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{{Short description|Scottish musician (born 1946)}}
'''Donovan Philips Leitch''' (usually known simply as '''Donovan''') (born [[May 10]], [[1946]]) is a [[United Kingdom|British]] musician. Emerging from the British [[folk music|folk]] scene, Donovan shot to fame in Britain in early [[1965]] after a series of showcase TV performances. His success was initially restricted to Britain, but after signing with the American [[Epic Records]] label and joining forces with producer [[Mickie Most]], he developed an eclectic but very successful style that blended folk, [[jazz]], [[pop]], [[psychedelic music|psychedelia]] and [[world music]].
{{about|the Scottish musician}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2016}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2016}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Donovan
| image = Donovan 1969.JPG
| caption = Donovan performing on ''[[The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour]]'' in 1969
| birth_name = Donovan Phillips Leitch
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1946|5|10}}
| birth_place = [[Maryhill]], [[Glasgow]], Scotland
| occupation = {{hlist|Musician|songwriter|record producer}}
| years_active = 1964–present
| spouse = {{marriage|[[Linda Lawrence]]|1970}}
| children = 5; including [[Donovan Leitch (actor)|Donovan Leitch]] and [[Ione Skye]]
| partner = Enid Karl (1966–70)
| module = {{Infobox musical artist
| embed = yes
| genre = {{hlist|[[Folk rock|Folk]]|[[pop music|pop]]|[[psychedelic music|psychedelia]]|[[rock music|rock]]}}
| instrument = {{hlist|Vocals|guitar<!--If you think an instrument should be listed, a consensus must be reached on the talk page-->}}
| label = {{hlist|[[Pye Records|Pye]]|[[Hickory Records|Hickory]]|[[Epic Records|Epic]]|[[Sony Wonder]]}}
| associated_acts = [[The Jeff Beck Group]]
| website = {{URL|donovan.ie}}
<!--| notable_instruments = 1965 [[Gibson J-45]]<br>[[Rickenbacker 325]]<br>[[C.F. Martin & Co.|Martin Guitars]]<br>[[Zemaitis Guitars|Zemaitis]] Signature "Blue Moon" Guitar<br>[[Harmony Guitars|Harmony]] Signature Guitars<br>The green handcrafted Ferrington (Kelly) used since 1996-->
}}
}}


'''Donovan Phillips Leitch''' (born 10 May 1946), known [[mononym]]ously as '''Donovan''', is a Scottish musician, songwriter and record producer. He emerged from the [[British folk]] scene in early 1965, and subsequently scored multiple international hit singles and albums during the late 1960s. His work became emblematic of the [[flower power]] era with its blend of [[Folk music|folk]], [[Pop music|pop]], [[Psychedelic music|psychedelica]], and [[jazz]] stylings.
Donovan quickly rose to become one of the most famous and popular British recording artists of his day, producing a string of trans-Atlantic hit albums and singles between [[1966]] and [[1970]]. He also became a close friend of [[The Beatles]] and was one of the few artists to collaborate on songs with them. Donovan's commercial fortunes waned after he parted ways with Most in [[1969]], and although he continued to perform and record sporadically in the Seventies and Eighties he gradually fell from favor, with his gentle musical style and '[[hippies|hippie]]' image increasingly scorned by critics, especially after the advent of [[punk rock]]. Donovan withdrew from performing and recording several times during his long career, but 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 noted [[rap]] producer and longtime fan [[Rick Rubin]] and recently released a new album, ''Beat Cafe''.


Donovan first achieved recognition with live performances on the pop TV series ''[[Ready Steady Go!]]'' in 1965. Having signed with [[Pye Records]] that year, he recorded singles and two albums in the folk vein for [[Hickory Records]], scoring three UK hit [[Single (music)|singles]]: "[[Catch the Wind]]", "[[Colours (Donovan song)|Colours]]" and "[[Universal Soldier (song)|Universal Soldier]]", the last written by [[Buffy Sainte-Marie]]. He then signed to [[Epic Records|CBS/Epic]] in the US and became more successful internationally, beginning a long collaboration with British record producer [[Mickie Most]]. In September 1966, "[[Sunshine Superman (song)|Sunshine Superman]]" topped America's [[Billboard Hot 100|''Billboard'' Hot 100]] chart for one week and went to No.&nbsp;2 in Britain, followed by "[[Mellow Yellow]]" at US No.&nbsp;2 in December 1966, then 1968's "[[Hurdy Gurdy Man]]" in the top 5 in both countries, and then "[[Atlantis (Donovan song)|Atlantis]]", which reached US No.&nbsp;7 in May 1969. The compilation ''[[Donovan's Greatest Hits]]'' was released in March 1969 and peaked at No. 4 on the [[Billboard 200]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.riaa.com/gold-platinum/|title=Gold & Platinum|website=Riaa.com}}</ref>
==Early life and career==


Donovan became a friend of other prominent musicians such as [[Joan Baez]], [[Brian Jones]], and [[the Beatles]]. He taught [[John Lennon]] a [[finger-picking]] guitar style in 1968 that Lennon employed in "[[Dear Prudence]]", "[[Julia (Beatles song)|Julia]]", "[[Happiness Is a Warm Gun]]", and other songs.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.dmbeatles.com/interviews.php?interview=66Paul |title=McCartney Interview 20&nbsp;November 1968 |publisher=Dmbeatles.com |access-date=18 May 2011}}</ref> His backing musicians included the [[Jeff Beck Group]], and [[John Bonham]], [[Jimmy Page]] and [[John Paul Jones (musician)|John Paul Jones]], who later rose to fame as members of [[Led Zeppelin]]. Donovan's commercial fortunes waned after parting with Most in 1969, and he left the industry for a time.
Donovan grew up in [[Glasgow]]; he contracted [[polio]] as a child but fortunately suffered no permanent injury. In [[1956]] the family moved to [[Hatfield]], [[England]]. Influenced by his family's love for [[Scotland|Scottish]] and [[England|English]] [[folk music]], he began playing [[guitar]] at fourteen. After leaving school, Donovan and longtime friend Gypsy Dave traveled for several years around Britain, [[busking]] and playing folk songs.


Donovan continued to perform and record intermittently in the 1970s and 1980s. His musical style and [[hippies|hippie]] image were scorned by critics, especially after the rise of [[punk rock]]. His performing and recording became sporadic until a revival in the 1990s with the emergence of Britain's [[rave music|rave]] scene and in 1994, he moved permanently to Ireland where he still lives.<ref name=":0" /> In 1996 he recorded the album ''[[Sutras (album)|Sutras]]'' with producer [[Rick Rubin]] and in 2004 made the album ''[[Beat Cafe]]''. Donovan was inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]] in 2012 and the [[Songwriters Hall of Fame]] in 2014.
Donovan began writing original material in the early [[1960s]] and by late [[1964]] he had settled in London and signed a management and publishing contract. He recorded a ten-track demo tape, which included the original recording of his first single, "Catch The Wind", a song that showed the unmistakable 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 he 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 (as it so often is with Dylan).Other significant influences in his formative years included Jesse Fuller ,[[Derroll Adams]] and [[Mac MacLeod]].


==Early life==
While recording the demo Donovan became friends with [[Brian Jones]] of [[The Rolling Stones]] and Jones's girlfriend of the time, Linda Lawrence. She had already had a son to Jones, but when she met Donovan her relationship with Jones was breaking up. She and Donovan subsequently became lovers and eventually married (they are still together). Linda became Donovan's muse and was to have a profound effect on his music, inspiring songs including, "Catch The Wind", "Legend Of A Girl Child Linda" and "Season Of The Witch".
Donovan was born on 10 May 1946, in [[Maryhill]], Glasgow<ref name=international>{{cite book|title=The International Who's Who in Popular Music 2002| publisher=Europa Publications|edition= 4|year=2002|isbn=978-1857431612|author=Andy Gregory|page=141|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gZIjT8PgJMEC&pg=PA141}}</ref><ref name=allmusic>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/donovan-mn0000799053/biography|title=Artist Biography [Donovan]|first=Jason|last=Ankeny|publisher=Allmusic.com|access-date=30 November 2014}}</ref> to Donald and Winifred (née Phillips) Leitch. His grandmothers were Irish.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/how-donovan-and-coco-his-granddaughter-caught-their-wind-35583500.html|title=How Donovan and Coco, his granddaughter, caught their wind|website=Independent.ie|date=3 April 2017 |access-date=4 July 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.healthywealthynwise.com/article.aspx?author=Janet%20Attwood%20and%20Christine%20Comaford&title=Donovan%20Leitch%20-%20Reconnect%20with%20Your%20Natural%20Harmony&Article=5530|author=Janet Attwood and Christine Comaford|title=Cover Story Article|publisher=Healthywealthynwise.com|access-date=1 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100206043559/http://healthywealthynwise.com/article.aspx?author=Janet%20Attwood%20and%20Christine%20Comaford&title=Donovan%20Leitch%20-%20Reconnect%20with%20Your%20Natural%20Harmony&Article=5530|archive-date=6 February 2010|url-status=live}}</ref> He contracted [[polio]] as a child. The disease and treatment left him with a limp.<ref name="Hurdy Gurdy Man">{{cite web|url=http://www.loti.com/sixties_music/Donovan_Leitch.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080109104337/http://www.loti.com/sixties_music/Donovan_Leitch.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=9 January 2008|title=The Hurdy Gurdy Man of the Psychedelic Sixties – Donovan Leitch|last=Prager|first=Felice|work=Rewind the Fifties|publisher=loti.com|access-date=11 November 2009}}</ref> His family moved to the [[New towns in the United Kingdom|new town]] of [[Hatfield, Hertfordshire]], England. Influenced by his family's love of [[folk music]], he began playing the guitar at 14. He enrolled in art school but soon dropped out, to live out his [[beatnik]] aspirations by going on the road.<ref name=artschooldropout>{{cite book|last=Donovan|first=Leitch|title=The Hurdy Gurdy Man|year=2006|publisher=Arrow|isbn=0-09-948703-9}}</ref>


==Music career==
Donovan had a meteoric rise to stardom. His demo tape was heard by Elkan Allen, producer of the [[television]] 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 TV debut on [[February 6]] [[1965]]. Unusually for pop programs of this time, he played and sang live, his guitar emblazoned with the words "This Machine Kills" -- a direct reference to [[Woody Guthrie]], whose own guitar bore the famous slogan "This Machine Kills Fascists". He was so well-received that he was invited back for the next two weeks, and immediately afterwards he was signed to a recording contract with Pye Records, whose other major pop acts were [[The Kinks]] and [[Petula Clark]].


===1964–66: Rise to fame===
Donovan's first UK single, a new version of "Catch The Wind", was released soon after his third TV appearance; it was a hugely successful debut, shooting to #4 on the U.K. 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 [[Wembley Arena|Empire Pool]], Wembley. The single was subsequently released on the small Hickory label in the [[USA]], where it managed an impressive #30 chart placing.
[[File:Donovan (1965).jpg|thumb|Donovan in 1965]]
Returning to [[Hatfield, Hertfordshire|Hatfield]], Donovan spent several months playing in local clubs, absorbing the folk scene around his home in [[St Albans]], learning the [[crosspicking]] guitar technique from local players such as [[Mac MacLeod]] and [[Mick Softley]] and writing his first songs. In 1964, he travelled to [[Manchester]] with [[Gyp Mills|Gypsy Dave]], then spent the summer in [[Torquay]], Devon. In Torquay he stayed with Mac MacLeod and took up [[busking]], studying the guitar, and learning [[traditional music|traditional]] folk and blues.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dixon |first=Kevin |url=http://www.peoplesrepublicofsouthdevon.co.uk/2010/07/17/torquays-other-history-the-inspiration-of-folk-superstars-donovan-and-mac-macleod |title=Torquay's other history: the inspiration of folk superstars Donovan and Mac Macleod|publisher=Peoplesrepublicofsouthdevon.co.uk|date=17 July 2010|access-date=18 May 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111008201625/http://www.peoplesrepublicofsouthdevon.co.uk/2010/07/17/torquays-other-history-the-inspiration-of-folk-superstars-donovan-and-mac-macleod/ |archive-date=8 October 2011 |df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.macmacleod.co.uk/reviews.html |title=reviews |access-date=2007-09-14 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090430165209/http://www.macmacleod.co.uk/reviews.html |archive-date=30 April 2009 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>


In late 1964, Donovan was offered a management and publishing contract by [[Peter Eden]] and [[Geoff Stephens]] of [[Pye Records]] in London, for which he recorded a 10-track demo tape which included the original of his first single, "[[Catch the Wind]]", and "[[Josie (Donovan song)|Josie]]". The first song revealed the influence of [[Woody Guthrie]] and [[Ramblin' Jack Elliott]], who had also influenced [[Bob Dylan]]. Dylan comparisons followed for some time.<ref name=pc48>{{Gilliland|url=https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc19823/m1 |title=Show 48 – The British are Coming! The British are Coming!: With an emphasis on Donovan, the Bee Gees and the Who. [Part 5] |access-date=18 May 2011}}</ref> In an interview with [[KFOK-LP|KFOK]] radio in the US on 14 June 2005, MacLeod said: "The press were fond of calling Donovan a Dylan clone as they had both been influenced by the same sources: Ramblin' Jack Elliott, [[Jesse Fuller]], Woody Guthrie, and many more."{{Citation needed|date=February 2013}}
Donovan's early musical style and appearance led to him being perceived and promoted as a British version of [[Bob Dylan]] and this brought with it a certain degree of criticism from folk purists, who wrongly assumed him to be a simple Dylan imitator. Not surprisingly, the meeting between the two musicians in April [[1965]] made headlines. However, although initially wary, Dylan was impressed by the young musician, as can be seen in [[D.A. Pennebaker]]'s film of Dylan's '65 UK tour, ''[[Don't Look Back]]'' (which was released in [[1967]]). As a result, Donovan was invited to tour with Dylan and [[Joan Baez]].


While recording the demo, Donovan befriended [[Brian Jones]] of [[the Rolling Stones]], who was recording nearby. He had recently met Jones' ex-girlfriend, [[Linda Lawrence]], who is the mother of Jones' son, Julian Brian (Jones) Leitch.<ref name="ReferenceA">Brian Jones: The Making of the Rolling Stones and Sympathy for the Devil: The Birth of the Rolling Stones by [[Paul Trynka]] – and the Death of Brian Jones by Paul Trynka</ref> The on-off romantic relationship that developed over five years was a force in Donovan's career. She influenced Donovan's music but refused to marry him and she moved to the United States for several years in the late 1960s. They met by chance in 1970 and married soon after. Donovan had other relationships – one of which resulted in the birth of his first two children, [[Donovan Leitch (actor)|Donovan Leitch]] and [[Ione Skye]], both of whom became actors.
Donovan's second single "Colours" was released in May, reaching #4, accompanied by his debut LP for Pye, ''[[What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid]]'', which reached #3 in the UK album charts. Retitled ''[[Catch the Wind (album)|Catch the Wind]]'' for the US, it reached #30 there. He made his first trip to the USA at this time, performing in New York with [[Pete Seeger]] and [[Reverend Gary Davis]] and appearing on Hullaballoo and Shindig, as well as performing to critical and audience acclaim at the 1965 [[Newport Folk Festival]] in July.


====Donovan and Dylan====
His next recording was a four-track EP, ''Universal Soldier'', which included his classic cover of the [[Buffy Sainte-Marie]] title track, along with three other overtly anti-war tracks. This was quite a radical move for an emerging pop performer -- the [[Vietnam War]] still had majority popular support in 1965 and Donovan's pioneering [[pacifist]] stance is conveniently overlooked by his critics; nor would this be his last anti-war recording. Despite its contentious subject matter, it was a significant commercial success, topping the British EP chart for eight weeks, reaching #14 on the British singles chart and #17 on the [[Australian]] singles chart.
During Bob Dylan's trip to the UK in the spring of 1965, the British music press were making comparisons of the two singer-songwriters which they presented as a rivalry. This prompted [[The Rolling Stones]] guitarist Brian Jones to say,


{{blockquote|We've been watching Donovan too. He isn't too bad a singer but his stuff sounds like Dylan's. His 'Catch The Wind' sounds like 'Chimes of Freedom'. He's got a song, 'Hey Tangerine Eyes' and it sounds like Dylan's 'Mr. Tambourine Man'.<ref>Rolling Stones off The Record", Mark Paytress, p.&nbsp;90</ref>}}
"Colours" was also released in the USA but it charted poorly, reaching #40 on the [[Cash Box magazine|Cash Box]] charts but only #61 on the [[Billboard magazine|Billboard]] chart. At this stage, Donovan's American success was greater 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 (album)|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.


