Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964-1976
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- London Town
- Codine
- Catch the Wind
- Universal Soldier
- Colours
- Sunshine Superman
- Season of the Witch
- Trip
- Guinevere
- Breezes of Patchulie
- Museum
- Superlungs My Supergirl
- Mellow Yellow
- Writer in the Sun
- Sand and Foam
- Sunny South Kensington
- Epistle to Dippy
- There Is a Mountain
- Wear Your Love Like Heaven
- Oh Gosh
- Tinker and the Crab
- Poor Cow
Disc 2:
- Hurdy Gurdy Man
- Jennifer Juniper
- Teen Angel
- Lalena
- To Susan on the West Coast Waiting
- Atlantis
- Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)
- Happiness Runs
- Celia of the Seals
- Riki Tiki Tavi
- Clara Clairvoyant
- Roots of Oak
- Riki Tiki Tavi
- Maria Magenta
- Cosmic Wheels
- I Like You
- Yellow Star
- Rock & Roll Souljer
- Quest
- Age of Treason
- What the Soul Desires
- Dark-Eyed Blue Jean Angel
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #6412 in Music
- Released on: 1996-10-29
- Number of discs: 2
- Formats: Box set, Limited Edition
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Features 21 total tracks including 'Mellow Jellow', 'Jennifer Juniper', 'Colours', 'Riki Tiki Tavi', 'Hurdy Gurdy Man', 'There Is A Mountain', 'Atlantis' and more. Epic. 2005.
Amazon.com
Heaven knows, the Scotsman born Donovan Leitch was ripe for ridicule, even when he was hitting the charts with regularity. He was the ultimate flower child, and his airier pronouncements made cynics want to tighten up those love beads around his neck. Listening to Troubadour, however, it's striking how versatile, melodic, and agreeable most of his material sounds decades after "Mellow Yellow" has faded into a jaundiced yellow. Clearly under the sway of Bob Dylan early on in his career, Donovan nevertheless was capable of directing his reverence into something as enchanting as "Catch the Wind." Amping up as the '60s progressed, he assembled a series of psychedelic-pop classics, including "Season of the Witch," the "Hey Jude"-like sing-along "Atlantis," and the uncharacteristically driving "Hurdy Gurdy Man" (the latter features three-quarters of what was to become Led Zeppelin providing stellar support). This two-disc anthology may be more Donovan than some desire, but the booklet, seven previously unreleased tracks, and expansive perspective it provides makes it a more-than-worthy overview for those who take their paisley folk-rock with a beatific smile. --Steven Stolder
Customer Reviews
Epistle to the Flower Power Era
Donovan began his career as a folkie, but he will be remembered forever as the leading proponent of flower power hipness.
Early folk-oriented tunes like "Catch the Wind," "Colours" and "Universal Soldier" all charted in the UK, but only "Catch the Wind" dented the US charts (No. 23). In late-65 Donovan splits from his manager and hooks up with new producer Mickie Most (Herman's Hermits, Animals, Lulu, etc.). In the process he switches direction from folk to pop.
His first single for Most is "Sunshine Superman"--which was originally titled "For John and Paul." It goes to No. 2 in the UK and tops the US chart. What follows is a string of memorable hits, including "Mellow Yellow" with Paul McCartney on background "whispered" vocals. [Did anyone REALLY believe this was about smoking banana skins! ] There's the percussion-flute workout "There Is a Mountain," (which the Allman Brothers would convert to "Mountain Jam" on Eat a Peach.]
Unlike many of his contemporaries, Donovan would maintain his popularity throughout the sixties. This also meant expanding his sound. "Hurdy Gurdy Man" starts out with Donovan's trademark vibrato vocal and cosmic lyrics, but with Jimmy Page on guitar and the future Led Zeppelin rhythm section on board it was one of the few Donovan tracks that rocked. Another hard-driving song (and Donovan's last US top 40 hit), "Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)," features the Jeff Beck Group.
Donovan leaves Mickie Most and releases "Celia of the Seals" as a duet with longtime bassist Danny Thompson. It only reaches US No. 84. His next single "Riki Tiki Tavi" is what Donovan dubbed an experiment in "Celtic rock." it peaked at US No. 84. His final US single is "I Like You" from Cosmic Wheels. [I bought this album on vinyl when it was released in 1973. Thankfully this disc does not also include the embarrassingly insipid "Intergalactic Laxative."] The single only went to No. 66. It was becoming apparent that by the early seventies, there were very few listeners still paying attention.
For this baby-boomer, this collection is everything I would expect in a box set: all the hits, a few unreleased songs, tracks from throughout the artist's career (the latest song is from 1976's Slow Down World), and an emphasis on the artist's commercial peak (1966-1969: 26 of the 44 songs). If all you want is the hits, the remastered Greatest Hits' 15 tracks will do the job cheaper, but for six dollars more you get nearly three times the songs and enough Donovan to put you into cosmic euphoria. Go for it. RECOMMENDED
Wonderful compilation, a must-have
This is a fabulous 2 CD set of selections from all over his 60s and some of his 70s work. If you're a big Donovan fan, then you need this set, the unreleased tracks are great, and some of the 70's tracks aren't avaible at all on CD besides from this set. This is a perfect start for new collectors. After this, go for 'Sunshine Superman', 'Mellow Yellow', 'A Gift From a Flower To a Garden', 'The Hurdy Gurdy Man' and 'Anthology: Summerday Reflection Songs'. Overall, a real musical treat.
Donovan DinoMIGHT
I've loved Donovan's music for a long time and accumulated albums, singles, tapes, CDs, etc., of his by the bushelful. However, I write this at a time when my infatuation with the man has faded quite a bit. This could be due to overkill on my part. At any rate, this collection has some good things going for it. All his hits are here. Some previously rare tracks have been included that are mostly quite good. A few oddball album tracks made it on here that really didn't deserve to be here. For big fans, this set is a must. For casual, "I just want the hits and the rest make me throw up" fans, you are getting a bit too much here. Go with a single CD of hits and not this 2-CD collection. You have to at least like the sentiment behind flower power to get into the lesser-known songs here. In reality, the choice of album cuts from both the 60s and 70s material is somewhat questionable--there are superior tracks that could have been chosen in some instances. Put a good band behind him, and Donovan can do magic with a song. He can also do quite well with just him and his guitar, as many of the songs on this set demonstrate. I think Donovan himself chose the songs on here--so I guess a few of the choices I don't agree with. Some of his favorites songs he wrote for his beloved wife Linda--"I Like You" is one that doesn't come off real well; "Dark-eyed Blue-Jean Angel" works better. For most listeners, the collection probably should have been limited to the years 1965-1971 or perhaps 1973, and trimming off the last few years of input. That would have allowed more space for great songs like "Three Kingfishers" from the Sunshine Superman album and "Young Girl Blues" from Mellow Yellow. All in all, his songs have aged well and deserve to be remembered for posterity.




