66年3RDがが180グラム重量盤モノ仕様でアナログ・リイシュー!
DONOVANの代表作であり、サイケ・ポップを代表する名盤。カラフルかつシンプルなメロディとソウルフルなDONOVANのヴォーカルは、母国に先立ってリリースされたアメリカで大きな評価を得、野心的で懐かしさを含んだ時代の一枚と評されました。オーラを放つJIMMY PAGEのギターは4曲参加で13ポンドというバイト感覚の逸品です。
ABBEY ROADマスタリング。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2023/12/12)
Paced by the title track, one of Donovan's best singles, 1966's Sunshine Superman heralded the coming psychedelic age with a new world/old world bent: several ambitious psychedelic productions and a raft of wistful folk songs. Producer Mickie Most fashioned a new sound for the Scottish folksinger, a sparse, swinging, bass-heavy style perfectly complementing Donovan's enigmatic lyrics and delightfully skewed, beatnik delivery. The two side-openers, "Sunshine Superman" and "Season of the Witch," are easily the highlights of the album; the first is the quintessential bright summer sing-along, the second a chugging eve-of-destruction tale. The rest of Sunshine Superman is filled with lengthy, abstract, repetitive folk jams, perfect for lazy summer afternoons, but more problematic when close attention is paid. Accompanied by acoustic guitar and a chamber quartet, the second track, "Legend of a Girl Child Linda," plods on for nearly seven minutes, Donovan's hippie-dippie delivery rendering "lace" into "layyyzzz." After that notable low point, he performs much better, tingling a few spines with his enunciation on the ancient-sounding folksongs "Guinevere," "Three King Fishers," and "Ferris Wheel." Elsewhere, he salutes the Jefferson Airplane on "The Fat Angel" and fellow British folkie Bert Jansch on "Bert's Blues." Donovan's songs are quite solid, but Mickie Most's insistence on extroverted productions (it would grow even more pronounced with time) resulted in a collection of songs that sound good on their own but aren't very comfortable in context. ~ John Bush
Rovi
大きめの鍋でコトコト煮ながら聴いてます。
本場インドな音楽だとちょっと胸焼けしそうになるのですが
これくらいのオリエンタル感がちょうどいい
わたしはナン派です