Donovan is the undercurrent In [[D. A. Pennebaker]]'s film ''[[Dont Look Back]]'' documenting Dylan's tour. Near the start of the film, Dylan opens a newspaper and exclaims, "Donovan? Who is this Donovan?" and [[Alan Price]] from [[The Animals]] spurred the rivalry on by telling Dylan that Donovan is a better guitar player, but that he had only been around for three months. Throughout the film Donovan's name is seen next to Dylan's on newspaper headlines and on posters in the background, and Dylan and his friends refer to him consistently.
A single version of "Universal Soldier" was issued in the USA in late August 1965 but it repeated the mediocre chart performance of "Colours", reaching only #45 in Cash Box and #53 in Billboard. Pye released Donovan's second UK album, ''[[Fairytale (album)|Fairytale]]'', in October 1966, along with his next single, "Turquoise". These too were less successful than his previous releases, with the album only reaching #20 and the single peaking at #30. Donovan made a second US tour in November, and Hickory released the American version of ''[[Fairytale (album)|Fairytale]]'' later that month but, as in the UK, it did charted much lower than the first LP, only reaching #85.


Donovan finally appears in the second half of the film, along with [[Derroll Adams]], in Dylan's suite at the [[Savoy Hotel]] despite Donovan's management refusing to allow journalists to be present, saying they did not want "any stunt on the lines of the disciple meeting the messiah".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sabotage.demon.co.uk/donovan/art/1.htm#mm5/5/65 |title=Melody Maker |date=5 May 1965 |publisher=Sabotage.demon.co.uk |access-date=18 May 2011 |archive-date=15 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110515020058/http://www.sabotage.demon.co.uk/donovan/art/1.htm#mm5/5/65 |url-status=dead }}</ref> According to Pennebaker, Dylan told him not to film the encounter, and Donovan played a song that sounded just like "[[Mr. Tambourine Man]]" but with different words. When confronted with lifting his tune, Donovan said that he thought it was an old folk song.<ref name="Marcus, 2011">{{citation|last1=Marcus |first1=Greil |title=Greil Marcus interviews D.A. Pennebaker about filming Bob Dylan|date=2011|publisher=New Video's Docurama Films}}</ref> Once the camera rolled, Donovan plays his song "To Sing For You" and then asks Dylan to play "[[It's All Over Now, Baby Blue|Baby Blue]]". Dylan later told ''[[Melody Maker]]'': "He played some songs to me.&nbsp;... I like him.&nbsp;... He's a nice guy." ''Melody Maker'' noted that Dylan had mentioned Donovan in his song "[[Talkin' World War III Blues|Talking World War Three Blues]]" and that the crowd had jeered, to which Dylan had responded backstage: "I didn't mean to put the guy down in my songs. I just did it for a joke, that's all."
==Collaboration with Mickie Most==


In an interview for the BBC in 2001 to mark Dylan's 60th birthday, Donovan acknowledged Dylan as an influence early in his career while distancing himself from "Dylan clone" allegations:
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 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]] and [[Herman's Hermits]].


{{blockquote|The one who really taught us to play and learn all the traditional songs was [[Martin Carthy]] – who incidentally was contacted by Dylan when Bob first came to the UK. Bob was influenced, as all American folk artists are, by the [[Celtic music]] of Ireland, Scotland and England. But in 1962 we folk Brits were also being influenced by some folk Blues and the American folk-exponents of our Celtic Heritage&nbsp;... Dylan appeared after [[Woody Guthrie|Woody]] [Guthrie], [[Pete Seeger|Pete]] [Seeger] and [[Joan Baez|Joanie]] [Baez] had conquered our hearts, and he sounded like a cowboy at first but I knew where he got his stuff – it was Woody at first, then it was [[Jack Kerouac]] and the stream-of-consciousness poetry which moved him along. But when I heard '[[Blowin' in the Wind]]' it was the clarion call to the new generation – and we artists were encouraged to be as brave in writing our thoughts in music&nbsp;... We were not captured by his influence, we were encouraged to mimic him – and remember every British band from the [[Rolling Stones|Stones]] to the [[Beatles]] were copying note for note, lick for lick, all the American pop and blues artists – this is the way young artists learn. There's no shame in mimicking a hero or two – it flexes the creative muscles and tones the quality of our composition and technique. It was not only Dylan who influenced us – for me he was a spearhead into protest, and we all had a go at his style. I sounded like him for five minutes – others made a career of his sound. Like troubadours, Bob and I can write about any facet of the human condition. To be compared was natural, but I am not a copyist.<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1347199.stm |title=Donovan remembers Dylan |last=Anon |date=23 May 2001 |work=BBC News |publisher=BBC |access-date=7 November 2009}}</ref>}}
Most produced almost all of Donovan's best recordings. 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 [[Jack Bruce]], Danny Thompson and future [[Led Zeppelin]] members [[John Paul Jones (musician)|John Paul Jones]] and [[Jimmy Page]]. Many of the earlier Donovan-Most recordings were backed by jazz musicians, the most regular players being Danny Thompson (from [[Pentangle (band)|Pentangle]]) or Spike Heatley on upright bass, Tony Carr on drums and congas, John Cameron on piano and Harold McNair on sax and flute. Carr's distinctive conga style and McNair's flute are an intrinsic feature of many of Donovan's recordings, and both players also toured the U.S with Donovan.


====Collaboration with Mickie Most====
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 -- they were among the top freelance pop musicians in London at that time, and worked on literally hundreds of well-known British recordings in that period, until Page retired from session work in 1968 to join [[The Yardbirds]]. Nevertheless, Donovan himself 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 real genesis of the Led Zeppelin style.
In late 1965, Donovan split with his original management and signed with [[Ashley Kozak]], who was working for [[Brian Epstein]]'s [[NEMS Enterprises]]. Kozak introduced Donovan to American businessman [[Allen Klein]] (later manager of the Rolling Stones and, in their final months, [[the Beatles]]).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.beatlesbible.com/people/allen-klein/|title=Allen Klein|date=25 March 2008|website=The Beatles Bible}}</ref> Klein in turn introduced Donovan to producer [[Mickie Most]],<ref name="classicbands">{{cite web|url=http://www.classicbands.com/donovan.html |title=Donovan |last=Anon |work=www.classicbands.com |access-date=7 November 2009}}</ref> who had chart-topping productions with [[the Animals]], [[Lulu (singer)|Lulu]], and [[Herman's Hermits]]. Most produced all Donovan's recordings during this period, although Donovan said in his autobiography that some recordings were self-produced, with little input from Most. Their collaboration produced successful singles and albums, recorded with London session players including [[Big Jim Sullivan]],<ref>{{cite news|title=Guitarist Big Jim Sullivan dies|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-19820424|work=BBC News|access-date=23 February 2013|date=3 October 2012}}</ref> [[Jack Bruce]],<ref>{{cite web|title=Jack Bruce Discography – 1963–2010 |url=http://www.jackbruce.com/2008/Music/complete_discography.htm |publisher=www.jackbruce.com |access-date=23 February 2013}}</ref> [[Danny Thompson]],<ref>{{cite web |title=Donovan With Danny Thompson – Discography |url=http://www.45cat.com/artist/donovan-with-danny-thompson/all |publisher=www.45cat.com |access-date=23 February 2013}}</ref> and future [[Led Zeppelin]] members [[John Paul Jones (musician)|John Paul Jones]] and [[Jimmy Page]].<ref name=lz>{{cite web|title=Season of the Witch |url=https://www.allmusic.com/song/season-of-the-witch-mt0010623319 |publisher=www.allmusic.com |access-date=23 February 2013}}</ref>


Many of Donovan's late 1960s recordings featured musicians including his key musical collaborator [[John Cameron (musician)|John Cameron]] on piano, Danny Thompson (from [[Pentangle (band)|Pentangle]]) or [[Spike Heatley]] on upright bass, Tony Carr on drums and [[conga]]s and [[Harold McNair]] on saxophone and flute. Carr's conga style and McNair's flute playing are a feature of many recordings. Cameron, McNair and Carr also accompanied Donovan on several concert tours and can be heard on his 1968 live album ''[[Donovan in Concert (1968 album)|Donovan in Concert]]''.
By [[1966]] Donovan had shed the overt Dylan/Guthrie influences and became 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. He was now entering his most creative and original phase as a songwriter and recording artist, working in close collaboration with Mickie Most and arranger, musician and jazz fan John Cameron.


====''Sunshine Superman''====
The first fruit of their collaboration was the track '[[Sunshine Superman]]'. One of the very 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 "coulda tripped out easy, but I changed my way".
[[File:Donovan 4.jpg|thumb|Donovan performing in [[Finnish Broadcasting Company]]'s television program ''Ohimennen'' in June 1966.]]
By 1966, Donovan had shed the Dylan/Guthrie influences and become one of the first British pop musicians to adopt [[flower power]]. He immersed himself in jazz, [[blues]], [[Eastern world|Eastern]] music, and the new generation of [[counterculture of the 1960s|counterculture]]-era [[West Coast of the United States|US West Coast]] bands such as [[Jefferson Airplane]] and [[the Grateful Dead]]. He was entering his most creative phase as a songwriter and recording artist, working with Mickie Most and with arranger, musician, and jazz fan [[John Cameron (musician)|John Cameron]]. Their first collaboration was ''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'', one of the first [[psychedelic pop]] records.<ref name="classicbands"/>


Donovan's rapid rise temporarily stalled in December 1965 when ''[[Billboard magazine|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 lengthy contractual wrangle ensued. As a result of this dispute, Donovan's subsequent U.K. and U.S. record releases differed markedly, with most of his LP being released in different forms on either side of the Atlantic and several significant album tracks from the late Sixties were not available locally in the UK for many years.
Donovan's rise stalled in December 1965 when ''Billboard'' broke news of the impending production deal between Klein, Most, and Donovan, and then reported that Donovan was to sign with [[Epic Records]] in the US. Despite Kozak's denials, [[Pye Records]] dropped the single and a contract dispute ensued, because Pye had a US licensing arrangement with [[Warner Bros. Records]]. As a result, the UK release of the ''Sunshine Superman'' LP was delayed for months, robbing it of the impact it would have had. Another outcome was that the UK and US versions of this and later albums differed – three of his Epic LPs were not released in the UK, and ''Sunshine Superman'' was issued in a different form in each country. Several tracks on his late 1960s Epic (US) LPs were not released in the UK for many years. The legal dispute continued into early 1966. During the hiatus, Donovan holidayed in Greece, where he wrote "Writer in the Sun",<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hit-channel.com/interview-donovan/68376 |title=Interview: Donovan |publisher=Hit-channel.com |date=20 June 2014 |access-date=19 August 2015}}</ref> inspired by rumours that his recording career was over. He toured the US and appeared on episode 23 of [[Pete Seeger]]'s television show ''[[Rainbow Quest]]'' in 1966 with [[Shawn Phillips]] and [[Rev. Gary Davis]]. After his return to London, he developed his friendship with [[Paul McCartney]] and contributed the line "sky of blue and sea of green" to "[[Yellow Submarine (song)|Yellow Submarine]]".


By spring 1966, the American contract problems had been resolved, and Donovan signed a $100,000 deal with Epic Records. Donovan and Most went to [[CBS Studio Building|CBS Studios]] in Los Angeles, where they recorded tracks for an LP, much composed during the preceding year. Although folk elements were prominent, the album showed increasing influence of [[jazz]], American west coast [[psychedelia]] and [[folk rock]] – especially [[the Byrds]]. The LP sessions were completed in May, and "[[Sunshine Superman (song)|Sunshine Superman]]" was released in the US as a single in June. It was a success, selling 800,000 in six weeks and reaching No. 1. It went on to sell over one million, and was awarded a [[music recording sales certification|gold disc]].<ref name="The Book of Golden Discs">{{cite book |first=Joseph |last=Murrells |year=1978 |title=The Book of Golden Discs |edition=2nd |publisher=Barrie and Jenkins Ltd |location=London |page=[https://archive.org/details/bookofgoldendisc00murr/page/204 204] |isbn=0-214-20512-6 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/bookofgoldendisc00murr/page/204 }}</ref> The LP followed in August, preceded by orders of 250,000 copies, reached No. 11 on the US [[Billboard 200|album chart]] and sold over half a million.<ref name="The Book of Golden Discs"/>
The legal dispute dragged on into early 1966, so during the hiatus Donovan holidayed in Greece, where he wrote one of his best songs, the wistful 'Writer In The Sun', inspired by the rumors that his recording career was over; he also toured the USA, playing some sparsely attended gigs. Returning to London, he collaborated with The Beatles, contributing lyrics (and uncredited backing vocals) to the song ''Yellow Submarine'', which was recorded at [[Abbey Road Studios]] on [[26 May]] [[1966]].


The US version of the ''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'' album features 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 [[Cass Elliot]] of [[the Mamas & the Papas]]. The song is notable for naming the Jefferson Airplane before they became known internationally and before [[Grace Slick]] joined. Other tracks include "Bert's Blues" (a tribute to [[Bert Jansch]]), "Guinevere", and "Legend of a Girl Child Linda", a track featuring voice, acoustic guitar and a small orchestra for over six minutes.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Hurdy Gurdy Man |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PVsIp2DSuQMC&pg=PA164 |access-date=19 February 2013|isbn = 9780099487036|author1 = Donovan|last2 = Leitch|first2 = Donovan|year = 2006| publisher=Arrow }}</ref>
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 then headed to CBS Studios in Los Angeles where they recorded the tracks for a new LP, much of which had been formulated and written over 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 through 1965.


The album also features the sitar, which was played by American folk-rock singer [[Shawn Phillips]]. Donovan met Phillips in London in 1965, and he became a friend and early collaborator, playing acoustic guitar and sitar on recordings including ''Sunshine Superman'' as well as accompanying Donovan at concerts and on Pete Seeger's TV show. Creatively, Phillips served as a silent partner in the gestation of many of Donovan's songs from the era, with the singer later acknowledging that Phillips primarily composed "[[Season of the Witch (song)|Season of the Witch]]".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.goldminemag.com/article/follow-the-ever-changing-ballad-of-singer-songwriter-shawn-phillips |title=Follow the ever-changing ballad of Shawn Phillips |date=25 July 2012}}</ref> Several songs including the title track had a harder edge. The driving, jazzy "The Trip", named after a Los Angeles club name, chronicled an [[LSD]] [[Psychedelic experience|trip]] during his time in L.A. and is loaded with references to his sojourn on the West Coast, and names Dylan and Baez. The third "heavy" song was "Season of the Witch".{{citation needed|date=February 2016}} Recorded with American and British session players, it features Donovan's first recorded performance on electric guitar. The song was covered by [[Julie Driscoll]], [[Brian Auger and the Trinity]] on their first LP in 1967, and [[Al Kooper]] and [[Stephen Stills]] recorded an 11-minute version on the 1968 album, ''[[Super Session]]''. Donovan's version is also in the closing sequence of the [[Gus Van Sant]] film, ''[[To Die For]]''. {{citation needed|date=August 2014}}
The LP sessions were completed in May and ''Sunshine Superman'' was released in the USA as a single in June. It was a huge success, providing Donovan with the crucial American chart breakthrough, selling 800,000 copies in just six weeks and eventually reaching #1. The LP followed in August, preceded by advance orders of 250,000 copies, and it reached #11 on the US album charts.


Because of earlier contractual problems, the UK version of ''Sunshine Superman'' LP was not released for another nine months. This was a compilation of tracks from the US albums ''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'' and ''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]''. Donovan did not choose the tracks.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
The U.S. version of the ''Sunshine Superman'' LP is probably the best, most consistent and most durable of Donovan's albums, it remains one of the keynote records of the psychedelic era. It boasts superb songs throughout, with restrained but imaginative [[chamber music|chamber]]-style arrangements featuring an eclectic range of instruments including acoustic bass, [[sitar]], saxophone, tablas and congas, harpsichord, strings and oboe. Highlights include the swinging 'The Fat Angel', written for 'Mama' [[Cass Elliott]] of [[The Mamas And The Papas]]. The song is also notable for namechecking cult San Francisco acid-rock band [[Jefferson Airplane]], well before they became known internationally. Other standout tracks include 'Bert's Blues', (a tribute to British folk legend Bert Jansch), the stately 'Guinevere' and 'Legend Of A Girl Child Linda' which ran for almost seven minutes.


