 |
1973 |
- |
| "Maria Magenta" |
- |
1973 |
- |
| "Sailing Homeward" |
- |
1974 |
- |
| "Rock 'n' Roll with Me" |
- |
1974 |
- |
| "Dark-Eyed Blue Jean Angel" |
- |
1975 |
- |
| "Rock 'n' Roll Souljer" |
- |
1975 |
- |
| "Dare to Be Different" |
- |
1977 |
- |
| "The Light" |
- |
1977 |
- |
| "Mee Mee I Love You" |
- |
1981 |
- |
| "Neutron" |
- |
1981 |
- |
| "Lay Down Lassie" |
- |
1982 |
- |
| "Jennifer Juniper" (reissue) |
- |
1990 |
#68 |
| "Newest Bath Guide" |
- |
1992 |
- |
| "Atlantis" (reissue) |
- |
2001 |
- |
| "Happiness Runs" |
- |
2005 |
- |
Compilations
1960s
- The Real Donovan
[U.S.] (1966) #96 U.S.
- Sunshine Superman
[UK] (1967) #25 UK
- Universal Soldier
[UK] (1967) #5 UK
- Wear Your Love
Like Heaven [U.S.] (1967) #60 U.S.
- For Little Ones
[U.S.] (1967) #185 U.S.
- Like It Is,
Was, and Evermore Shall Be [U.S.] (1968) #177
U.S.
- A Touch of Music
a Touch of Donovan [West Germany] (1969)
- The World of
Donovan [UK] (1969)
- Donovan's Greatest Hits
(1969) #4 U.S.
- Fairytale
[UK] (1969)
- The Best of Donovan
[U.S.] (1969) #135 U.S.
1970s
- Donovan P. Leitch
[U.S.] (1970) #128 U.S.
- Catch the Wind [UK]
(1971)
- Hear Me Now
[U.S.] (1971)
- Golden Hour of Donovan
[UK] (1971)
- The World of
Donovan [U.S.] (1972)
- Colours
[UK] (1972)
- Early Treasures
[U.S.] (1973)
- The
Pye History of British Pop Music: Donovan [UK]
(1975)
- The
Pye History of British Pop Music: Donovan Vol. 2
[UK] (1976)
- Donovan File
[UK] (1977)
- Star Discothek: Donovan
[West Germany] (circa 1978)
1980s
- Spotlight on Donovan
(1981)
- The Best of Donovan
[Australia] (1982)
- Minstrel Boy
(1983)
- Catch the Wind
[UK] (1986)
- Colours
[UK] (1987)
- Donovan's Greatest
Hits and More (1989)
1990s
- The EP Collection (1990)
- The Collection
(1990)
- Colours
(1991)
- Troubadour:
The Definitive Collection 1964–1976 (1992)
- The Early Years
(1993)
- Sunshine
Superman: 18 Songs of Love and Freedom (1993)
- Donovan in Concert
(1994)
- Till I See You Again
(1994)
- Sunshine Superman
(1994)
- Live
[Germany] (1995)
- Universal Soldier
(1995)
- Definitive Collection
[Austria] [Holland] (1995)
- Wonderful Music of Donovan
[Portugal] (1996)
- Golden Hits
[Holland] [U.S.] (1996)
- Peace and Love Songs
[U.S.] (1996)
- Sunshine Superman
(1997)
- Performance
(1997)
- Greatest Hits: Acoustic
Live (1997)
- Mellow
(1997)
- Love Is Hot, Truth Is
Molten [Australia] (1998)
- The Very Best
of Donovan (1998)
- Cosmic Wheels
(1998)
- Atlantis Calling
(1999)
2000s
- Forever Gold
(2000)
- Summer Day Reflection
Songs (2000)
- Golden Tracks
(2000)
- Super Hits
(2000)
- Catch the Wind
(2000)
- Mellow
Yellow/Wear Your Love Like Heaven (2001)
- Colours: Live in Concert
(2001)
- The Very Best
of Donovan [Germany] (2002)
- The Very
Best of Donovan: The Early Years (2002)
- Sunshine
Superman: The Very Best of Donovan (2002)
- Atlantis
[Holland] (2002)
- Storyteller
(2003)
- Catch the Wind
[UK] (2003)
- The Great Donovan
[Australia] (2003)
- To Try
for the Sun: The Journey of Donovan (2005) (Legacy
Recordings)
- The
Best Of Donovan Sunshine Superman (2006)
Unreleased albums
- Moon in Capricorn
- Celtia
- Lonely hotel
- The minstrel
- country
- cosmo street
- Christmas day
- Eight
little fishes / smile in reverse
- The Acetates
(1971-1972, Open Road recording sessions, Open Road disbanded before an
album was officially finished; some works on this 3 disk collection can
be found on later albums, specifically including Beat Cafe)
Tribute albums
- Donovan My Way (Vic Lewis and His
Orchestra) (1968)
- The boy with the saffron robe (Vic Lewis
and his orchestra)
- Island of Circles
(1992)
- A Gift from a Garden to a Flower: A Tribute to
Donovan (2002)
Covers
- "Lord Of The Reedy River", covered by Kate
Bush as a single's B-side early in her career, was
re-released on her compilation This
Woman's Work.
