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THE
DONOVAN INTERVIEW
Hello.
Actually I met you when you were here in Milano last time when you were here to
promote your Sutras album.
Oh, very
good
I remember
talking with you in the short press conference after the show. It was
great.
Yes, thank
you.
So it was
about seven or eight years from your last album. What happened in these seven
years?
Oh, many
things. I was busy promoting the album in the USA. I worked on my book. I have a
book coming out next year. I continued to work on my archive of my music and I
created a label called 'Donovan Discs’ and I created a website. So I was quite
busy but I wasn't in the studio until 2 1/2 years ago when I made this new
record
You said
you did your own label but are you planning to re-release your old albums with
extra tracks or something like that?
Something
like that. Like this: 'Donovan Discs' is looking after my archive which no one
has heard. The lost tapes… and the first lost tape we released was called 'Sixty
Four' on the website which is www.donovan.ie. so on this
website there is my first archive, number one.
Oh great.
I will check it. I didn't know.
Yes, 'Sixty
Four' it's called. My first nine recordings... before commercial records and
this was a great find and then 'Donovan Discs' also made 'Beat Café' but this
time it's not for sale on website. It’s on the Appleseed label in the USA and
the world. So the label is doing two things. It’s making my new record but it's
also going to handle the archive. But the catalog, the actual catalog of my past
is going to be handled by Sony in America and they will release the box set next
year. That will be with outtakes, yes.
Fantastic
news. I can't wait for that ...and hopefully there will be also in your archives
some recordings in concert thru the years or just...
Yes! We have
concert recordings also. So the plan is to begin to release more next year of
the archive.
Fantastic.
So, about this new, great album 'Beat Café’, I should say that I enjoy a
lot.
Thank
you.
It was
kind of a surprise. And of course it is not a surprise knowing about your
history.
Ha-ha
Musically
speaking it is a very interesting album. How did the idea for such a particular
project come out?
Well, John
Chelew, the producer... (he is a) roots producer, he won three Grammy Awards, he
is a very good roots producer. He worked with Blind Boys of Alabama, Richard
Thompson... he worked with John Hiatt. He worked with very good musicians and he
called me up and he said he just made a record with my good friend, Danny
Thompson. So Danny called me and said, ‘This John Chelew, he wants to take you
in the studio and wants to do the magic Donovan and Danny Thompson sounds’ and
this sound, how it works is Danny plays this acoustic bass which is antique,
Victorian bass called 'Victoria' and I play acoustic. Danny Thompson and
Donovan, we made records... so many good records over the years. He also was on
'Sutras'. John said, 'Would you like to try experiment with Danny?' and I said
'I'm ready.' Danny is the master bass and I'm the master acoustic! Ha-ha-ha! So
the three masters got together in Hollywood and we made seven recordings, one
after another which became 'Beat Café.' Now the theme of 'Beat Café' became
important because it was like a Bohemian record, making like improvisation, but
not old jazz, not old blues but a new kind of a way of
recording.
Yes,
actually listening to a song like 'Love Floats' is a very interesting
experimental-kind of music.
Yes, it
sounds a little bit like Jimmy Smith or Georgie Fame on the organ. It sounds
like rhythm and blues but then it's got this other sort of world music thing
going...and atmospheric vocals and so we experimented there on 'Love
Floats'.
Yes,
that's great. How easy was it to reach such a sound? I
mean...
Well, it's
easy when you've got Jim Keltner and Danny Thompson and...and
Donovan.
Ha-ha,
yeah.
To make a
good sound, the producer is very important and the studio is....very very VERY
important and it was analog and it was analog and then some digital
experimentation later with loops, but not digital, loops, you know we looped a
bit but most of it was very easy to record with these
guys.
Yes,
that's great. Actually, as I say, the sound in some moments like this song 'Love
Floats' sounds very, very modern, if I can say... because it reminds me of some
kind of trip-hop music...
Yeah
I don't
know if you listen to that kind of music...in England there is a very
interesting scene, I don't know how much you...
Yes, we
wanted to experiment with modern...
And it's
interesting because that kind of music is usually electronic music, while you
play acoustic instruments
Yes! So it's
like a modern loop, dance thing in some places in 'Love Floats' but we're using
acoustic loops rather than electronic. We said we must stay as pure as possible
to the acoustic sound because that's what we were looking
for.
That’s
great. The title track, the 'Beat Café' song, talking about the lyrics, you
describe so well the atmosphere of the Beat Café. I was wondering, when you were
growing in Scotland there were the same kind of Bohemian scene that there was in
New York City or San Francisco coffee houses.