====Mellow Yellow====
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' (titled after the L.A. club of the same name) features sitar by American folk singer [[Shawn Phillips]], and was loaded with references to Donovan's sojourn on the West Coast, namechecking both Dylan and Baez. The third 'heavy' song, destined to became one of his most enduring recordings, was a brooding, portentous number called 'Season Of The Witch'. Recorded with a pick-up band he had met in an L.A. club, it featured Donovan's first recorded performance on electric rhythm guitar. The song was covered by [[Brian Auger]] on his first LP in 1967 and the Donovan version was used to great effect, years later, in the memorable closing sequence of the Gus Van Zant film ''To Die For'', starring [[Nicole Kidman]].
[[File:Royal Albert Hall, London - Nov 2012.jpg|thumb|upright=1.3|The [[Royal Albert Hall]], London]]
On 24 October 1966, Epic released the single "[[Mellow Yellow]]", arranged by [[John Paul Jones (musician)|John Paul Jones]] and purportedly featuring [[Paul McCartney]] on backing vocals, but not in the chorus.<ref name="classicbands"/> In his autobiography Donovan explained "electrical banana" was a reference to a "yellow-coloured vibrator".<ref>Donovan, ''Donovan in Concert'', released on Atlantic July 1968, re-issued on BGO February 2002. ASIN B0000011LU.</ref> The song became Donovan's signature tune in the US and reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, No. 3 on the Cash Box chart, and earned a gold record award for sales of more than one million in the US.<ref name="The Book of Golden Discs"/>


Through the first half of 1967, Donovan worked on a double-album studio project, which he produced. In January he gave a concert at the [[Royal Albert Hall]] accompanied by a ballerina who danced during a 12-minute performance of "Golden Apples". On 14 January, [[NME|New Musical Express]] reported he was to write incidental music for a [[Royal National Theatre|National Theatre]] production of ''[[As You Like It]]'', but this did not come to fruition. His version of "[[Under the Greenwood Tree]]" did appear on "[[A Gift from a Flower to a Garden]]".
Because of the 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'.


In March Epic released the ''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]'' LP (not released in the UK), which reached No. 14 in the US album charts, plus a non-album single, "[[Epistle to Dippy]]", a Top 20 hit in the US. Written as an open letter to a school friend, the song had a pacifist message as well as psychedelic imagery. The real "Dippy" was in the [[British Army]] in Malaysia. According to Brian Hogg, who wrote the liner notes for the Donovan boxed set ''[[Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964–1976|Troubadour]]'', Dippy heard the song, contacted Donovan and left the army. On 9 February 1967, Donovan was among guests invited by the Beatles to Abbey Road Studios for the orchestral overdub for "[[A Day in the Life]]", the finale to ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]''.<ref>{{cite book|title=A Day in the Life:One Family, the Beautiful People, and the End of the Sixties|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OfMWwVXsl0EC&pg=PT78 |access-date=20 February 2013|isbn = 9780786748006|last1 = Greenfield|first1 = Robert|date = 17 June 2009| publisher=Hachette Books }}</ref>
On [[24 October]] [[1966]] Epic released the rollicking, brass-laden single 'Mellow Yellow', arranged by John Paul Jones and featuring [[Paul McCartney]] on uncredited backing vocals. Although it was rumoured at the time that the phrase "electrical banana" referred to the practice of smoking banana peels to get high, it appears that it was actually a coded reference to a vibrator -- the earlier line "I'm just mad about Fourteen" leaves little room for doubt that the primary theme of the song was sexual. Nevertheless, it became Donovan's signature tune and was a huge commercial success -- it reached #2 in Billboard, #3 in Cash Box and earned a gold record award for sales of more than one million copies in the U.S.


====Arrest====
During the first half of 1967 Donovan worked on an ambitious new studio project. 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 nothing came of the proposal.
On 10{{nbsp}}June 1966,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hitchens |first1=Peter |author1-link=Peter Hitchens |title=The War We Never Fought: The British Establishment's Surrender to Drugs |date=2012 |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing]] |location=London |isbn=978-1-4411-7331-7 |page=102 |url=https://archive.org/details/warweneverfought0000hitc |url-access=registration |via=the [[Internet Archive]]}}</ref> Donovan became the first high-profile British pop star to be arrested for possession of [[cannabis (drug)|cannabis]].<ref name="Hurdy Gurdy Man"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Shea |first1=Stuart |last2=Rodriguez |first2=Robert |title=Fab Four FAQ: Everything Left to Know About the Beatles{{nbsp}}... and More! |date=2007 |publisher=[[Hal Leonard]] |location=New York City |page=67 |isbn=978-1-4234-2138-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/fabfourfaqeveryt0000shea/ |url-access=registration |via=the [[Internet Archive]]}}</ref> Donovan's drug use was mostly restricted to cannabis, with occasional use of [[LSD]] and [[mescaline]].{{citation needed|date=December 2019}} His LSD use is thought to be referenced indirectly in some of his lyrics.<ref name="Hurdy Gurdy Man"/> Public attention was drawn to his marijuana use by the TV documentary ''A Boy Called Donovan'' in early 1966, which showed the singer and friends smoking cannabis at a party thrown by the film crew. Donovan's arrest proved to be the first in a long series involving the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. In early 1967, Donovan was subject of an exposé in the ''[[News of the World]]''.<ref>{{cite book|title=Pop Music and the Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N-ViwZnnR3oC&q=donovan+1967+news+of+the+world&pg=PA117 |access-date=19 February 2013|isbn = 9781566399661|last1 = Jones|first1 = Steve|year = 2002| publisher=Temple University Press }}</ref>


According to Donovan, the article was based on an interview by an ex-girlfriend of his friend Gypsy Dave. The article was the first in a three-part series, ''Drugs & Pop Stars – Facts That Will Shock You.'' It was quickly shown some claims were false. A ''News of the World'' reporter claimed to have spent an evening with [[Mick Jagger]], who allegedly discussed his drug use and offered drugs to companions. He had mistaken Brian Jones for Jagger, and Jagger sued the newspaper for libel. Among other supposed revelations were claims that Donovan and stars including members of [[The Who]], [[Cream (band)|Cream]], [[The Rolling Stones]] and [[The Moody Blues]] regularly smoked marijuana, used other drugs, and held parties where the recently banned hallucinogen LSD was used, specifically naming the Who's [[Pete Townshend]] and Cream's [[Ginger Baker]].
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 USA. Written in the form of an open letter to an old school friend, the song had a strong pacifist subtext, 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.


It emerged later that the ''News of the World'' reporters were passing information to the police. In the late 1990s, ''The Guardian'' said ''News of the World'' reporters had alerted police to the party at [[Keith Richards]]'s home, which was raided on 12 February 1967. Although Donovan's was not as sensational as the later arrests of Jagger and Richards, he was refused entry to the US until late 1967. He could not appear at the [[Monterey Pop Festival|Monterey International Pop Festival]] in June that year.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Season of "Season of the Witch"|date=16 May 2012 |url=https://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/culture/2012/05/season-of-the-witch.html|publisher=www.newyorker.com|access-date=19 February 2013}}</ref>
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 brilliant Lennon-McCartney collaboration '[[A Day In The Life]]', the grand finale to their new opus ''[[Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]''.


===1967–69: International success===
==Drug bust==
In July 1967, Epic released "[[There Is a Mountain]]", which just missed the US top ten and was later used as the basis for [[the Allman Brothers Band]]'s "[[Mountain Jam]]". In September, Donovan toured the US, backed by a jazz group and accompanied by his father, who introduced the show. Later that month, Epic released Donovan's fifth album, a set titled, ''[[A Gift from a Flower to a Garden]]'', the first rock music box set and only the third pop-rock double album released. It was split into halves. The first, ''Wear Your Love Like Heaven'', was for people of his generation who would one day be parents; the second, ''[[For Little Ones]]'', was songs Donovan had written for coming generations. Worried it might be a poor seller, Epic boss [[Clive Davis]] also insisted the albums be split and sold separately in the US (the "Wear Your Love Like Heaven" album cover was photographed at [[Bodiam Castle]]), but his fears were unfounded – although it took time, the original boxed set sold steadily, eventually peaking at 19 in the US album chart and achieving gold record status in the US in early 1970.


The psychedelic and mystical overtones were unmistakable – the front cover featured an [[infrared photography|infra-red]] photograph by [[Karl Ferris]] showing Donovan at [[Bodiam Castle]], dressed in a robe, holding flowers and peacock feathers, while the back photo showed him holding hands with Indian guru [[Maharishi Mahesh Yogi]]. The liner notes included an appeal for young people to give up drugs. His disavowal of drugs came after his time with the Maharishi in [[Rishikesh]], a topic discussed in a two-part interview for the first two issues of ''[[Rolling Stone]]''.<ref>{{cite magazine |magazine=Rolling Stone|title=Donovan: The Rolling Stone Interview |url= https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/donovan-the-rolling-stone-interview-part-2-232058/ |first=John|last=Carpenter|volume=1|issue=1,2|date=9–23 November 1967}}</ref>
Donovan became the first high-profile British pop star to be arrested for possession of [[marijuana]], which evidently occurred some time in late 1966. In Donovan's case, his drug use was evidently moderate, and seems to have been mostly restricted to pot smoking -- certainly he was not indulging on the Herculean scale of friends like [[John Lennon]], [[Jimi Hendrix]] and [[Brian Jones]].


In late 1967 Donovan contributed two songs to the [[Ken Loach]] film ''[[Poor Cow]]''. "Be Not Too Hard" was a musical setting of [[Christopher Logue]]'s poem ''September Song'', and was later recorded by such artists as [[Joan Baez]] and [[Shusha Guppy]]. The title track, originally entitled "Poor Love", was the B-side of his next single, "[[Jennifer Juniper]]", which was inspired by [[Jenny Boyd]], sister of [[George Harrison]]'s wife, [[Pattie Boyd]] and was another top 40 hit in the US. Donovan developed interest in eastern mysticism and claims to have interested the Beatles in [[transcendental meditation]].{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
Attention was first drawn to his marijuana use by a 1966 TV documentary, which showed the singer and some friends sharing a joint. The subsequent bust gained a great deal of publicity and in early 1967, Donovan was the subject of an expose by the British tabloid ''[[News Of The World]]''; it was the first instalment of a controversial 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 Yhe World reporter who claimed to have spent an entire evening with [[Mick Jagger]], who (he claimed) 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).


In early 1968 he was part of the group that traveled to the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in [[Rishikesh]]. The visit gained worldwide attention thanks to the presence of all four Beatles as well as [[Beach Boys]] lead singer [[Mike Love]], as well as actress [[Mia Farrow]] and her sister Prudence (who inspired Lennon to write "[[Dear Prudence]]"). According to a 1968 [[Paul McCartney]] interview with [[Radio Luxembourg (English)|Radio Luxembourg]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dmbeatles.com/interviews.php?interview=66|title=Paul McCartney Interview: Promoting the White Album (20 November 1968)|publisher=Dmbeatles.com|access-date=18 May 2011}}</ref> it was during this time that Donovan taught Lennon and McCartney [[fingerstyle guitar|finger-picking guitar]] styles including the [[clawhammer]], which he had learned from Mac MacLeod. Lennon used this technique on songs including "[[Dear Prudence]]", "[[Julia (The Beatles song)|Julia]]", "[[Happiness is a Warm Gun]]" and "[[Look at Me (John Lennon song)|Look at Me]]", and McCartney with "[[Blackbird (Beatles song)|Blackbird]]" and "[[Mother Nature's Son]]".<ref>{{cite web |title=Rolling Stone – Donovan on teaching guitar technique to the Beatles |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3tWkyYXcLc | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211030/Q3tWkyYXcLc| archive-date=2021-10-30|website=You Tube | date=30 April 2012 |publisher=Rolling Stone |access-date=30 November 2018}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
Among the supposed revelations were claims that Donovan and other leading pop stars including members of [[The Who]], [[Cream (band)|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.
[[File:Hurdy Gurdy Man - ad 1968.png|thumb|''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' advertisement, June 15, 1968]]
Donovan's next single, in May 1968, was the psychedelic "[[Hurdy Gurdy Man]]". The liner notes from EMI's reissues say the song was intended for Mac MacLeod, who had a heavy rock band called [[Hurdy Gurdy (band)|Hurdy Gurdy]]. After hearing MacLeod's version, Donovan considered giving it to [[Jimi Hendrix]], but when Most heard it, he convinced Donovan to record it himself. Donovan tried to get Hendrix to play, but he was on tour. Jimmy Page played electric guitar in some studio sessions and is credited with playing on the song.<ref>Liner notes, ''[[Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964–1976]]'', Sony Music Entertainment, 1992. ("[[Hurdy Gurdy Man]]" recording in London, England, 1968, crediting Donovan on vocal, acoustic guitar and tambura, [[Allan Holdsworth]] and [[Jimmy Page]] on electric guitars, [[John Paul Jones (musician)|John Paul Jones]] on bass, [[John Bonham]] and "Clem Clatini" (a misspelling of [[Clem Cattini]]) on drums, produced by Most, arrangement by John Paul Jones, [[Epic Records|Epic]] LP BN 25420, Epic single 5-10345.)</ref><ref>[[Anthony DeCurtis|DeCurtis, A.]], "Donovan's Calling", essay released in liner notes of ''[[Try for the Sun: The Journey of Donovan]]'' 2005 limited-edition boxed set compilation by Sony BMG Music Entertainment [[Legacy Recordings]].</ref> Alternatively, it is credited to [[Alan Parker(musician)|Alan Parker]].{{citation needed|date=May 2014}}


Donovan credits Page and "Allen Hollsworth" (a misspelling of [[Allan Holdsworth]]) as the "guitar wizards" for the song, saying they created "a new kind of metal folk".<ref name=autobio>Leitch, Donovan, ''The Hurdy Gurdy Man'', [[Random House|Century]], an imprint of [[Random House]], London, 2005 (published in the U.S. as ''The Autobiography of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man'', pp. 218–19 [[St. Martin's Press]], New York, 2005; {{ISBN|0-312-35252-2}}).</ref>
It emerged later that the News Of Yhe World's 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 tipped off the police about the party at Keith Richard's house, 'Redlands', which was famously raided in the early hours of [[12 February]] [[1967]], just after [[George Harrison]] and his girlfriend had left.


Since [[John Bonham]] and John Paul Jones also played, Donovan said perhaps the session inspired the formation of [[Led Zeppelin]].<ref name=autobio/> The heavier sound of "Hurdy Gurdy Man" was an attempt by Most and Donovan to reach a wider audience in the US, where hard-rock groups like [[Cream (band)|Cream]] and [[the Jimi Hendrix Experience]] were having an impact. The song became one of Donovan's biggest hits, making the Top 5 in the UK and the US, and the Top 10 in Australia.{{Citation needed|date=February 2013}}
Although Donovan's bust was nowhere near as sensational as the later arrests of Jagger and Richards, it had one especially unfortunate outcome -- because of the charges, he was refused entry to the United States until late in 1967, and so was unable to give his scheduled performance at the epoch-making [[Monterey International Pop Festival]] in June of that year.


In July 1968, Epic released ''[[Donovan in Concert (1968 album)|Donovan in Concert]]'', the recording of his Anaheim concert in September 1967. The cover featured only a painting by [[Fleur Cowles]] (with neither the artist's name nor the title). The album contained two of his big hits and songs which would have been new to the audience. The expanded double CD from 2006 contained "Epistle To Derroll", a tribute to one of his formative influences, [[Derroll Adams]]. The album also includes extended group arrangements of "Young Girl Blues" and "The Pebble and the Man", a song later reworked and retitled as "Happiness Runs". In the summer of 1968, Donovan worked on a second LP of children's songs, released in 1971 as the double album, ''[[HMS Donovan (album)|HMS Donovan]]''. In September, Epic released a single, "[[Laléna]]", a subdued acoustic ballad which reached the low 30s in the US. The album ''[[The Hurdy Gurdy Man]]'' followed (not released in the UK), continuing the style of the ''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]'' LP, and reached 20 in the US, despite containing two earlier hits, the title track and "Jennifer Juniper".{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
== International success, 1967-69==


After another US tour in the autumn he collaborated with Paul McCartney, who was producing ''[[Postcard (album)|Postcard]]'', the debut LP by Welsh singer [[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, "[[Atlantis (Donovan song)|Atlantis]]", which was released in the UK (with "I Love My Shirt" as the B-side) in late November and reached 23.<ref name=ukcharts>{{cite web|title=Donovan|url=http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/_/donovan/|publisher=officialcharts.com|access-date=19 February 2013}}</ref>
In July Epic released the single 'There Is A Mountain', which went Top Ten in the USA and was later covered by [[The Allman Brothers]]. In September he undertook a new tour of the United States. This time Donovan was backed by a small jazz group and accompanied by his father, who introduced the show. Dressed in a flowing white robe, the stage decked with feathers, flowers and incense, Donovan played to a packed house at the Philharmonic Hall in New York. His performance was rapturously received and immortalised by [[Lillian Roxon]] in her ''Rock Encylopedia''. A similarly ecstatic performance at the [[Hollywood Bowl]] was followed by a notable landmark: Donovan's interview with writer John Carpenter became the first ever ''Rolling Stone'' interview in the magazine's debut issue, published on [[November 9]], [[1967]]. Donovan's concert at the Anaheim Convention Center on [[23 September]] was recorded and released as a live LP the following year.