- "Sunshine Superman" was covered by Scott Cain
on his debut album Controlled Folly.
"Sunshine Superman" was also covered by Hüsker Dü on
their album Everything Falls Apart.
lb (Lassigue Bendthaus, a/k/a of Uwe Schmidt) did a version of "Sunshine
Superman" in his record Pop
Artificielle.
- "Guinevere" was covered by Richard
Barone on his live album, Between Heaven and Cello.
- "Hurdy Gurdy Man" was covered by the Butthole
Surfers.
- Sarah McLachlan's cover of "Wear
Your Love Like Heaven" appears on the U.S. release of her album Solace.
- The acid rock band Vanilla Fudge achieved mild success
with a cover of "Season of the Witch" in the late 1960s.
- Hole's
cover of "Season of the Witch" appeared during their MTV
Unplugged session.
- Jefferson Airplane also covered
"The Fat Angel" during 1968, in return for being mentioned in the
song's lyrics.
- Lindsey Buckingham includes a
cover of "To Try For The Sun" on his 2006 release, Under The Skin,
with slight lyrical reinterpretations.
- Joan Baez did a cover of "Turquoise".
- The Spill Canvas, an alternative
rock band, do a cover of the song "Catch The Wind" in their 2007 EP Denial
Feels So Good.
- Laleña was covered by Deep Purple on their 1969 self titled
album.
Filmography
Actor
- If It's
Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium (1969)
- The Pied Piper (1972)
- Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978)
As himself
Composer
- Poor Cow (1967)
- Brother Sun, Sister Moon
(1972)
- The Pied Piper (1972 film)
(1972)
Music DVD
- Festival (directed by Murray Lerner,
1967. Footage from Newport Festival 1963-66. Also with Joan Baez, Bob
Dylan and Peter Paul and Mary)
- Isle of Wight festival (catch the wind)
- The secret policeman's concert for
Amnesty International (Catch the wind - Universal soldier &
colours)
Television appearances
- Ready Steady Go!
(February
19, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (March 12, 1965)
- Top of the Pops
(March
26, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (April 2, 1965)
- Top of the Pops (April 8, 1965)
- Top of the Pops (April 22, 1965)
- Top of the Pops (June 3, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (June 25, 1965)
- American Bandstand
(August
7, 1965)
- Shindig! (August 11, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (August 20, 1965)
- Where the Action Is
(September
3, 1965)
- Where the Action Is (September
16, 1965)
- Where the Action Is (September
23, 1965)
- Shindig! (September
30, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (November
5, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (December
24, 1965)
- Ready Steady Go (January
21, 1966)
- Hullabaloo
(March
7, 1966)
- Top of the Pops (January 5, 1967)
- Our World (June 25, 1967)
- It Must Be Dusty
(May 22, 1968)
- Bobbie Gentry (July 27, 1968)
- The Hollywood Palace
(November
9, 1968)
- The Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour (taped: November
8, 1968,
aired: November
17, 1968)
- Beat Club (January
25, 1969)
- The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour
(taped: March
1, 1969,
aired: March
23, 1969)
- The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour
(taped: March
28, 1969,
aired: April
20, 1969)
- Kraft Music Hall (May 7, 1969)
- Top of the Pops (July 24, 1969)
- Get It Together (May 23, 1970)
- In Concert: Donovan (????? 1972 - Shown UK BBC4
19/07/07)
- Musikladen (December
5, 1973)
- The John Denver Show
(June 3, 1973)
- The Midnight
Special (July 2, 1976)
- Futurama (April 16, 2000)
- Wetten, dass..?
(November
17, 2001)
- The South Bank Show
(March
14, 2004)
- Tout le monde en parle
(April
30, 2005)
- The Heaven and Earth Show (November
6, 2005)
- CBS Sunday Morning
(December
18, 2005)
Trivia
- Donovan was the first published interview in
Rolling Stone magazine.
- Hurdy Gurdy Man
features prominently in the 2007 film Zodiac.
His daughter, Ione Skye, also appears in that film.
- Donovan is a supporter of The Druk White Lotus
School in Ladakh, India.
External links