Donovan - In Concert: The Complete 1967 Anaheim Show
Facts
| Artist(s) | Donovan |
| Studio | EMI Int'l |
| Release Date | June 19, 2006 |
| UPC Code | 094635410020 |
| Buy this item | $32.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 28 9:27 EST (details) 2 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Import, Live |
About Donovan - In Concert: The Complete 1967 Anaheim Show
Often portrayed as the British Dylan, Donovan Leitch was in fact much more than this. As the highest profile UK folk singer at a time when most folk singers were American, Donovan's association with the summer of love made him one of the most popular singers of the 60's and he made forays into the world of psychedelia, with Sunshine Superman, ahead of most of his contemporaries. Donovan's greatest albums have already been digitally remastered and re-released - the albums that epitomise his time as one of the UK's greatest singers - Sunshine Superman, Mellow Yellow, The Hurdy Gurdy Man and Barabajagal. EMI. 2006. Album Description
Tracks
Disc 1- Intro
- Isle of Islay
- Young Girl Blues
- There Is a Mountain
- Poor Love (Poor Cow)
- Sunny Goodge Street - Donovan, Donovan [Rock]
- Celeste
- The Fat Angel
- Guinevere
- Widow with Shawl (A Portrait)
- Epistle to Derroll
- Preachin' Love
- The Lullaby of Spring
- Sand and Foam
- Hampstead Incident
- Writer in the Sun
- To Try for the Sun
- Someone Singing
- Pebble and the Man (Happiness Runs)
- The Tinker and the Crab
- Rules and Regulations
- Mellow Yellow
- Catch the Wind, Pt. 1
Similar CDs
| Donovan: Live in L.A. at the Kodak Theatre | Mellow Yellow | A Gift from a Flower to a Garden | Sunshine Superman | The Hurdy Gurdy Man |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Relive Flower Power |
| Bob Dylan was the American Donovan |
| ONE OF A KIND, ONE TO ONE |
This CD offers the complete concert and the performance has thankfully been remastered with a great deal of respect for the original sound. The very brief liner notes call attention to the fact that even the reverb you'll hear is that of the performance space -- no indulgence in additional tinkering or sweetening was applied. And frankly, none is needed. Which means you're hearing the sort of music that actually lives in the performers' abilities and in-the-moment interactions, not the over-rehearsed recreation of a studio recording designed to support some silly dance routine. (In such cases, I guess the dance routines are so important because the music itself is usually so profoundly incapable of holding the attention of so many 21st century fans. Either that or the height of musical expression was somehow realised on the old Carol Burnett Show during the June Taylor Dancers' segments and I just failed to recognize it as such...).
As the next in the line of these Donovan remasters, the decision to present the entire performance is the right one, especially given the intimate nature of so many of these songs and their place in the early Donovan canon. And -- as you must already know -- the performance itself is both dear and great stuff, gratefully restored and greatly appreciated. July 1, 2006
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