Early in 1969, the comedy film ''[[If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium]]'' featured music by Donovan; the title tune was written by him and sung by J. P. Rags, and he also performed "Lord of the Reedy River" in the film as a singer at a youth hostel. On 20 January, Epic released the single, "To Susan on the West Coast Waiting", with "[[Atlantis (Donovan song)|Atlantis]]" as the B-side. The A-side, a gentle [[Calypso music|calypso]]-styled song, contained another anti-war message, and became a moderate Top 40 US hit. However, when DJs in America and Australia flipped it and began playing "Atlantis", that became a hit. The gentle "Atlantis" later formed the backdrop to a violent scene in [[Martin Scorsese]]'s 1990 film ''[[GoodFellas]]''. "Atlantis" was revived in 2000 for an episode of ''[[Futurama]]'' titled "The Deep South" (2ACV12) which aired on 16 April that year. For this episode Donovan recorded a satirical version of the song describing the Lost City of [[Atlanta]] which featured in the episode.
Later in July 1967 Epic released Donovan's fourth 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 (album)|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 children. 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, peaking at #19 on the US charts and achieving gold record status in the USA in early 1970.


In March 1969 (too soon to include "Atlantis"), Epic and Pye released ''[[Donovan's Greatest Hits]]'', which included four previous singles – "Epistle To Dippy", "There is a Mountain", "Jennifer Juniper" and "Laléna", as well as rerecorded versions of "[[Colours (Donovan song)|Colours]]" and "Catch The Wind" (which had been unavailable to Epic because of Donovan's contractual problems) and stereo versions of "Sunshine Superman" (previously unissued full length version) and "Season of the Witch". It became the most successful album of his career; it reached 4 in the US, became a million-selling gold record, and stayed on the Billboard album chart for more than a year. On 26 June 1969 the track "[[Barabajagal (single)|Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)]]" (recorded May 1969), which gained him a following on the rave scene decades later, was released, reaching 12 in the UK but charting less strongly in the US. This time he was backed by the original [[Jeff Beck]] Group, featuring Beck on lead guitar, [[Ronnie Wood]] on bass, [[Nicky Hopkins]] on piano, and [[Micky Waller]] on drums. The Beck group was under contract to Most and it was Most's idea to team them with Donovan to bring a heavier sound to Donovan's work, while introducing a lyrical edge to Beck's.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
The psychedelic and mystical overtones of the work were unmistakable -- the front cover featured a heavily solarized photograph of Donovan dressed in a robe and holding flowers and peacock feathers, while the back cover photo showed him holding hands with Indian guru [[Maharishi Mahesh Yogi]]. But 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.


On 7 July 1969, Donovan performed at the first show in the second season of free rock concerts in [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]], London, which also featured [[Blind Faith]], [[Richie Havens]], [[the Edgar Broughton Band]] and the [[Third Ear Band]]. In September 1969, the "Barabajagal" album reached 23 in the US. Only the recent "Barabajagal"/"Trudi" single and "Superlungs My Supergirl" were 1969 recordings, the remaining tracks {{Clarify|date=February 2013}} were from sessions in London in May 1968 and in Los Angeles in November 1968. {{Citation needed|date=February 2013}}
In late 1967 Donovan contributed a 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 girlfriend, [[Patti Boyd]]. It was another Top 40 hit in the USA.


In the late 1960s to the early 1970s he lived at [[Stein, Skye|Stein]], on the Isle of Skye, where he and a group of followers formed a commune and where he was visited by [[George Harrison]]. He named his daughter, born 1970, Ione Skye.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitscotland.com/info/accommodation/lochbay-boathouse-p274481|title=Lochbay Boathouse, Stein – Self Catering|website=www.visitscotland.com|language=en|access-date=2019-10-03}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/the-beatles-in-scotland-george-harrisons-story-996110|title=The Beatles in Scotland: George Harrison's story|date=2008-11-02|website=Daily Record|access-date=2019-10-03}}</ref>
Like The Beatles, Donovan's 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 [http://www.geocities.com/~beatleboy1/db112068.int.html] it was during this time that Donovan taught John Lennon the finger picking styles like the 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 ''Dear Prudence''.


=== 1970s: Changes ===
Released in May 1968, his next single was the swirling psychedelic nugget ''The Hurdy Gurdy Man''. In the liner notes from EMI's reissues it reveals both who the song was for and who played on the track.The song was originally intended for Donovan's old friend and guitar mentor [[Mac MacLeod]] who had a heavy rock band called [[Hurdy Gurdy (band)|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 and that he should record it himself. Donovan tried to get Hendrix to play on the recording, but he was on tour and unavailable for the session. Jimmy Page was also considered to play on the track and he was out of the country. In the place of Hendrix and Page they brought in a brilliant young British guitarist, [[Alan Parker(musician)|Alan Parker]] . It is possible Jimmy Page did play on the album sessions for Hurdy Gurdy Man but not on the title track. John Paul Jones played bass with Clem Cattini on drums.Both Jones and Page have stated that the idea of Led Zeppelin was formed during the 'Hurdy Gurdy Man' sessions.
In late 1969, the relationship with Most ended after an argument over an unidentified recording session in Los Angeles. In the 1995 BBC Radio 2 ''The Donovan Story'', Most recounted:


{{blockquote|The only time we ever fell out was in Los Angeles when there was all these, I suppose, big stars of their day, the Stephen Stillses and the Mama Casses, all at the session and nothing was actually being played. Somebody brought some dope into the session and I stopped the session and slung them out. You know you need someone to say, "it's my session, I'm paying for it." We fell out over that.<ref name="Lorne Murdoch 2005">Lorne Murdoch, liner notes to ''Barabajagal'' expanded CD reissue (EMI, 2005)</ref>}}
The heavier sound of 'Hurdy Gurdy Man' was a deliberate attempt by Most and Donovan to try and reach a wider audience in the United States, where the new hard rock sounds of groups like [[Cream (band)|Cream]] and [[The Jimi Hendrix Experience]] were having a major impact. Most's commercial instincts were spot-on, and the song became one of Donovan's biggest hits, going Top 5 in both the UK and the USA and Top 10 in Australia.


==== Open Road band ====
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. Not coincidentally, they were also under contract to Most at the time and it was Most's idea to team them with Donovan, another attempt to bring a heavier sound to Donovan's work, whlie also introducing a more lyrical edge to Beck's. However it was some time before these recordings saw the light of day. 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.
Donovan said he wanted to record with someone else, and he and Most did not work together again until ''[[Cosmic Wheels]]'' (1973). After the rift, Donovan spent two months writing and recording the album ''[[Open Road (Donovan album)|Open Road]]'' as a member of the rock trio [[Open Road (band)|Open Road]]. Stripping the sound of Most's heavy studio productions down to stuff that could be played by a live band, Donovan dubbed the sound "[[Celtic Rock]]". The album peaked at No. 16 in the U.S., the third-highest of any of his full-length releases to date, but as his concert appearances became less frequent and new artists and styles of popular music began to emerge, his commercial success began to decline. Donovan said:


{{blockquote|I was exhausted and looking for roots and new directions. I checked into Morgan Studios in London and stayed a long while creating Open Road and the ''HMS Donovan'' sessions. Downstairs was McCartney, doing his solo album. I had left Mickie after great years together. The new decade dawned and I had accomplished everything any young singer-songwriter could achieve. What else was there to do but to experiment beyond the fame and into the new life, regardless of the result?<ref name="Lorne Murdoch 2005"/>}}
In July 1968 Epic released ''[[Donovan In Concert]]'', the recording of his Anaheim concert in September 1967. Featuring a cover painting by Donovan himself, it is notable for its long running time, its mellow jazzy feel and its excellent sound, with Donovan again leading the pack by 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 length versions of 'Young Girl Blues' and 'The Pebble And The Man', a song later reworked and retitled as 'Happiness Runs'.


Donovan's plan for ''Open Road'' was to tour the world for a year, beginning with a boat voyage around the [[Aegean Sea]], documented in the 1970 film ''[[There is an Ocean]]''. This was partially on the advice from his management to go into [[tax exile]], during which he was not to set foot in the UK until April 1971, but after touring to France, Italy, Russia, and Japan, he cut the tour short:
During the summer of 1968 Donovan worked on a second LP of children's songs, subsequently released as the double album ''H.M.S. Donovan''. In September Epic released a new single, 'Lalena', a subdued acoustic ballad which only managed to reach the low 30s in the US charts. The album ''[[The Hurdy Gurdy Man]]'' followed; it continued the style of the ''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]'' LP and reached a creditable #20 in America, in spite of the fact that it contained several earlier hits including the title track and 'Jennifer Juniper'.


{{blockquote|I travelled to Japan and was set to stay out of the UK for a year and earn the largest fees yet for a solo performer, and all tax-free. At the time the UK tax for us was 98%. During that Japanese tour I had a gentle breakdown, which made me decide to break the tax exile. Millions were at stake. My father, my agent, they pleaded for me not to step onto the [[BOAC]] jet bound for London. I did and went back to my little cottage in the woods. Two days later a young woman came seeking a cottage to rent. It was Linda.<ref name="Lorne Murdoch 2005"/>}}
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 #23.


The band would continue without Donovan, adding new members, touring and releasing the album ''Windy Daze'' in 1971 before disbanding in 1972.<ref name="BIIR, 1971">{{cite news|title=The Post-Donovan High|agency=Beat Instrumental & International Recording|date=1971}}</ref><ref name=Dazenotes>{{cite AV media |people= |date=2021 |title=Windy Daze |type=CD Liner |publisher=Cherry Red Records Ltd.}}</ref>
At the start of 1969 the comedy film ''If It's Tuesday It Must Be Belgium'' was released, featuring music by Donovan. On [[20 January]] 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 with a pointed anti-war message, was a moderate Top 40 US hit, but when DJs in America and Australia flipped it and began playing 'Atlantis' heavily, it became a major hit, making the Top Ten in both countries in spite of its decidedly 'hippy-dippy' subject matter, a lengthy spoken introduction and its four-minute-plus running time. 'Atlantis' received a low-key revival in 2000 when Donovan himself performed a retooled version of the song in an episode of [[Futurama (TV Series)|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 espisode.


==== Reunions with Linda Lawrence and Mickie Most ====
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 until then been unavailable to Epic because of Donovan's contractual problems. It became the most successful album of his career -- it reached #4 in the US, became a million-selling gold record and stayed on the Billboard album chart for more than a year.
After this reunion, Donovan and Linda married on 2 October 1970 at Windsor register office and honeymooned in the Caribbean. Donovan dropped out of the round of tour promotion and concentrated on writing, recording and his family. The largely self-produced children's album ''HMS Donovan'' in 1971, went unreleased in the US and did not gain a wide audience. During an 18-month tax exile in Ireland (1971–72), he wrote for the 1972 film ''[[The Pied Piper (1972 film)|The Pied Piper]]'' in the title role, and for ''[[Brother Sun, Sister Moon]]'' (1972). The title song from the Zeffirelli film provided Donovan with a publishing windfall in 1974 when it was covered as the B-side of the million-selling US top 5 hit "[[The Lord's Prayer (Sister Janet Mead song)|The Lord's Prayer]]", by Australia's singing nun, [[Sister Janet Mead]].


After a new deal with Epic, Donovan reunited with Mickie Most in early 1973, resulting in the LP ''Cosmic Wheels'', which featured arrangements by [[Chris Spedding]].<ref name="Lorne Murdoch 2005"/> It was his last chart success, reaching the top 40 in America and Britain. Late in the year, he released ''Essence To Essence'', produced by [[Andrew Loog Oldham]], and a live album recorded and released only in Japan, which featured an extended version of "Hurdy Gurdy Man", including an additional verse written by [[George Harrison]] in [[Rishikesh]].<ref>{{cite book|title=The Beatles As Musicians:Revolver through the Anthology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1CAvwZPKTkoC&pg=PA158 |access-date=19 February 2013|isbn = 9780199880935|last1 = Everett|first1 = Walter|date = 31 March 1999| publisher=Oxford University Press }}</ref> While recording the album, [[Alice Cooper]] invited Donovan to share lead vocals on his song "[[Billion Dollar Babies (Alice Cooper song)|Billion Dollar Babies]]".{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
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 finally released, reaching #12 in the UK but charting less strongly in the USA. The ''Barabajagal'' album followed in August, reaching #23 in America.


''Cosmic Wheels'' was followed up by two albums that same year: his second concert album, ''[[Live in Japan: Spring Tour 1973]]'', and the more introspective ''[[Essence to Essence]]''. His last two albums for Epic Records were ''[[7-Tease]]'' (1974) and ''[[Slow Down World]]'' (1976). In 1977, he opened for [[Yes (band)|Yes]] on their six-month tour of North America and Europe following the release of ''[[Going for the One]]'' (1977). The 1978 LP, ''[[Donovan (album)|Donovan]]'' was on Most's [[RAK Records]] in the UK and on Clive Davis' new [[Arista Records]] in the US; it reunited him for the last time with Most and Cameron, but was not well received at the height of the [[New wave music|new wave]] and did not chart.{{citation needed|date=February 2016}}
==The split with Most, and later career==


=== 1980s–1990s ===
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, he said, and Donovan could either do it his way or take a walk. Donovan declared that he wanted to record with someone else, and their hugely successful partnership came to an abrupt end. They would not work together again until 1973's ''Cosmic Wheels''.
The punk era (1976–1980) provoked a backlash in Britain against the optimism and whimsy of the hippie era, of which Donovan was a prime example. The word "hippie" became pejorative, and Donovan's fortunes suffered.{{Citation needed|date=March 2010}} In this period, he released the albums ''[[Neutronica]]'' (1980), ''[[Love Is Only Feeling]]'' (1981), and ''[[Lady of the Stars]]'' (1984), and guest-starred on ''[[Stars on Ice]]'', a half-hour variety show on ice produced by [[CTV Television Network|CTV]] in Toronto. There was a respite when he appeared alongside [[Sting (musician)|Sting]], [[Phil Collins]], [[Bob Geldof]], [[Eric Clapton]] and Jeff Beck in the [[Amnesty International]] benefit show ''[[The Secret Policeman's Other Ball]]''. Accompanied by [[Danny Thompson]], Donovan performed several hits including "Sunshine Superman", "Mellow Yellow", "Colours", "Universal Soldier" and "Catch the Wind". He was also in the performance of Dylan's "[[I Shall Be Released]]" for the show's finale. Donovan also appeared at the [[Glastonbury Festival]] on 18 June 1989 with the band [[Ozric Tentacles]] accompanying him onstage.


In 1990, Donovan released a live album featuring new performances of his classic songs. In 1991, [[Nettwerk]] released a [[tribute album]] to Donovan, ''[[Island of Circles]]''. Sony's 2-CD boxed set ''[[Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964–1976]]'' (1992) continued the restoration of his reputation, and was followed by the 1994 release of ''Four Donovan Originals'', which saw his four classic Epic LPs on CD in their original form for the first time in the UK. He found an ally in rap producer and [[Def Jam]] label owner [[Rick Rubin]] and recorded the album ''[[Sutras (album)|Sutras]]'' for Rubin's [[American Recordings (record label)|American Recordings]] label.<ref name="classicbands"/>
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 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 fortunes, and his concert appearances became increasingly rare from this time forward.


===2000s===
The largely self-produced chlidren's album ''H.M.S 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 a previously unheard version of ''Hurdy Gurdy Man'' that included a verse written by George Harrison.
[[File: Donovan -10Aug2007.jpg|thumb|Donovan before a show in [[Washington, D.C.]], on 10 August 2007]]
In 2000, Donovan narrated and played himself in the ''[[Futurama]]'' episode [[The Deep South (Futurama)|"The Deep South"]] on 16 April with a parody of the song "Atlantis".{{Citation needed|date=April 2024}}


A new album, ''[[Beat Cafe]]'', on Appleseed Records in 2004, marked a return to the jazzy sound of his 1960s recordings and featured bassist [[Danny Thompson]] and drummer [[Jim Keltner]], with production by John Chelew ([[The Blind Boys of Alabama]]). At a series of ''Beat Cafe'' performances in New York, [[Richard Barone]] ([[The Bongos]]) joined Donovan to sing and read passages from [[Allen Ginsberg]]'s ''[[Howl (poem)|Howl]]''.
His 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 fell on deaf ears 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 May 2004, Donovan played "Sunshine Superman" at the wedding concert for the [[Frederik X|Crown Prince]] and [[Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark|Crown Princess of Denmark]]. He released his early demo tapes, ''Sixty Four'', and a re-recording of the ''Brother Sun, Sister Moon'' soundtrack on [[iTunes]]. A set of his Mickie Most albums was released on 9 May 2005. This EMI set has 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 Mansi on double bass, former [[The Damned (band)|Damned]] drummer [[Rat Scabies]] and [[Flipron]] keyboard player, Joe Atkinson.
Sony's definitive 2-CD boxed set ''Troubadour'' (1992) did much to restore 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 famed [[rap]] producer and [[Def Jam]] label owner [[Rick Rubin]], who was in fact a longtime fan; Rubin financed and produced Donovan's critically acclaimed 1996 album ''Sutras''.


