Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Open Road - [WARNING] Large post, loads slow!

NOTE: This post might be too large to load up & work properly, I think the html if printed as text would fill 12 or more full printed pages. I have had problems with playing some of the music feeds myself (crappy internet connection). The script on this page took me well over 4 hours to publish, so I aint trashin' it. If worst comes to worst the download links do work (I tested em myself), you can download one or two to see if you like em and take it from there.

Open Road

Donovan (Donovan Phillips Leitch, born 10 May 1946, in 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. Donovan came to fame in the United Kingdom in early 1965 with a series of live performances on the pop TV series, Ready Steady Go!, and his popularity spread to the USA and other countries. After signing with the British label, Pye Records in 1965, he recorded a handful of singles and two albums in the folk music vein. After getting out from his original management contract, he began a long and successful collaboration with leading independent record producer Mickie Most, scoring a string of hits in the UK, the USA, Australia and other countries, including several British and American #1 hits and million-selling records. Donovan was the first artist to be signed to CBS/Epic Records by then-new Administrative Vice President Clive Davis, who later became head of the CBS Record empire.
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 friend of leading pop musicians including Joan Baez, Brian Jones, Bruce Springsteen, and The Beatles, and was one of the few artists to collaborate on songs with the Beatles. He influenced both John Lennon and Paul McCartney when he taught them his finger-picking guitar style in 1968.[1] Donovan's commercial fortunes waned after he parted ways with Mickie Most in 1969, and he left the music industry for a time.
He continued to perform and record sporadically in the 1970s and 1980s, but gradually fell from favor. 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 career, but he underwent a revival in the 1990s with the emergence of the rave scene in Britain. Late in the decade, he recorded an album with producer and long-time fan Rick Rubin and released a new album, Beat Cafe, in 2004. <--- a="" from="" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donovan" s="" site="" taken="" wiki="">here
].
Open Road album comments:

Just upon the release of this album in 1970 it was made illegal to sell in the United States over copyright violations, or so they said...

They claimed Donovan "stole chords from Bob Dylan", how the hell can a singer steal a guitar note anyway?

I think and I'd bet money on it that it was something else. I'd bet it was the content and the topic of the album.

If you listen to it from beginning to end you would see that it describes a love of a man through the eye of a singer who is also a man and that in 1970 was a bad topic to be discussing, especially in music, especially in music aimed at teens who listened to that music. I think that's why it was outlawed in the U.S.A..

This was Christmas week in 1970 and although they could not sell the album there was no law preventing them from giving it away. Both my mother and aunt got brand new Hi-Fi stereo record players that year for Christmas and in those days with every new stereophonic record player you got your first album free. You selected it out of a box of albums put aside for the occasion. My mother selected Roberta Flack, my aunt selected Donovan's Open Road.

I loved that damn album and it took months of conniving and begging to get her to trade it off to me, but eventually I got it. I was about ten years old at the time.

Come age twelve or so and with the help of a good stash of Marijuana I smoked myself into oblivion and left the record on replay mode on the disk changer and the sun came through the window and warped it on me "Dammit!", but I still cherished the album until it was stolen from me.

I ran away from home at age 13 and in doing so I gave everyone free run through my belongings. I searched for that album everywhere and found it nine years later in an album collection at a house that my sister used to babysit at and it was my copy "it was warped exactly the same" so I took it back. I held onto it about ten or fifteen more years but always searched for a new undamaged copy of it. Never could get one anywhere until recently.

Playing cribbage in Social Lounge (Yahoo Games) I met a wonderful friend (Chris B.) and she replied "Well the albums not illegal here" and after over twenty-five years of searching she bought it for me and sent it to me.

One more comment, although it's irrelevant in art form, but still I'm going to make it. I had no idea that this album was about sex or relationships between men. I was only ten years old. I just loved it because I was reading J.R.R. Tolkien's Hobbit and the trilogy and I loved the troll songs Curry Land and Celtic Rock, plus I hated the Catholic religion because of the way the generation before me was abused under their ways and rules. Grown now and understanding more now I can see what it was really about and my opinion is that it's a beautiful production, a loving gesture, a showing of deep concern and a masterpiece of musical element!



Changes
"Everyone is right, everything is wrong. Don't let the changes get you down man"
This is the first step into a new lifestyle & encouragement to help him face the "changes".
http://youtu.be/t6nxyeFvVC0

Song for John
"You're my singer, let me be your song. Celestial bodies, they get along, I just wanna sing along" & "Vegetarian by choice, not by fashion. It's not so much what you eat but what you balance on. Watch me as I balance on"
It's the leadership being offered to help him enter into this new lifestyle.
http://youtu.be/1tpPvDh6NAc


Curry Land
"Ladie you are my piece of mind. We're I to seek your par none I could find" & "Lady Hall had drowned,the price of Nineveh rose Rose" then "Anchored in the bay of innocence is left a lonely man, lonely through and through"
This is the calculations period, the grief of leaving the comfort of the past and the journey into the new.
http://youtu.be/vQegDOV1LB8


Joe Bean's theme
"The lazy leading ladies languid way, the lovely leading lady in our play. Soft white and always thrilling jasmine fills the air"
This describes the refreshment of the new-ness of the experience, and maybe the calm before the storm.
http://youtu.be/Zq5p6yi5Z04


People used to
"People used to get together round the fire. Fishes were cooked, songs were sang" & "People tell me that it's so, oh I don't know anymore. I don't know" then "And still you people tell me life is easy to get on with but what I've got so far is enough to be going on with"
Now comes the beginning of the judgment along with the confusion over decisions, goals and desires.
http://youtu.be/EnECuNw2wtM


Celtic Rock
"Down through the cave in the mouth of gloom trolls go marching two by two" & "Who should come by the mountain way? Young fin Hanly, a lute he play, clothed in a scarlet liviray ????"
Now comes the angry people and he's not prepared yet for their approaches or tactics
http://youtu.be/k0jVxhUTVeY



Riki Tiki Tavi
"Better get into what you gotta get into, better get into it now. No slacking please" & "I saw you today on the #9 bus" you were going my way"
Saying that the only one that can defend you is yourself, but I'm going in the same direction as you so let's travel together.
http://youtu.be/TY7Rxae4pjU



Clara Clairvoyant
"Clara Clairvoyant, consultation ten to four, in the shadows, leave skepticism at the door" & "Cathy Catholic~a, in the box from three to four, in the shadows, leave genitals at the door. Ooh, but, but, tut-tut. Have you any perversions to confess...?"
This means that everyone has a part of themselves left open to gossip, scrutiny and/or slander so "don't let them fool you with the false judgments"
http://youtu.be/xCFttHeq1NM



Roots of oak
"Gonna need facts, figures and logic. Feign would I hear lore, legend and magic"
Now he begins to judge himself through his own eyes and not through the prejudiced opinions of others.
http://youtu.be/IbweW1Amb2I


Season of farewell
"Suddenly I realize. I'm to be my own surprise. This is the season of farewell and I've finally broken the spell and I want you to know before you go"
This is when he cuts loose from ties that would restrict him in his new lifestyle.
http://youtu.be/eU-bC0fOI7A


Poke at the Pope
"Poke at the Pope, that's what we're having"
Starting to question religious moral beliefs.
http://youtu.be/utCjMTaP43s



New Year's Resolution
"Do what you've never done before. See what you've never seen. Feel what you've never felt before"
This is the beginning of a new resolution after going through all the transitions.
"So many times I was the one who stopped myself from doing things. So many times I was the one who grounded myself and clipped my wings"
http://youtu.be/7SxxjBNeauk

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