Yes, they are
different in different countries and the American was the model of the beat
generation but we had a beat scene in Britain. I was ten years old when the
family moved from Scotland to outside London and there was a Bohemian Jazz Club,
Blues Clubs, folk clubs, poetry, art schools, coffee house that was London but
it was very different from America in the sense that the cafés of America and
Paris...in London it was pubs. There were some cafés/coffee houses. It was pubs
where the music Café was played but it was same kind of Bohemian thing. You see,
Bohemia is an incredible experience. It’s begun way back in 1840 in Paris...in
the cafés of Paris and a new kind of figure, a new kind of man and woman was
walking the streets and they called them Bohemians because they hung out in the
Bohemian cafés in the Latin quarter where the gypsies played and of course
gypsies are called Bohemians 'cause they come from Bohemia and so the Bohemian
scene was very strong in the UK also.
So it's
possible to say you were more influenced by these European approach than the
classic beat writers like Kerouac Ginsberg?
I was
influenced by Kerouac and Ginsberg and Burroughs as well and they were American,
yeah, but when you look, Kerouac, his family comes from Brittany and France. So
he's like Kerouac a French-Keltic poet. So there was a connection and of course,
the connection of Ginsberg and the classic poetry of Europe. So it was very
europeanized and so we loved the Americans because of jazz. You see America
created jazz. They mixed poetry and jazz. So those three poets opened those
doors.
The song
'Yin My Yang', to me it sounds like a classic Donovan song. How did this
particular song came out?
How I write?
How I record?
How did
the idea come about?
The idea came
from, I guess, the music. I have so many different styles. I love different
styles from the folk to the blues, to the jazz, to the Latin America and this
has got a Latin American rhythm but it's unusual Latin. It's Donovan Latin and
it has this very easy Bosa Nova feel, but with a difference, a kind of
dak-dak-dak. More like, I should say, more like tango. It's like a tango, as
well and the words come from the Bohemian books on Zen Buddhism and Eastern
philosophy and the Buddhism of Ying and Yang. So I making some jokes with
spiritual and philosophical words. 'Yin My Yang' is a love
song.
Also,
another of my favorite tracks at the moment is your version of the 'Cuckoo' the
classic version of the song. I remember the Pentangle doing a version of this
one many years ago.
Oh yeah.
Well, Danny, of course was in the Pentangle.
It was,
maybe an idea from Danny Thompson to record?
No, it's a
famous song, of course. We, who come from the folk scene, love
it.
People jam on
it because it's so simple and infectious. It's great. So the idea came... I
didn't have a plan. No plan to make 'Cuckoo', but of course the Bohemian Cafés
have jazz, blues, classical, poetry, painting, sculptures, dancers and they have
folk musicians. So when we heard this in the studio, it was a jam. Jim Keltner
heard me tuning up and I started picking for the tuning up. I started picking
the 'Cuckoo' and he said to me 'What's that mountain thing?' You know,
'mountain' meaning Appalachian mountain/banjo coz he knows a lot about music. I
said it's called 'The Cuckoo' and he said 'Why don't we record it?' So we went
in the studio and we played it twice and that was it! The masters, Danny already
knew it from the Pentangle, of course. I already knew it and Jim learned it and
so it was great. At one point we said 'Should we put it on the album? It sounds
so different' and Jim Muscleman of Appleseed records said 'It MUST go on the
album! It's part of the 'Beat Café' and so the 'Cuckoo' is one of my favorites
now, also and when Jim Keltner listened to the track he was so pleased. I said,
'Why are you smiling?' Jim Keltner said 'I've finally outcashed Johnny Cash!'
Because Jim always wanted to make a record with Johnny, but he never did and now
he gets a chance and it sounds when I listened to it playing just like the
drummers on the Johnny Cash records.
That's a
great story. That's absolutely a great version.
Yeah, thank
you. I love that track. It's one of those you record two times and that's
it.
The
magic.
Magic, yeah!
What about
the Dylan Thomas poem? I mean it makes perfect sense talking about Bohemian…the
poetry....but why did you chose that particular poem?
Well, Dylan
Thomas is our Bohemian poet of the 50's, I guess...of the 1950's and very
influential, incredible, Welsh, British/Welsh, Keltic and a great influence on
me and others. Many young poets were influenced and of course the Jazz and the
poetry of the west coast, San Francisco where Kenneth Roth and Lawrence
Ferlinghetti in the late '40's they pioneered reading poetry to jazz and of
course Dylan Thomas grew up in the jazz age and so we put the two pieces
together and I particularly like this poem 'Do Not Go Gentle' because my father
passed away in the last four years.