In 2006, Donovan played British festivals and two dates at Camden's [[The Jazz Cafe]], London.
Donovan also provided songs for the 1971 movie ''The Pied Piper'', in which he also starred, 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 U.S. Top 5 hit 'The Lord's Prayer', by Australia's singing nun [[Sister Janet Mead]].


In January 2007, Donovan played at the [[Kennedy Center]], in Washington, DC; at [[Alice Tully Hall]], in New York City; and at the [[Kodak Theatre]], in Los Angeles, in conjunction with a presentation by filmmaker [[David Lynch]] supporting the [[David Lynch Foundation]] for [[Transcendental Meditation in education|Consciousness-Based Education]] and world peace. The concert at the Kodak Theatre was filmed by [[Raven Productions]] and broadcast on [[public television]] as a [[pledge drive]]. Donovan's partnership with the David Lynch Foundation saw him performing concerts through October 2007, as well as giving presentations about Transcendental meditation. He appeared at [[Maharishi University of Management]] in [[Fairfield, Iowa]], in May 2007,<ref name=GGN0507>{{cite web|title=David Lynch Weekend draws crowds to Maharishi University of Management|url=http://www.pictures.globalgoodnews.com/archive/archive-2007/lynch-wkend/index.html|access-date=30 December 2013}}</ref> and toured the UK with Lynch in October 2007.<ref name=Independent1007>{{cite news|last=Rajan|first=Amol|title=Bring peace to schools by meditation, say Lynch and Donovan|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/bring-peace-to-schools-by-meditation-say-lynch-and-donovan-395234.html|access-date=30 December 2013|location=London|work=The Independent|date=24 October 2007}}</ref>
Donovan and Linda have two children, Astrella Celeste and Oriole Nebula, and two children by his 1960s girlfriend Enid Stulberger, who have become actors, his namesake son, [[Donovan Leitch, Jr.]], and his daughter, [[Ione Skye]].


In March 2007, Donovan played two shows at the [[SXSW|South by Southwest]] music festival in [[Austin, Texas]]. He had planned a spring 2007 release of an album, along with a UK tour, but announced the tour was cancelled and the album delayed. He said was in good health and gave no reason for the cancellation.{{Citation needed|date=February 2013}}
A new album ''Beat Cafe'' has just been released on Appleseed records. It marks a return to the jazzy sound of some of his 60's recordings and features bassist Danny Thompson and drummer [[Jim Keltner]] and production by John Chelew ([[Blind Boys Of Alabama]]).


In April 2007, Donovan presented a three-part series on [[Ravi Shankar]] for [[BBC Radio 2]]. In October 2007, he announced plans for the "Invincible Donovan University" focusing on Transcendental Meditation, to be near Glasgow or Edinburgh.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.journal-online.co.uk/article/2671-invincible-donovan-university|location=Edinburgh|work=The Journal|title=Invincible Donovan University|date=5 November 2007|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110820170130/http://www.journal-online.co.uk/article/2671-invincible-donovan-university|archive-date=20 August 2011|df=dmy-all}}</ref> In October 2007 the DVD ''The Donovan Concert—Live in LA'', filmed at the Kodak Theatre Los Angeles earlier that year, was released in the UK. On 6 October 2009, Donovan was honoured as a [[Broadcast Music Incorporated|BMI]] Icon at the 2009 annual BMI London Awards.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=BMI Icon Donovan Honored in London|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]|url=https://www.billboard.com/biz/articles/news/global/1264533/bmi-icon-donovan-honored-in-london|access-date=10 January 2014}}</ref> The Icon designation is given to BMI songwriters who have had "a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers".<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/538885|title=Kris Kristofferson to be Honored as Icon at 57th Annual BMI Country Awards|date=30 June 2009 |publisher=bmi.com|access-date=15 September 2010}}</ref>
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]] .


=== 2010s–2020s ===
In May of 2004, Donovan played "Sunshine Superman" at the pre-wedding concert for the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Denmark.
In October 2010, Donovan's released the double album ''Ritual Groove'', which he had described as "a soundtrack to a movie not yet made."<ref>{{Cite web |date=Oct 15, 2008 |title=Donovan: The 'Sunshine Superman,' Part II |url=https://www.goldminemag.com/articles/donovan-the-sunshine-superman-part-ii |access-date=April 18, 2024 |website=[[Goldmine (magazine)|Goldmine]]}}</ref> On 10 May 2021, his 75th birthday, Donovan released the music video for the album's song "[[I Am the Shaman]]". [[David Lynch]] produced the track and directed the video.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Blistein |first=Jon |date=2021-05-10 |title=Donovan Taps David Lynch to Direct New Video for 2010 Song 'I Am the Shaman' |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/david-lynch-donovan-i-am-the-shaman-music-video-1167295/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |magazine=Rolling Stone |language=en-US}}</ref>


In 2012, he released ''[[The Sensual Donovan]]'', recorded in 1971 with [[John Phillips (musician)|John Phillips]] of The Mamas and the Papas, backed by [[The Crusaders (jazz fusion group)|The Crusaders]].<ref name="NYT 2014">{{Cite news |last=Kozinn |first=Allan |date=June 10, 2014 |title=A Genre Dabbler Gets His Accolades |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/11/arts/music/donovan-to-enter-songwriters-hall-of-fame.html |access-date=April 18, 2024 |work=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref> In 2013, he recorded the album ''[[Shadows of Blue]]'' at Treasure Isle Studios in [[Nashville]]. The album includes songs he wrote in the 1970s and explores a [[country music|country]] style.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Doyle |first=Patrick |date=2013-07-17 |title=Donovan Returns to Nashville on New LP 'Shadows of Blue' |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/donovan-returns-to-nashville-on-new-lp-shadows-of-blue-242311/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |magazine=Rolling Stone |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name="NYT 2014" />
A [[tribute album]] to Donovan, ''[[Island of Circles]]'', was released by [[Nettwerk]] in [[1991]].


A tribute album to Donovan, ''Gazing with Tranquility'', was released in October 2015 under nonprofit label Rock the Cause Records to benefit the charity Huntington's Hope.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Moon |first=Tom |date=October 7, 2015 |title=Review: 'Gazing With Tranquility: A Tribute To Donovan' |url=https://www.npr.org/2015/10/07/446002861/first-listen-gazing-with-tranquility-a-tribute-to-donovan |access-date=April 18, 2024 |website=[[NPR]]}}</ref> It features covers by [[The Flaming Lips]], [[Lissie]], and [[Sharon Van Etten]].<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Spanos |first=Brittany |date=2015-07-23 |title=Flaming Lips, Sharon Van Etten to Cover Donovan |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-news/flaming-lips-sharon-van-etten-to-cover-donovan-on-tribute-album-71125/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |magazine=Rolling Stone |language=en-US}}</ref>
Donovan has also released his early demo tapes 'Sixty Four' and a rerecording of the 'Brother Sun,Sister Moon' soundtrack on i-Tunes.


In 2019, Donovan released ''[[Eco-Song]]'', an album of songs with an ecological theme, inspired by [[Greta Thunberg]]. He hoped to adapt the album into a [[rock opera]] but was unable to due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Williams |first=Zoe |date=2020-04-09 |title=Donovan: 'Can you believe the Beatles and I were paying 96% tax?' |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/apr/09/donovan-beatles-and-i-paying-96-per-cent-tax-greta-thunberg |access-date=2024-04-19 |work=The Guardian |language=en-GB |issn=0261-3077}}</ref>
Also a major set of his Mickie Most albums is on release from [[9 May]] [[2005]].This [[EMI]] set has dozens of extra tracks including another song with the Jeff Beck Group.


To mark the 50th anniversary of [[Brian Jones]]'s death in 2019, Donovan released a tribute album, ''Joolz Juke'', featuring Jones's grandson (and Donovan's step-grandson), Joolz Jones.<ref name="Grammys">{{Cite web |last=Enos |first=Morgan |date=Jun 1, 2021 |title=Donovan On His New Single "I Am The Shaman," His Upcoming Animated Series & The Role Of The Shaman In Everyday Life |url=https://www.grammy.com/news/2021-donovan-david-lynch-i-am-the-shaman-tales-of-aluna-interview |access-date=April 18, 2024 |website=[[Grammy Awards]]}}</ref> In 2021, he released the album ''[[Lunarian (album)|Lunarian]]'', dedicated to his wife. The album's song "Still Waters" was recorded decades earlier with [[Nils Lofgren]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Young |first=Amy |date=March 15, 2021 |title='60s Folk Icon Donovan Releases Unheard Songs Featuring Legendary Guitarist Nils Lofgren |url=https://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/music/60s-folk-icon-donovan-releases-unheard-songs-legendary-guitarist-nils-lofgren-still-waters-11537318 |access-date=April 18, 2024 |work=[[Phoenix New Times]]}}</ref> Donovan and Lawrence created an animated children's television series, ''Tales of Aluna'', with 26 episodes produced by Australian studio Three's a Company. They had developed the series's story over decades.<ref name="Grammys" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=Gaydos |first=Steven |date=2021-05-14 |title=Singer-Songwriter Donovan Takes Climate Message to Animation |url=https://variety.com/2021/music/artists/donovan-animation-aluna-1234971759/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |website=Variety |language=en-US}}</ref>
==Discography==
===Albums===
*''[[What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid]]'' [UK] / ''[[Catch the Wind (album)|Catch the Wind]]'' [US] ([[1965]]) #30 US; #3 UK
*''[[Fairytale (album)|Fairytale]]'' ([[1965]]) #85 US; #20 UK
*''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'' [US] ([[1966]]) #11 US
*''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]'' [US] ([[1967]]) #14 US
*''[[A Gift from a Flower to a Garden]]'' ([[1967]]) #19 US; #13 UK
*''[[Donovan in Concert]]'' [Live] ([[1968]]) #18 US
*''[[The Hurdy Gurdy Man]]'' [US] ([[1968]]) #20 US
*''[[Barabajagal (album)|Barabajagal]]'' [US] ([[1969]]) #23 US
*''[[Open Road (album)|Open Road]]'' ([[1970]]) #16 US; #30 UK
*''[[H.M.S. Donovan]]'' ([[1971]])
*''[[Cosmic Wheels (album)|Cosmic Wheels]]'' ([[1973]]) #25 US; #15 UK
*''[[Live in Japan: Spring Tour 1973]]'' [Live][Japan] ([[1973]])
*''[[Essence to Essence]]'' ([[1973]]) #174 US
*''[[7-Tease]]'' ([[1974]]) #135 US
*''[[Slow Down World]]'' ([[1976]]) #174 US
*''[[Donovan (album)|Donovan]]'' ([[1977]])
*''[[Neutronica]]'' [France][Germany] ([[1980]])
*''[[Love Is Only Feeling]]'' [Germany] ([[1981]])
*''[[Lady of the Stars]]'' ([[1984]])
*''[[Rising (Donovan album)|Rising]]'' [UK] / ''[[The Classics Live]]'' [US] [Live] ([[1990]])
*''[[One Night in Time]]'' [Japan] ([[1993]])
*''Sutras'' ([[1996]])
*''Rising Again'' [Live] ([[2001]])
*''Greatest Hits Live Vancouver 1986'' [Live] ([[2001]])
*''Pied Piper'' ([[2002]])
*''Sixty Four'' ([[2004]])
*''Brother Sun Sister Moon'' ([[2004]])
*''Beat Cafe'' ([[2004]])


Donovan released the album ''[[Gaelia]]'' in December 2022.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Gaydos |first=Steven |date=2022-12-02 |title=Donovan Dives Into the Ancient Roots of His New Album, 'Gaelia,' and Why He Still Believes Music Can Save the World |url=https://variety.com/2022/music/news/donovan-new-album-interview-1235448296/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |website=Variety |language=en-US}}</ref> The album's singles ''Rock Me'' and ''Lover O' Lover'' featured [[David Gilmour]] on guitar.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Willman |first=Chris |date=2022-11-25 |title=Donovan Unveils Historic David Gilmour Collaboration, 'Rock Me,' With 'Gaelia' Album Set to Follow (EXCLUSIVE) |url=https://variety.com/2022/music/news/donovan-david-gilmour-collaboration-rock-me-gaelia-album-irish-1235442026/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |website=Variety |language=en-US}}</ref> Donovan took 2024 off to prepare for a sixtieth anniversary concert series planned for 2025.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Vivarelli |first=Nick |date=2024-03-19 |title=Donovan Talks Celebrating His Soundtrack for Franco Zeffirelli's 'Brother Sun, Sister Moon' With Italy's President and Franciscan Monks (EXCLUSIVE) |url=https://variety.com/2024/film/global/donovan-franco-zeffirelli-brother-sun-sister-moon-songs-1235944626/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |website=Variety |language=en-US}}</ref>
===Singles and Extended Players (EPs)===
*"Catch the Wind" / "Why Do You Treat Me Like You Do?" ([[1965]]) #23 US; #4 UK
*''Catch the Wind'' [France] ([[1965]])
*"Colours" / "To Sing for You" [UK] ([[1965]]) #4 UK
*"Colours" / "Josie" [US] ([[1965]]) #61 US
*''The Universal Soldier'' [UK] ([[1965]]) #13 UK
*"Universal Soldier" / "Do You Hear Me Now?" [US] ([[1965]]) #53 US
*"Turquoise" / "Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness)" [UK] ([[1965]]) #30 UK
*"I'll Try for the Sun" / "Turqoise" [US] ([[1966]])
*"[[Sunshine Superman]]" / "The Trip" [US] ([[1966]]) #1 US; #2 UK
*"Mellow Yellow" / "Sunny South Kensington" (US) ([[1966]]) #2 US
*"Mellow Yellow" / "Preachin' Love" [UK] ([[1967]]) #8 UK
*"Epistle to Dippy" / "Preachin' Love" [US] ([[1967]]) #19 US
*"There Is a Mountain" / "Sand and Foam" ([[1967]]) #11 US; #8 UK
*"Wear Your Love Like Heaven" / "Oh Gosh" [US] ([[1967]]) #23 US
*"Jennifer Juniper" / "Poor Cow" ([[1968]]) #26 US; #5 UK
*"Jennifer Juniper (Versione Italiana)" / "Mellow Yellow" [Italy] ([[1968]])
*"Hurdy Gurdy Man" / "Teen Angel" ([[1968]]) #5 US; #4 UK
*"Laleña" / "Aye My Love" [US] ([[1968]]) #33 US
*"Atlantis" / "I Love My Shirt" [UK] ([[1968]]) #23 UK
*"To Susan on the West Coast Waiting" / "Atlantis" [US] ([[1969]]) #7 US (by "Atlantis")
*"Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)" / "Bed with Me" [UK] ([[1969]]) #12 UK
*"Goo Goo Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)" / "Trudi" [US] ([[1969]]) #36 US
*"Riki Tiki Tavi" / "Roots of Oak" ([[1970]]) #55 US
*"Celia of the Seals" / "Mr. Wind" [UK] ([[1970]])
*"Celia of the Seals" / "The Song of the Wandering Aengus" [US] ([[1971]]) #84 US
*"I Like You" / "Earth Sign Man" ([[1973]]) #66 US
*"Maria Magenta" / "The Intergalactic Laxative" ([[1973]])
*"Sailing Homeward" / "Lazy Daze" [UK] ([[1973]])
*"Sailing Homeward" / "Yellow Star" ([[1974]])
*"Rock 'n' Roll with Me" / "Divine Daze of Deathless Delight" ([[1974]])
*"Rock 'n' Roll Souljer" / "How Silly" [US] ([[1975]])
*"Rock 'n' Roll Souljer" / "Love of My Life" [UK] ([[1975]])
*"A Well Known Has Been" / "Dark-Eyed Blue Jean Angel" [US] ([[1976]])
*"Dare to Be Different" / "The International Man" [US] ([[1977]])
*"The Light" / "The International Man" [UK] ([[1977]])
*"Dare to Be Different" / "Sing My Song" [UK] ([[1978]])
*"Mee Mee I Love You" / "Harmony" [West Germany] ([[1981]])
*"Lay Down Lassie" / "Love Is Only Feeling" [UK] ([[1981]])
*"Happiness Runs" ([[2005]])


===Compilations===
==Personal life==
Donovan had a relationship with American model Enid Karl, and they had two children: actor-musician [[Donovan Leitch (actor)|Donovan Leitch]] in 1967, and actress [[Ione Skye]] in 1970.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://articles.philly.com/1996-11-25/entertainment/25647151_1_hurdy-gurdy-man-flower-child-mellow-yellow|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151019045920/http://articles.philly.com/1996-11-25/entertainment/25647151_1_hurdy-gurdy-man-flower-child-mellow-yellow|url-status=dead|archive-date=19 October 2015|series='60s Archives |work= The Philadelphia Inquirer |title= Flower Child Looks To Bloom Again: Donovan, The Trippy Troubadour Behind Such Generation- Defining Hits As ''Mellow Yellow'' and ''Sunshine Superman'', Is Back At 50 With A New Album|date=30 November 2005|access-date=19 August 2015}}</ref> In October of 1970, Donovan married [[Linda Lawrence]].<ref name=international/> They have two children together.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.independent.ie/entertainment/how-donovan-and-coco-his-granddaughter-caught-their-wind/35583500.html | title=How Donovan and Coco, his granddaughter, caught their wind | date=3 April 2017 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Autobiography of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man|first=Donovan|last=Leitch|publisher=St. Martin's Griffin|year=2007|isbn=978-0312364342|page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=mt8QL1oAhTgC&pg=PA144-IA8 144]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.astrella-celeste.com|title=Page Redirection|publisher=Astrella-celeste.com|access-date=19 August 2015}}</ref> Lawrence was the inspiration for "Sunshine Superman".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2016/may/02/how-we-made-sunshine-superman-donovan |title=How we made: Donovan's Sunshine Superman |first=Dave |last=Simpson |work=The Guardian |date=2 May 2016 |access-date=August 7, 2018}}</ref>
*''The Real Donovan'' [US] ([[1966]]) #96 US
*''[[Sunshine Superman]]'' [UK] ([[1967]]) #25 UK
*''Universal Soldier'' [UK] ([[1967]]) #5 UK
*''[[Wear Your Love Like Heaven (album)|Wear Your Love Like Heaven]]'' [US] ([[1967]]) #60 US
*''[[For Little Ones]]'' [US] ([[1967]]) #185
*''Like It Is, Was, And Evermore Shall Be'' [US] ([[1968]]) #177 US
*''[[What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid]]'' [Edit][UK] ([[1968]])
*''[[Donovan's Greatest Hits]]'' ([[1969]]) #4 US
*''[[Fairytale (album)|Fairytale]]'' [Edit][UK] ([[1969]])
*''The Best of Donovan'' [US] ([[1969]]) #135 US
*''Touch of Donovan'' [West Germany] ([[1969]])
*''Donovan P. Leitch'' [US] ([[1970]]) #128 US
*''Golden Hour of Donovan'' [UK] ([[1971]])
*''Colours'' [UK] ([[1972]])
*''The World of Donovan'' [US] ([[1972]])
*''Early Treasures'' [US] ([[1973]])
*''Hear Me Now'' [US] ([[1974]])
*''The Pye History of British Pop Music: Donovan'' [UK] ([[1975]])
*''The Pye History of British Pop Music: Donovan Vol. 2'' [UK] ([[1976]])
*''The Donovan File'' [UK] ([[1977]])
*''Greatest Hits and More'' ([[1989]])
*''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]])
*''Peace and Love Songs'' [US] ([[1995]])
*''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'' ([[1997]])
*''Mellow'' ([[1997]])
*''Love Is Hot, Truth Is Molten: Original Essential Recordings 1965-1973'' [Australia] ([[1997]])
*''[[Cosmic Wheels (album)|Cosmic Wheels]]'' ([[1998]])


Donovan is also the adoptive father of Lawrence's and [[Brian Jones]]'s son, Julian Brian (Jones) Leitch.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
===Tribute Albums===

*''Island of Circles: A Nettwork Compilation'' ([[1991]])
In February 2024, Donovan was disqualified from driving for two years and fined €500 for dangerous driving by [[Skibbereen]] District Court in [[Ireland]]. A charge of being drunk in charge of a vehicle was dismissed, as the court determined it would be unsafe to convict him for that offence. The court heard that the singer was still working and that he supports charitable causes. He has lived in Ireland for thirty years, with no previous convictions.<ref name=":0">{{Cite news |title=Musician Donovan (77) fined €500 and given road ban for dangerous driving |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law/courts/2024/02/13/musician-donovan-77-fined-500-and-given-road-ban-for-dangerous-driving/ |access-date=2024-02-26 |newspaper=The Irish Times |language=en}}</ref>
*''A Gift from a Garden to a Flower: A Tribute to Donovan'' ([[2002]])

Donovan, as of February 2024, lives in [[Castlemagner]], [[Kanturk]] in [[County Cork]]. He suffers from [[chronic obstructive pulmonary disease]] (COPD)<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-10-20 |title=Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) |url=https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/chronic-obstructive-pulmonary-disease-copd/ |access-date=2024-03-14 |website=nhs.uk |language=en}}</ref> and a "restricted lung disease".<ref name=":0" />

===Religious beliefs===
Donovan identifies as [[paganism|pagan]].<ref>{{cite web |work= [[MusicOMH]] |url= https://www.musicomh.com/features/interviews/interview-donovan |author= Linda Serck |title= Donovan Interview |date= August 3, 2005 |access-date= April 3, 2024 |url-status= live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20130527011900/https://www.musicomh.com/features/interviews/interview-donovan |archive-date= May 27, 2013 }}</ref> Raised [[Protestantism|Protestant]], he left the religion after reading [[Lao Tzu]], [[Zen]] and [[Celtic mythology]] as a teenager. His personal belief system combines Celtic mythology, [[Buddhism]], and [[goddess]] worship.<ref>{{cite web |work= [[The Standard-Times (New Bedford)|The Standard-Times]] |url= https://www.southcoasttoday.com/story/entertainment/local/1997/03/30/minstrel-donovan-weaves-magic-with/50623357007/ |author= Kira L. Billik |title= Minstrel Donovan weaves magic with 'Sutras' |date= March 29, 1997 |access-date= April 3, 2024 }}</ref> During a 2022 interview with ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', he said "[E]very other song of mine celebrates the Goddess. She is [[Mother Nature]]. And we have been placed in this extraordinary position, almost on the edge of extinction, by this totally, overly male view that every resource, every river, every breeze, every cloud, every metal in the land should be raped and pillaged and sold as a commodity."<ref>{{cite web |work= [[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |url= https://variety.com/2022/music/news/donovan-new-album-interview-1235448296/ |author= Steven Gaydos |title= Donovan Dives Into the Ancient Roots of His New Album, 'Gaelia,' and Why He Still Believes Music Can Save the World |date= December 2, 2022 |access-date= April 3, 2024 }}</ref>

== Accolades ==
In November 2003, the [[University of Hertfordshire]] awarded Donovan an honorary Doctor of Letters degree.<ref>{{cite web|title=Gracious me, Sanjeev's a doctor!|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/threecounties/read_this/2003/11/sanjeev_doctorate_given.shtml|access-date=2 January 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=University to honour Donovan and TV comedian|date=12 November 2003 |url=http://www.newsshopper.co.uk/news/431987.print/|access-date=2 January 2014}}</ref> He was nominated by Sara Loveridge (a student at the university who had interviewed and reviewed Donovan for the university paper in 2001–2002); Andrew Morris, Sara's partner and Donovan researcher/writer; and Mac MacLeod.<ref name=awards>{{cite web|title=Donovan awards and honours |url=http://www.donovan.ie/en/donovan-awards-and-honours/ |access-date=2 January 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131225051544/http://www.donovan.ie/en/donovan-awards-and-honours/ |archive-date=25 December 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy }}</ref>

On 14 April 2012, Donovan was inducted into the [[Rock and Roll Hall of Fame]].<ref>{{cite web|title=2012 inductees|url=http://www.rockhall.com/inductees/ceremonies/2012/|access-date=2 January 2014}}</ref><ref name=rs2011>{{cite magazine|title=Donovan on His Acceptance into the Hall of Fame|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/donovan-on-his-acceptance-into-the-hall-of-fame-im-pleased-as-punch-20111207|magazine=Rolling Stone|access-date=2 January 2014}}</ref>

==Discography==
{{Main|Donovan discography}}
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
*''[[What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid]]'', a.k.a. ''Catch the Wind'' (1965)
*''[[Fairytale (album)|Fairytale]]'' (1965)
*''[[Sunshine Superman (album)|Sunshine Superman]]'' (1966)
*''[[Mellow Yellow (album)|Mellow Yellow]]'' (1967)
*''[[A Gift from a Flower to a Garden]]'' (1967), a double album set also released separately as
**''Wear Your Love Like Heaven'' (album 1)
**''For Little Ones'' (album 2)
*''[[The Hurdy Gurdy Man]]'' (1968)
*''[[Barabajagal]]'' (1969)
*''[[Open Road (Donovan album)|Open Road]]'' (1970)
*''[[HMS Donovan (album)|HMS Donovan]]'' (1971)
*''[[Cosmic Wheels]]'' (1973)
*''[[Essence to Essence]]'' (1973)
*''[[7-Tease]]'' (1974)
*''[[Slow Down World]]'' (1976)
*''[[Donovan (album)|Donovan]]'' (1977)
*''[[Neutronica]]'' (1980)
*''[[Love Is Only Feeling]]'' (1981)
*''[[Lady of the Stars]]'' (1984)
*''[[One Night in Time]]'' (1993)
*''[[Sutras (album)|Sutras]]'' (1996)
*''[[Pied Piper (Donovan album)|Pied Piper]]'' (2002)
*''[[Sixty Four]]'' (2004)
*''[[Brother Sun, Sister Moon (album)|Brother Sun, Sister Moon]]'' (2004)
*''[[Beat Cafe]]'' (2004)
*''Ritual Groove'' (2010)
*''[[The Sensual Donovan]]'' (2012)
*''[[Shadows of Blue]]'' (2013)
*''[[Eco-Song]]'' (2019)
*''[[Lunarian (album)|Lunarian]]'' (2021)
*''[[Gaelia]]'' (2022)
}}


==Filmography==
==Filmography==
===Actor===
===Actor===
*"If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium" ([[1969]])
* ''[[If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium]]'' (1969)
*"The Pied Piper" ([[1972]])
* ''[[The Pied Piper (1972 film)|The Pied Piper]]'' (1972)
*"Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" ([[1978]])
* ''[[Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (film)|Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band]]'' (1978)

===As himself===
* ''A Boy Called Donovan'' (1966)
* ''[[Dont Look Back]]'' (1967)
* "[[The Deep South (Futurama)|The Deep South]]", ''[[Futurama]]'' season 2 episode 12 (2000)

===Musical composer===
* ''[[Poor Cow]]'' (1967)
* ''[[Brother Sun, Sister Moon]]'' (1972)
* ''[[The Pied Piper (1972 film)|The Pied Piper]]'' (1972)

===Music and documentary DVD===
* ''Festival'' (directed by [[Murray Lerner]], 1967), with footage from the [[Newport Folk Festival|Newport Festival]] 1963–66. Also with Joan Baez, Bob Dylan and [[Peter, Paul and Mary]]
* ''[[Dont Look Back]]'' (documentary film by [[D. A. Pennebaker]], 1967)
* ''[[There is an Ocean]]'' (1970), a documentary of Donovan and Open Road travelling and performing outdoors on several Greek islands.
* ''Isle of Wight festival'' (1970, featuring "Catch the Wind")
* ''[[The Secret Policeman's Other Ball]]'' (1981, featuring "Catch the Wind", "Universal Soldier", and "Colours")
* ''Donovan: The Donovan Concert Live in L.A. 21 January 2007''
* ''Sunshine Superman: The Journey of Donovan'' (2008, documentary directed by [[Hannes Rossacher]])
* ''I Am The Shaman'' (2021, single produced and directed by [[David Lynch]])

==Literary works==
* Leitch, Donovan, ''The Hurdy Gurdy Man'', [[Random House|Century]], an imprint of [[Random House]], London, 2005 (published in the US as ''The Autobiography of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man''), [[St. Martin's Press]], New York, 2005; {{ISBN|0-312-35252-2}}

==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}


===As Himself===
==External links==
{{commons category}}
*"[[Don't Look Back]]" ([[1967]])
{{Wikiquote}}
* {{Official website|http://www.donovan.ie}}
* {{IMDb name|232942}}
* {{Pop Chronicles|48}}
* {{Rockhall}}


{{Donovan}}
== External links ==
{{2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame}}
*[http://www.donovan.ie Donovan Home Page]
{{Authority control}}
*[http://www.american-buddha.com/donovan.bib.htm Donovan discography]
*[http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/donovancelticdreamweaver/ Donovan Celtic Dreamweaver fansite]
*[http://launch.groups.yahoo.com/group/Everlasting_Sea/ Everlasting Sea fan site, with information about a fanzine]


[[Category:1946 births|Donovan]]
[[Category:Donovan| ]]
[[Category:British musicians|Donovan]]
[[Category:1946 births]]
[[Category:Folk singers|Donovan]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:British pop singers|Donovan]]
[[Category:20th-century Buddhists]]
[[Category:21st-century Buddhists]]
[[de:Donovan]]
[[Category:20th-century Scottish male singers]]
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[[Category:21st-century Scottish male singers]]
[[Category:British Invasion artists]]
[[Category:British folk rock musicians]]
[[Category:British folk-pop singers]]
[[Category:British harmonica players]]
[[Category:Dawn Records artists]]
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[[Category:Fingerstyle guitarists]]
[[Category:Hickory Records artists]]
[[Category:Marble Arch Records artists]]
[[Category:Musicians from Glasgow]]
[[Category:People from Hatfield, Hertfordshire]]
[[Category:People from Maryhill]]
[[Category:Psychedelic folk musicians]]
[[Category:Psychedelic rock musicians]]
[[Category:Pye Records artists]]
[[Category:Rak Records artists]]
[[Category:21st-century Scottish autobiographers]]
[[Category:Scottish buskers]]
[[Category:Scottish folk singers]]
[[Category:Scottish male singer-songwriters]]
[[Category:Scottish singer-songwriters]]
[[Category:Scottish people of Irish descent]]
[[Category:Scottish pop singers]]
[[Category:Scottish record producers]]
[[Category:Scottish rock singers]]
[[Category:Transcendental Meditation exponents]]
[[Category:Scottish people with disabilities]]
[[Category:Singers with disabilities]]
[[Category:Converts to Buddhism from Protestantism]]
[[Category:Scottish Buddhists]]
[[Category:Converts to pagan religions from Protestantism]]
[[Category:Scottish modern pagans]]
[[Category:Performers of modern pagan music]]
[[Category:British musicians with disabilities]]
[[Category:Hippies]]

Latest revision as of 09:11, 7 December 2024

Donovan
Donovan performing on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1969
Born
Donovan Phillips Leitch

(1946-05-10) 10 May 1946 (age 78)
Maryhill, Glasgow, Scotland
Occupations
  • Musician
  • songwriter
  • record producer
Years active1964–present
Spouse
(m. 1970)
PartnerEnid Karl (1966–70)
Children5; including Donovan Leitch and Ione Skye
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Labels
Websitedonovan.ie

Donovan Phillips Leitch (born 10 May 1946), known mononymously as Donovan, is a Scottish musician, songwriter and record producer. He emerged from the British folk scene in early 1965, and subsequently scored multiple international hit singles and albums during the late 1960s. His work became emblematic of the flower power era with its blend of folk, pop, psychedelica, and jazz stylings.

Donovan first achieved recognition with live performances on the pop TV series Ready Steady Go! in 1965. Having signed with Pye Records that year, he recorded singles and two albums in the folk vein for Hickory Records, scoring three UK hit singles: "Catch the Wind", "Colours" and "Universal Soldier", the last written by Buffy Sainte-Marie. He then signed to CBS/Epic in the US and became more successful internationally, beginning a long collaboration with British record producer Mickie Most. In September 1966, "Sunshine Superman" topped America's Billboard Hot 100 chart for one week and went to No. 2 in Britain, followed by "Mellow Yellow" at US No. 2 in December 1966, then 1968's "Hurdy Gurdy Man" in the top 5 in both countries, and then "Atlantis", which reached US No. 7 in May 1969. The compilation Donovan's Greatest Hits was released in March 1969 and peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard 200.[1]

Donovan became a friend of other prominent musicians such as Joan Baez, Brian Jones, and the Beatles. He taught John Lennon a finger-picking guitar style in 1968 that Lennon employed in "Dear Prudence", "Julia", "Happiness Is a Warm Gun", and other songs.[2] His backing musicians included the Jeff Beck Group, and John Bonham, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones, who later rose to fame as members of Led Zeppelin. Donovan's commercial fortunes waned after parting with Most in 1969, and he left the industry for a time.