I'm
sorry.
He
was...lived a long life and he read me poetry and so this is my tribute to my
father. Just like Dylan Thomas' poem is a tribute to his
father.
Inside the
record you wrote 'The journey leads to where you've always been.' Do you feel
that with this album you've completed your journey in a way
or…
Um...I don't
think....
Musically
speaking, of course.
Yes, the
journey continues. It's not complete yet. There is this other thing going to
happen next year called the Forty Anniversary and the book and the documentary
and the box sets and all that, but 'the journey continues' I celebrate 'Beat
Café' this year because it was the beginnings. It's…out of the Bohemian Café
came all the wonderful sounds and ideas that have changed the world of music and
the arts and changed the world for better, but out of that Bohemian Café came me
and I'll celebrate my journey as a popular artist next year and talk about all
the subjects again of anti-war, civil rights. All my songs, they speak of the
movements. The civil rights, the anti-protest songs, the anti-war songs then the
discovery of the holy plants inner world and psychodelia and then meditation and
ecology and feminism and cosmic conscientiousness and on and on. So after next
year, my journey will continue into 2006 and I have another project which will
take me in the studio to develop the journey further. So the journey goes on and
the journey always leads to where you've always been. It's an expression to say
that the e spiritual world is inside always. Always the spiritual world is here
and always the music will return to the roots. It will always go back to where
you've always been and so my journey goes on but it always goes back to the
center...to the root of folk and roots music.
You say
that you are writing your book. I understand is a biography. I read in an
English magazine that you wrote a short article about Bob Dylan's biography.
Have you had the chance to see Bob Dylan in concert in recent
times?
Sure and I
read the complete book and he also speaks of his early Bohemian days which is
fascinating and a lot of my book speaks of the early British Bohemia which is
fascinating for me as well and....recent concerts? No. Five years since I saw
Bob but I think the concert probably is similar to the same concert today and
he's very much into the electric rhythm and blues, which he loves, but recently
I heard he was doing acoustic...a couple of acoustic songs on the stage and I'd
like to see that, but I haven't seen a concert for some
time.
How do you
like his recent albums?
I love the
Daniel Lanois. I think he's the perfect producer for Bob.
I have
just a couple more questions if you have some time. Just a personal curiosity.
Not many people know that the Allman Brothers Band famous 'Mountain Jam' is
inspired by your 'There Is a Mountain' song. So I'm just very curious to know if
you ever discussed with the people in the Allman Brothers Band about that
particular song. The 'Mountain Jam' is a kind of landmark to the Allman Brothers
Band. the Allman Brothers Band music is so different from your music...I thought
maybe you were friends?.
No, we
didn't...we briefly met when once, with one of the Allman brothers', his name is
Gregg. Who's the other brother's name?
Duane
Who's the guy
who died?
Duane
Duane. Gregg
is still alive?
Yes
It was Gregg
when he was with Cher and that was fifteen years ago (not really, this is a note
by me, it must have being at least 30 years ago). He was dating Cher and they
were in Berlin and I didn't get a chance to talk but I said 'hello' and I said
'thank you' for that jam' because it's fantastic when a great band covers your
song. 'Season Of The Witch' also has been jammed by Steven Stills and Al Kooper
in a super session and the 'Mountain Jam' of course and it's so cool to have
these kinds of songs that bands groove on. Led Zeppelin used to rehearse…begin
the rehearsal with 'Season of the Witch' because it made the balance of the band
correct. The arrangement was so simple and so full of groove that the drums and
the bass and the guitars and the keyboards could be balanced easy and also the
band could enjoy the sound check....ha-ha....and not play their own songs. They
could play that and so I love 'Mountain Jam', yeah
Talking
about 'Season of the Witch', it's one of my favorite Donovan
songs.
Other
songs like 'Hurdy Gurdy' , you have special musicians on those… Jimmy Page
actually recorded with you.
Yes
And also
Jeff Beck.
Yes
What you
remember about recording with those people, I mean…
Well it's
fabulous. Jimmy Page was in The Yardbirds and then he...the band broke and he
left and he became a studio player and that's how he made some money. We did
some sessions in London and I was very lucky to have Jimmy on my records and he
was extraordinary. He IS an extraordinary player and he played on 'Sunshine
Superman' and 'Hurdy Gurdy Man' and he played on some other items which I think
I have in my archive which I'm trying to find. Then Jeff Beck, he's amazing. My
wife, Linda had a friend called Cecilia Hammond and Cecilia Hammond married Jeff
Beck so Cecilia Hammond, the model and Jeff were living together many years and
I always loved his playing and Mickey Most, my producer was recording Jeff Beck
on the album ' Beck-Ola ' and he invited Jeff and the band to come in and do a
single with me and we came in the studio.