Donovan continued to perform and record intermittently in the 1970s and 1980s. His musical style and hippie image were scorned by critics, especially after the rise of punk rock. His performing and recording became sporadic until a revival in the 1990s with the emergence of Britain's rave scene and in 1994, he moved permanently to Ireland where he still lives.[3] In 1996 he recorded the album Sutras with producer Rick Rubin and in 2004 made the album Beat Cafe. Donovan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012 and the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2014.

Early life

[edit]

Donovan was born on 10 May 1946, in Maryhill, Glasgow[4][5] to Donald and Winifred (née Phillips) Leitch. His grandmothers were Irish.[6][7] He contracted polio as a child. The disease and treatment left him with a limp.[8] His family moved to the new town of Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England. Influenced by his family's love of folk music, he began playing the guitar at 14. He enrolled in art school but soon dropped out, to live out his beatnik aspirations by going on the road.[9]

Music career

[edit]

1964–66: Rise to fame

[edit]
Donovan in 1965

Returning to Hatfield, Donovan spent several months playing in local clubs, absorbing the folk scene around his home in St Albans, learning the crosspicking guitar technique from local players such as Mac MacLeod and Mick Softley and writing his first songs. In 1964, he travelled to Manchester with Gypsy Dave, then spent the summer in Torquay, Devon. In Torquay he stayed with Mac MacLeod and took up busking, studying the guitar, and learning traditional folk and blues.[10][11]

In late 1964, Donovan was offered a management and publishing contract by Peter Eden and Geoff Stephens of Pye Records in London, for which he recorded a 10-track demo tape which included the original of his first single, "Catch the Wind", and "Josie". The first song revealed the influence of Woody Guthrie and Ramblin' Jack Elliott, who had also influenced Bob Dylan. Dylan comparisons followed for some time.[12] In an interview with KFOK radio in the US on 14 June 2005, MacLeod said: "The press were fond of calling Donovan a Dylan clone as they had both been influenced by the same sources: Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Jesse Fuller, Woody Guthrie, and many more."[citation needed]

While recording the demo, Donovan befriended Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones, who was recording nearby. He had recently met Jones' ex-girlfriend, Linda Lawrence, who is the mother of Jones' son, Julian Brian (Jones) Leitch.[13] The on-off romantic relationship that developed over five years was a force in Donovan's career. She influenced Donovan's music but refused to marry him and she moved to the United States for several years in the late 1960s. They met by chance in 1970 and married soon after. Donovan had other relationships – one of which resulted in the birth of his first two children, Donovan Leitch and Ione Skye, both of whom became actors.

Donovan and Dylan

[edit]

During Bob Dylan's trip to the UK in the spring of 1965, the British music press were making comparisons of the two singer-songwriters which they presented as a rivalry. This prompted The Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones to say,

We've been watching Donovan too. He isn't too bad a singer but his stuff sounds like Dylan's. His 'Catch The Wind' sounds like 'Chimes of Freedom'. He's got a song, 'Hey Tangerine Eyes' and it sounds like Dylan's 'Mr. Tambourine Man'.[14]

Donovan is the undercurrent In D. A. Pennebaker's film Dont Look Back documenting Dylan's tour. Near the start of the film, Dylan opens a newspaper and exclaims, "Donovan? Who is this Donovan?" and Alan Price from The Animals spurred the rivalry on by telling Dylan that Donovan is a better guitar player, but that he had only been around for three months. Throughout the film Donovan's name is seen next to Dylan's on newspaper headlines and on posters in the background, and Dylan and his friends refer to him consistently.

Donovan finally appears in the second half of the film, along with Derroll Adams, in Dylan's suite at the Savoy Hotel despite Donovan's management refusing to allow journalists to be present, saying they did not want "any stunt on the lines of the disciple meeting the messiah".[15] According to Pennebaker, Dylan told him not to film the encounter, and Donovan played a song that sounded just like "Mr. Tambourine Man" but with different words. When confronted with lifting his tune, Donovan said that he thought it was an old folk song.[16] Once the camera rolled, Donovan plays his song "To Sing For You" and then asks Dylan to play "Baby Blue". Dylan later told Melody Maker: "He played some songs to me. ... I like him. ... He's a nice guy." Melody Maker noted that Dylan had mentioned Donovan in his song "Talking World War Three Blues" and that the crowd had jeered, to which Dylan had responded backstage: "I didn't mean to put the guy down in my songs. I just did it for a joke, that's all."

In an interview for the BBC in 2001 to mark Dylan's 60th birthday, Donovan acknowledged Dylan as an influence early in his career while distancing himself from "Dylan clone" allegations:

The one who really taught us to play and learn all the traditional songs was Martin Carthy – who incidentally was contacted by Dylan when Bob first came to the UK. Bob was influenced, as all American folk artists are, by the Celtic music of Ireland, Scotland and England. But in 1962 we folk Brits were also being influenced by some folk Blues and the American folk-exponents of our Celtic Heritage ... Dylan appeared after Woody [Guthrie], Pete [Seeger] and Joanie [Baez] had conquered our hearts, and he sounded like a cowboy at first but I knew where he got his stuff – it was Woody at first, then it was Jack Kerouac and the stream-of-consciousness poetry which moved him along. But when I heard 'Blowin' in the Wind' it was the clarion call to the new generation – and we artists were encouraged to be as brave in writing our thoughts in music ... We were not captured by his influence, we were encouraged to mimic him – and remember every British band from the Stones to the Beatles were copying note for note, lick for lick, all the American pop and blues artists – this is the way young artists learn. There's no shame in mimicking a hero or two – it flexes the creative muscles and tones the quality of our composition and technique. It was not only Dylan who influenced us – for me he was a spearhead into protest, and we all had a go at his style. I sounded like him for five minutes – others made a career of his sound. Like troubadours, Bob and I can write about any facet of the human condition. To be compared was natural, but I am not a copyist.[17]

Collaboration with Mickie Most

[edit]

In late 1965, Donovan split with his original management and signed with Ashley Kozak, who was working for Brian Epstein's NEMS Enterprises. Kozak introduced Donovan to American businessman Allen Klein (later manager of the Rolling Stones and, in their final months, the Beatles).[18] Klein in turn introduced Donovan to producer Mickie Most,[19] who had chart-topping productions with the Animals, Lulu, and Herman's Hermits. Most produced all Donovan's recordings during this period, although Donovan said in his autobiography that some recordings were self-produced, with little input from Most. Their collaboration produced successful singles and albums, recorded with London session players including Big Jim Sullivan,[20] Jack Bruce,[21] Danny Thompson,[22] and future Led Zeppelin members John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page.[23]

Many of Donovan's late 1960s recordings featured musicians including his key musical collaborator John Cameron on piano, Danny Thompson (from Pentangle) or Spike Heatley on upright bass, Tony Carr on drums and congas and Harold McNair on saxophone and flute. Carr's conga style and McNair's flute playing are a feature of many recordings. Cameron, McNair and Carr also accompanied Donovan on several concert tours and can be heard on his 1968 live album Donovan in Concert.

Sunshine Superman

[edit]
Donovan performing in Finnish Broadcasting Company's television program Ohimennen in June 1966.

By 1966, Donovan had shed the Dylan/Guthrie influences and become one of the first British pop musicians to adopt flower power. He immersed himself in jazz, blues, Eastern music, and the new generation of counterculture-era US West Coast bands such as Jefferson Airplane and the Grateful Dead. He was entering his most creative phase as a songwriter and recording artist, working with Mickie Most and with arranger, musician, and jazz fan John Cameron. Their first collaboration was Sunshine Superman, one of the first psychedelic pop records.[19]

Donovan's rise stalled in December 1965 when Billboard broke news of the impending production deal between Klein, Most, and Donovan, and then reported that Donovan was to sign with Epic Records in the US. Despite Kozak's denials, Pye Records dropped the single and a contract dispute ensued, because Pye had a US licensing arrangement with Warner Bros. Records. As a result, the UK release of the Sunshine Superman LP was delayed for months, robbing it of the impact it would have had. Another outcome was that the UK and US versions of this and later albums differed – three of his Epic LPs were not released in the UK, and Sunshine Superman was issued in a different form in each country. Several tracks on his late 1960s Epic (US) LPs were not released in the UK for many years. The legal dispute continued into early 1966. During the hiatus, Donovan holidayed in Greece, where he wrote "Writer in the Sun",[24] inspired by rumours that his recording career was over. He toured the US and appeared on episode 23 of Pete Seeger's television show Rainbow Quest in 1966 with Shawn Phillips and Rev. Gary Davis. After his return to London, he developed his friendship with Paul McCartney and contributed the line "sky of blue and sea of green" to "Yellow Submarine".

By spring 1966, the American contract problems had been resolved, and Donovan signed a $100,000 deal with Epic Records. Donovan and Most went to CBS Studios in Los Angeles, where they recorded tracks for an LP, much composed during the preceding year. Although folk elements were prominent, the album showed increasing influence of jazz, American west coast psychedelia and folk rock – especially the Byrds. The LP sessions were completed in May, and "Sunshine Superman" was released in the US as a single in June. It was a success, selling 800,000 in six weeks and reaching No. 1. It went on to sell over one million, and was awarded a gold disc.[25] The LP followed in August, preceded by orders of 250,000 copies, reached No. 11 on the US album chart and sold over half a million.[25]

The US version of the Sunshine Superman album features 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 Cass Elliot of the Mamas & the Papas. The song is notable for naming the Jefferson Airplane before they became known internationally and before Grace Slick joined. Other tracks include "Bert's Blues" (a tribute to Bert Jansch), "Guinevere", and "Legend of a Girl Child Linda", a track featuring voice, acoustic guitar and a small orchestra for over six minutes.[26]

The album also features the sitar, which was played by American folk-rock singer Shawn Phillips. Donovan met Phillips in London in 1965, and he became a friend and early collaborator, playing acoustic guitar and sitar on recordings including Sunshine Superman as well as accompanying Donovan at concerts and on Pete Seeger's TV show. Creatively, Phillips served as a silent partner in the gestation of many of Donovan's songs from the era, with the singer later acknowledging that Phillips primarily composed "Season of the Witch".[27] Several songs including the title track had a harder edge. The driving, jazzy "The Trip", named after a Los Angeles club name, chronicled an LSD trip during his time in L.A. and is loaded with references to his sojourn on the West Coast, and names Dylan and Baez. The third "heavy" song was "Season of the Witch".[citation needed] Recorded with American and British session players, it features Donovan's first recorded performance on electric guitar. The song was covered by Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and the Trinity on their first LP in 1967, and Al Kooper and Stephen Stills recorded an 11-minute version on the 1968 album, Super Session. Donovan's version is also in the closing sequence of the Gus Van Sant film, To Die For. [citation needed]

Because of earlier contractual problems, the UK version of Sunshine Superman LP was not released for another nine months. This was a compilation of tracks from the US albums Sunshine Superman and Mellow Yellow. Donovan did not choose the tracks.[citation needed]

Mellow Yellow

[edit]
The Royal Albert Hall, London

On 24 October 1966, Epic released the single "Mellow Yellow", arranged by John Paul Jones and purportedly featuring Paul McCartney on backing vocals, but not in the chorus.[19] In his autobiography Donovan explained "electrical banana" was a reference to a "yellow-coloured vibrator".[28] The song became Donovan's signature tune in the US and reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, No. 3 on the Cash Box chart, and earned a gold record award for sales of more than one million in the US.[25]

Through the first half of 1967, Donovan worked on a double-album studio project, which he produced. In January he gave a concert at the Royal Albert Hall accompanied by a ballerina who danced during a 12-minute performance of "Golden Apples". On 14 January, New Musical Express reported he was to write incidental music for a National Theatre production of As You Like It, but this did not come to fruition. His version of "Under the Greenwood Tree" did appear on "A Gift from a Flower to a Garden".

In March Epic released the Mellow Yellow LP (not released in the UK), which reached No. 14 in the US album charts, plus a non-album single, "Epistle to Dippy", a Top 20 hit in the US. Written as an open letter to a school friend, the song had a pacifist message as well as psychedelic imagery. The real "Dippy" was 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. On 9 February 1967, Donovan was among guests invited by the Beatles to Abbey Road Studios for the orchestral overdub for "A Day in the Life", the finale to Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band.[29]

Arrest

[edit]

On 10 June 1966,[30] Donovan became the first high-profile British pop star to be arrested for possession of cannabis.[8][31] Donovan's drug use was mostly restricted to cannabis, with occasional use of LSD and mescaline.[citation needed] His LSD use is thought to be referenced indirectly in some of his lyrics.[8] Public attention was drawn to his marijuana use by the TV documentary A Boy Called Donovan in early 1966, which showed the singer and friends smoking cannabis at a party thrown by the film crew. Donovan's arrest proved to be the first in a long series involving the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. In early 1967, Donovan was subject of an exposé in the News of the World.[32]

According to Donovan, the article was based on an interview by an ex-girlfriend of his friend Gypsy Dave. The article was the first in a three-part series, Drugs & Pop Stars – Facts That Will Shock You. It was quickly shown some claims were false. A News of the World reporter claimed to have spent an evening with Mick Jagger, who allegedly discussed his drug use and offered drugs to companions. He had mistaken Brian Jones for Jagger, and Jagger sued the newspaper for libel. Among other supposed revelations were claims that Donovan and stars including members of The Who, Cream, The Rolling Stones and The Moody Blues regularly smoked marijuana, used other drugs, and held parties where the recently banned hallucinogen LSD was used, specifically naming the Who's Pete Townshend and Cream's Ginger Baker.

It emerged later that the News of the World reporters were passing information to the police. In the late 1990s, The Guardian said News of the World reporters had alerted police to the party at Keith Richards's home, which was raided on 12 February 1967. Although Donovan's was not as sensational as the later arrests of Jagger and Richards, he was refused entry to the US until late 1967. He could not appear at the Monterey International Pop Festival in June that year.[33]

1967–69: International success

[edit]

In July 1967, Epic released "There Is a Mountain", which just missed the US top ten and was later used as the basis for the Allman Brothers Band's "Mountain Jam". In September, Donovan toured the US, backed by a jazz group and accompanied by his father, who introduced the show. Later that month, Epic released Donovan's fifth album, a set titled, A Gift from a Flower to a Garden, the first rock music box set and only the third pop-rock double album released. It was split into halves. The first, Wear Your Love Like Heaven, was for people of his generation who would one day be parents; the second, For Little Ones, was songs Donovan had written for coming generations. Worried it might be a poor seller, Epic boss Clive Davis also insisted the albums be split and sold separately in the US (the "Wear Your Love Like Heaven" album cover was photographed at Bodiam Castle), but his fears were unfounded – although it took time, the original boxed set sold steadily, eventually peaking at 19 in the US album chart and achieving gold record status in the US in early 1970.

The psychedelic and mystical overtones were unmistakable – the front cover featured an infra-red photograph by Karl Ferris showing Donovan at Bodiam Castle, dressed in a robe, holding flowers and peacock feathers, while the back photo showed him holding hands with Indian guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. The liner notes included an appeal for young people to give up drugs. His disavowal of drugs came after his time with the Maharishi in Rishikesh, a topic discussed in a two-part interview for the first two issues of Rolling Stone.[34]

In late 1967 Donovan contributed two songs to the Ken Loach film Poor Cow. "Be Not Too Hard" was a musical setting of Christopher Logue's poem September Song, and was later recorded by such artists as Joan Baez and Shusha Guppy. The title track, originally entitled "Poor Love", was the B-side of his next single, "Jennifer Juniper", which was inspired by Jenny Boyd, sister of George Harrison's wife, Pattie Boyd and was another top 40 hit in the US. Donovan developed interest in eastern mysticism and claims to have interested the Beatles in transcendental meditation.[citation needed]

In early 1968 he was part of the group that traveled to the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in Rishikesh. The visit gained worldwide attention thanks to the presence of all four Beatles as well as Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love, as well as actress Mia Farrow and her sister Prudence (who inspired Lennon to write "Dear Prudence"). According to a 1968 Paul McCartney interview with Radio Luxembourg,[35] it was during this time that Donovan taught Lennon and McCartney finger-picking guitar styles including the clawhammer, which he had learned from Mac MacLeod. Lennon used this technique on songs including "Dear Prudence", "Julia", "Happiness is a Warm Gun" and "Look at Me", and McCartney with "Blackbird" and "Mother Nature's Son".[36]

Billboard advertisement, June 15, 1968

Donovan's next single, in May 1968, was the psychedelic "Hurdy Gurdy Man". The liner notes from EMI's reissues say the song was intended for Mac MacLeod, who had a heavy rock band called Hurdy Gurdy. After hearing MacLeod's version, Donovan considered giving it to Jimi Hendrix, but when Most heard it, he convinced Donovan to record it himself. Donovan tried to get Hendrix to play, but he was on tour. Jimmy Page played electric guitar in some studio sessions and is credited with playing on the song.[37][38] Alternatively, it is credited to Alan Parker.[citation needed]

Donovan credits Page and "Allen Hollsworth" (a misspelling of Allan Holdsworth) as the "guitar wizards" for the song, saying they created "a new kind of metal folk".[39]

Since John Bonham and John Paul Jones also played, Donovan said perhaps the session inspired the formation of Led Zeppelin.[39] The heavier sound of "Hurdy Gurdy Man" was an attempt by Most and Donovan to reach a wider audience in the US, where hard-rock groups like Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience were having an impact. The song became one of Donovan's biggest hits, making the Top 5 in the UK and the US, and the Top 10 in Australia.[citation needed]

In July 1968, Epic released Donovan in Concert, the recording of his Anaheim concert in September 1967. The cover featured only a painting by Fleur Cowles (with neither the artist's name nor the title). The album contained two of his big hits and songs which would have been new to the audience. The expanded double CD from 2006 contained "Epistle To Derroll", a tribute to one of his formative influences, Derroll Adams. The album also includes extended group arrangements of "Young Girl Blues" and "The Pebble and the Man", a song later reworked and retitled as "Happiness Runs". In the summer of 1968, Donovan worked on a second LP of children's songs, released in 1971 as the double album, HMS Donovan. In September, Epic released a single, "Laléna", a subdued acoustic ballad which reached the low 30s in the US. The album The Hurdy Gurdy Man followed (not released in the UK), continuing the style of the Mellow Yellow LP, and reached 20 in the US, despite containing two earlier hits, the title track and "Jennifer Juniper".[citation needed]

After another US tour in the autumn he collaborated with Paul McCartney, who was producing Postcard, the debut LP by Welsh singer 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, "Atlantis", which was released in the UK (with "I Love My Shirt" as the B-side) in late November and reached 23.[40]

Early in 1969, the comedy film If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium featured music by Donovan; the title tune was written by him and sung by J. P. Rags, and he also performed "Lord of the Reedy River" in the film as a singer at a youth hostel. On 20 January, 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 another anti-war message, and became a moderate Top 40 US hit. However, when DJs in America and Australia flipped it and began playing "Atlantis", that became a hit. The gentle "Atlantis" later formed the backdrop to a violent scene in Martin Scorsese's 1990 film GoodFellas. "Atlantis" was revived in 2000 for an episode of Futurama titled "The Deep South" (2ACV12) which aired on 16 April that year. For this episode Donovan recorded a satirical version of the song describing the Lost City of Atlanta which featured in the episode.

In March 1969 (too soon to include "Atlantis"), Epic and Pye released Donovan's Greatest Hits, which included four previous singles – "Epistle To Dippy", "There is a Mountain", "Jennifer Juniper" and "Laléna", as well as rerecorded versions of "Colours" and "Catch The Wind" (which had been unavailable to Epic because of Donovan's contractual problems) and stereo versions of "Sunshine Superman" (previously unissued full length version) and "Season of the Witch". It became the most successful album of his career; it reached 4 in the US, became a million-selling gold record, and stayed on the Billboard album chart for more than a year. On 26 June 1969 the track "Barabajagal (Love Is Hot)" (recorded May 1969), which gained him a following on the rave scene decades later, was released, reaching 12 in the UK but charting less strongly in the US. This time he was backed by the original Jeff Beck Group, featuring Beck on lead guitar, Ronnie Wood on bass, Nicky Hopkins on piano, and Micky Waller on drums. The Beck group was under contract to Most and it was Most's idea to team them with Donovan to bring a heavier sound to Donovan's work, while introducing a lyrical edge to Beck's.[citation needed]

On 7 July 1969, Donovan performed at the first show in the second season of free rock concerts in Hyde Park, London, which also featured Blind Faith, Richie Havens, the Edgar Broughton Band and the Third Ear Band. In September 1969, the "Barabajagal" album reached 23 in the US. Only the recent "Barabajagal"/"Trudi" single and "Superlungs My Supergirl" were 1969 recordings, the remaining tracks [clarification needed] were from sessions in London in May 1968 and in Los Angeles in November 1968. [citation needed]

In the late 1960s to the early 1970s he lived at Stein, on the Isle of Skye, where he and a group of followers formed a commune and where he was visited by George Harrison. He named his daughter, born 1970, Ione Skye.[41][42]

1970s: Changes

[edit]

In late 1969, the relationship with Most ended after an argument over an unidentified recording session in Los Angeles. In the 1995 BBC Radio 2 The Donovan Story, Most recounted:

The only time we ever fell out was in Los Angeles when there was all these, I suppose, big stars of their day, the Stephen Stillses and the Mama Casses, all at the session and nothing was actually being played. Somebody brought some dope into the session and I stopped the session and slung them out. You know you need someone to say, "it's my session, I'm paying for it." We fell out over that.[43]

Open Road band

[edit]

Donovan said he wanted to record with someone else, and he and Most did not work together again until Cosmic Wheels (1973). After the rift, Donovan spent two months writing and recording the album Open Road as a member of the rock trio Open Road. Stripping the sound of Most's heavy studio productions down to stuff that could be played by a live band, Donovan dubbed the sound "Celtic Rock". The album peaked at No. 16 in the U.S., the third-highest of any of his full-length releases to date, but as his concert appearances became less frequent and new artists and styles of popular music began to emerge, his commercial success began to decline. Donovan said:

I was exhausted and looking for roots and new directions. I checked into Morgan Studios in London and stayed a long while creating Open Road and the HMS Donovan sessions. Downstairs was McCartney, doing his solo album. I had left Mickie after great years together. The new decade dawned and I had accomplished everything any young singer-songwriter could achieve. What else was there to do but to experiment beyond the fame and into the new life, regardless of the result?[43]

Donovan's plan for Open Road was to tour the world for a year, beginning with a boat voyage around the Aegean Sea, documented in the 1970 film There is an Ocean. This was partially on the advice from his management to go into tax exile, during which he was not to set foot in the UK until April 1971, but after touring to France, Italy, Russia, and Japan, he cut the tour short:

I travelled to Japan and was set to stay out of the UK for a year and earn the largest fees yet for a solo performer, and all tax-free. At the time the UK tax for us was 98%. During that Japanese tour I had a gentle breakdown, which made me decide to break the tax exile. Millions were at stake. My father, my agent, they pleaded for me not to step onto the BOAC jet bound for London. I did and went back to my little cottage in the woods. Two days later a young woman came seeking a cottage to rent. It was Linda.[43]

The band would continue without Donovan, adding new members, touring and releasing the album Windy Daze in 1971 before disbanding in 1972.[44][45]

Reunions with Linda Lawrence and Mickie Most

[edit]

After this reunion, Donovan and Linda married on 2 October 1970 at Windsor register office and honeymooned in the Caribbean. Donovan dropped out of the round of tour promotion and concentrated on writing, recording and his family. The largely self-produced children's album HMS Donovan in 1971, went unreleased in the US and did not gain a wide audience. During an 18-month tax exile in Ireland (1971–72), he wrote for the 1972 film The Pied Piper in the title role, and for Brother Sun, Sister Moon (1972). The title song from the Zeffirelli film provided Donovan with a 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.

After a new deal with Epic, Donovan reunited with Mickie Most in early 1973, resulting in the LP Cosmic Wheels, which featured arrangements by Chris Spedding.[43] It was his last chart success, reaching the top 40 in America and Britain. Late in the year, he released Essence To Essence, produced by Andrew Loog Oldham, and a live album recorded and released only in Japan, which featured an extended version of "Hurdy Gurdy Man", including an additional verse written by George Harrison in Rishikesh.[46] While recording the album, Alice Cooper invited Donovan to share lead vocals on his song "Billion Dollar Babies".[citation needed]

Cosmic Wheels was followed up by two albums that same year: his second concert album, Live in Japan: Spring Tour 1973, and the more introspective Essence to Essence. His last two albums for Epic Records were 7-Tease (1974) and Slow Down World (1976). In 1977, he opened for Yes on their six-month tour of North America and Europe following the release of Going for the One (1977). The 1978 LP, Donovan was on Most's RAK Records in the UK and on Clive Davis' new Arista Records in the US; it reunited him for the last time with Most and Cameron, but was not well received at the height of the new wave and did not chart.[citation needed]

1980s–1990s

[edit]

The punk era (1976–1980) provoked a backlash in Britain against the optimism and whimsy of the hippie era, of which Donovan was a prime example. The word "hippie" became pejorative, and Donovan's fortunes suffered.[citation needed] In this period, he released the albums Neutronica (1980), Love Is Only Feeling (1981), and Lady of the Stars (1984), and guest-starred on Stars on Ice, a half-hour variety show on ice produced by CTV in Toronto. There was a respite when he appeared alongside Sting, Phil Collins, Bob Geldof, Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck in the Amnesty International benefit show The Secret Policeman's Other Ball. Accompanied by Danny Thompson, Donovan performed several hits including "Sunshine Superman", "Mellow Yellow", "Colours", "Universal Soldier" and "Catch the Wind". He was also in the performance of Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" for the show's finale. Donovan also appeared at the Glastonbury Festival on 18 June 1989 with the band Ozric Tentacles accompanying him onstage.

In 1990, Donovan released a live album featuring new performances of his classic songs. In 1991, Nettwerk released a tribute album to Donovan, Island of Circles. Sony's 2-CD boxed set Troubadour: The Definitive Collection 1964–1976 (1992) continued the restoration of his reputation, and was followed by the 1994 release of Four Donovan Originals, which saw his four classic Epic LPs on CD in their original form for the first time in the UK. He found an ally in rap producer and Def Jam label owner Rick Rubin and recorded the album Sutras for Rubin's American Recordings label.[19]

2000s

[edit]
Donovan before a show in Washington, D.C., on 10 August 2007

In 2000, Donovan narrated and played himself in the Futurama episode "The Deep South" on 16 April with a parody of the song "Atlantis".[citation needed]

A new album, Beat Cafe, on Appleseed Records in 2004, marked a return to the jazzy sound of his 1960s recordings and featured bassist Danny Thompson and drummer Jim Keltner, with production by John Chelew (The Blind Boys of Alabama). At a series of Beat Cafe performances in New York, Richard Barone (The Bongos) joined Donovan to sing and read passages from Allen Ginsberg's Howl.

In May 2004, Donovan played "Sunshine Superman" at the wedding concert for the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Denmark. He released his early demo tapes, Sixty Four, and a re-recording of the Brother Sun, Sister Moon soundtrack on iTunes. A set of his Mickie Most albums was released on 9 May 2005. This EMI set has 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 Mansi on double bass, former Damned drummer Rat Scabies and Flipron keyboard player, Joe Atkinson.

In 2006, Donovan played British festivals and two dates at Camden's The Jazz Cafe, London.

In January 2007, Donovan played at the Kennedy Center, in Washington, DC; at Alice Tully Hall, in New York City; and at the Kodak Theatre, in Los Angeles, in conjunction with a presentation by filmmaker David Lynch supporting the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and world peace. The concert at the Kodak Theatre was filmed by Raven Productions and broadcast on public television as a pledge drive. Donovan's partnership with the David Lynch Foundation saw him performing concerts through October 2007, as well as giving presentations about Transcendental meditation. He appeared at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, in May 2007,[47] and toured the UK with Lynch in October 2007.[48]

In March 2007, Donovan played two shows at the South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas. He had planned a spring 2007 release of an album, along with a UK tour, but announced the tour was cancelled and the album delayed. He said was in good health and gave no reason for the cancellation.[citation needed]

In April 2007, Donovan presented a three-part series on Ravi Shankar for BBC Radio 2. In October 2007, he announced plans for the "Invincible Donovan University" focusing on Transcendental Meditation, to be near Glasgow or Edinburgh.[49] In October 2007 the DVD The Donovan Concert—Live in LA, filmed at the Kodak Theatre Los Angeles earlier that year, was released in the UK. On 6 October 2009, Donovan was honoured as a BMI Icon at the 2009 annual BMI London Awards.[50] The Icon designation is given to BMI songwriters who have had "a unique and indelible influence on generations of music makers".[51]

2010s–2020s

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In October 2010, Donovan's released the double album Ritual Groove, which he had described as "a soundtrack to a movie not yet made."[52] On 10 May 2021, his 75th birthday, Donovan released the music video for the album's song "I Am the Shaman". David Lynch produced the track and directed the video.[53]

In 2012, he released The Sensual Donovan, recorded in 1971 with John Phillips of The Mamas and the Papas, backed by The Crusaders.[54] In 2013, he recorded the album Shadows of Blue at Treasure Isle Studios in Nashville. The album includes songs he wrote in the 1970s and explores a country style.[55][54]

A tribute album to Donovan, Gazing with Tranquility, was released in October 2015 under nonprofit label Rock the Cause Records to benefit the charity Huntington's Hope.[56] It features covers by The Flaming Lips, Lissie, and Sharon Van Etten.[57]

In 2019, Donovan released Eco-Song, an album of songs with an ecological theme, inspired by Greta Thunberg. He hoped to adapt the album into a rock opera but was unable to due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[58]

To mark the 50th anniversary of Brian Jones's death in 2019, Donovan released a tribute album, Joolz Juke, featuring Jones's grandson (and Donovan's step-grandson), Joolz Jones.[59] In 2021, he released the album Lunarian, dedicated to his wife. The album's song "Still Waters" was recorded decades earlier with Nils Lofgren.[60] Donovan and Lawrence created an animated children's television series, Tales of Aluna, with 26 episodes produced by Australian studio Three's a Company. They had developed the series's story over decades.[59][61]

Donovan released the album Gaelia in December 2022.[62] The album's singles Rock Me and Lover O' Lover featured David Gilmour on guitar.[63] Donovan took 2024 off to prepare for a sixtieth anniversary concert series planned for 2025.[64]

Personal life

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Donovan had a relationship with American model Enid Karl, and they had two children: actor-musician Donovan Leitch in 1967, and actress Ione Skye in 1970.[65] In October of 1970, Donovan married Linda Lawrence.[4] They have two children together.[66][67][68] Lawrence was the inspiration for "Sunshine Superman".[69]

Donovan is also the adoptive father of Lawrence's and Brian Jones's son, Julian Brian (Jones) Leitch.[13]

In February 2024, Donovan was disqualified from driving for two years and fined €500 for dangerous driving by Skibbereen District Court in Ireland. A charge of being drunk in charge of a vehicle was dismissed, as the court determined it would be unsafe to convict him for that offence. The court heard that the singer was still working and that he supports charitable causes. He has lived in Ireland for thirty years, with no previous convictions.[3]

Donovan, as of February 2024, lives in Castlemagner, Kanturk in County Cork. He suffers from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)[70] and a "restricted lung disease".[3]

Religious beliefs

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Donovan identifies as pagan.[71] Raised Protestant, he left the religion after reading Lao Tzu, Zen and Celtic mythology as a teenager. His personal belief system combines Celtic mythology, Buddhism, and goddess worship.[72] During a 2022 interview with Variety, he said "[E]very other song of mine celebrates the Goddess. She is Mother Nature. And we have been placed in this extraordinary position, almost on the edge of extinction, by this totally, overly male view that every resource, every river, every breeze, every cloud, every metal in the land should be raped and pillaged and sold as a commodity."[73]

Accolades

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In November 2003, the University of Hertfordshire awarded Donovan an honorary Doctor of Letters degree.[74][75] He was nominated by Sara Loveridge (a student at the university who had interviewed and reviewed Donovan for the university paper in 2001–2002); Andrew Morris, Sara's partner and Donovan researcher/writer; and Mac MacLeod.[76]

On 14 April 2012, Donovan was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.[77][78]

Discography

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Filmography

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Actor

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As himself

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Musical composer

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Music and documentary DVD

[edit]

Literary works

[edit]
  • Leitch, Donovan, The Hurdy Gurdy Man, Century, an imprint of Random House, London, 2005 (published in the US as The Autobiography of Donovan: The Hurdy Gurdy Man), St. Martin's Press, New York, 2005; ISBN 0-312-35252-2

References

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