Jeff was late
and the song was 'Barabajagal' and the drummer of Jeff Beck's band....what was
his name...Mitch Miller...no no...can't remember his name, but the drummer was
playing the beat and the tempo of 'Barabajagal' when I walked in and...Mickey
Waller is his name....and I said 'Mickey, how are you doing?' and Mickey said
'Alright, Don. How are you?' I said 'You've heard the tune then?' and he was
tuning the drums and playing the drums to the same exact pattern that
'Barabajagal' needed and I said 'Well, you're playing the tempo.' He said 'No I
haven't heard a bloody thing' and I said 'Well, that's the tempo.' and he said
'Well that's good' and then I went into the studio and there was Ronnie Wood who
was playing with Beck at the time and he plugged in and said 'What's the
chords?' and I said 'Here they are.' He said 'Right, got it' and Nicky Hopkins
on piano said nothing to us. He was just reading a comic book called 'Silver
Surfer' and that's when he made a band called 'Silver Surfer' later and then I
just played the chords. The band played it once and said 'Right, where's Jeff
Beck?' and Jeff was late and Mickey Most had a table with hor d'ourves and wine
and beer and coffee and tea and we were all waiting for Jeff and then he arrived
and he said nothing. He was Jeff Beck. He just had jeans and these boots on and
Mickey Most said 'Ok Jeff, get out your guitar.' and Jeff looked around the
studio and he said ' Where's my fuckin' guitar?' and the band said 'Oh no! It's
locked in the van!' So Jeff Beck arrives at the 'Barabajagal' session with NO
Jeff Beck guitar and so he says to Mickey Most 'Look, just phone up and rent me
one.' So they phoned up and rented the best Fender Stratocaster they could find
in London and they brought it in and we recorded it…in three takes. Jeff was
incredible. He only had to hear it once and he knew what to do and the two
girls, Madelyn Bell and Leslie Duncan did the backup vocals and I made a record
with Mickey Most and Jeff Beck and it was the most unusual Donovan record. I
think there is another most unusual Donovan record. It is called 'Epistle to
Dippy'. That one may be the weirdest one. Ha-ha.
Why?
It's SO
experimental with classical and rock guitar and strange chords. I tuned the
guitar into very weird chords and so, just like 'Beat Café', I experimented then
and I continue to try and experiment. For instance, on 'Beat Café' the
experimental song 'Whirlwind' (he makes guitar sounds) It's like a kind of
backwards...I'm playing a riff like a blues riff but backwards and that works.
It's a good experiment, that one. On the 'Beat Café', talking about guitar
players, we wanted Jimmy Page for the 'Beat Café' project
Wow
And we sent
so many telephone calls to him and we wanted him to play acoustic because that
was the project, but he had a bad back and he was busy. He couldn't come and at
one point I said to John Chelew, the producer 'Look, why not I'll play the
guitar?' So I play all the lead guitar on 'Beat Café' and I'm so glad because
I'm a little shy about playing lead. I play fantastic pick finger style guitar.
You did a
good job
But I never
really played the lead styles. So I tried to play the lead and we put the guitar
thru Leslie speakers to try to make the guitar sound very unusual and anyway I
enjoyed playing lead and I'm so sorry Jimmy didn't join us on 'Beat Café' but
hey I think I discovered a new guitar player called ME!
Ha-ha
Just the
last question, since you were such good friends with the Beatles, in a few days
it will be the sad anniversary of the deaths of George Harrison and John Lennon
too. If you don't mind I'd like to ask you a few words to remember your
friends?
Well, John is
sadly missed and yet his music goes on forever. He was a casualty of fame and
the worst kind. My book next year speaks of my relationship with John and the
freedoms we lost when we became famous and the dangers of fame from fans and
from excess, but John...we miss him. George, well he was my closest of the
Beatles friends and the spiritual path and his songs and the spiritual path and
my songs were the same path. We miss George, but his music, also, goes on
forever and George would be the first to say 'Don't worry about my body. I don't
believe in bodies. 'George would say. 'The body is just a vehicle. We pick it up
and we drop it and we go on into our future lives.' So George is reincarnated or
else he's in one of the heavens. Maybe he's on cloud nine. Ha-ha. But we miss
them both but they would be the first to say 'Don't be sad for me. You get on
with your own live and make this world a better place to
be.'