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Essential Donovan
by Sony
Essential Donovan - Click to Enlarge
Avg. Rating: 3.6 of 5 stars (based on 5 reviews)
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Customer Reviews
4 of 5 stars  If you liked him in the old days...
Thursday, September 30, 2004
and do not have any of Donovan on CD, this is a good choice. I always liked his folky early songs better than the later psychedelic tunes, and this disc has more of the latter and only two of the former. I wish "Universal Soldier" had been included after "Catch the Wind" and "Colours" at a minimum. However, if your taste runs to the acid/hippy phase of Donovan's brief career near the top of the charts, tracks three through 14 will satisfy your longing. Some earlier reviewers think the remastering here was not entirely successful compared to his "Greatest Hits" LP transfer of some years back. I have not heard that, so I have no comment except that one prior critic clearly says he likes this new disc better. Donovan proved to be Dylan light, and his choice to progress from folk-protest to mellow, spiritual, hallucinogenic songs instead of to rock and roll, Dylan's own choice, put him in a narrow box by the end of the sixties. But he is hard to dislike, and I enjoy "Catch the Wind" and "Colours" no matter how many times I hear them, so for nostalgia's sake, at least, I am pleased to own this.

3 out of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 5 stars  Buy "Greatest Hits" Instead
Monday, September 27, 2004
While it is incredibly good news that Donovan--who has always been under rated--is being included in the "Essential" series, the compilation itself is a disappointment. All of the tracks included here, and one other as well, can be found on the expanded version of "Greatest Hits" released last year. The album notes and the sound quality on "Greatest Hits" are also superior. Unless you are a Donovan completist (and I admit that I am), I would strongly suggest "Greatest Hits" instead of "The Essential."

2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4 of 5 stars  Essential?
Tuesday, July 13, 2004
I guess this would be essential if you didn't have the "Greatest Hits" already, otherwise it's about the same thing. Of course what's here is all great folk-rock. Everything I know of his is here, including "Mellow Yellow", "Wear Your Love Like Heaven", "Hurdy Gurdy Man", "Jennifer Juniper", and the excellent "Colours". The only difference between this and "Greatest Hits", is just a song or two. Maybe the cheaper one would be the better collection?

4 out of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4 of 5 stars  A big upgrade over the previous "Greatest Hits" package
Friday, May 07, 2004
I purchased this CD to replace my vinyl copy of "Donovan"s Greatest Hits" that was originally released back in 1969. That collection had a couple of major flaws. First, there were absolutely no liner notes offered. More importantly, "Catch The Wind" and "Colours" were re-recordings and not the original hits that appeared in the U.S. on Nashville's Hickory Records.
While under no circumstances would I ever consider Donovan to be a five star performer, this recently released CD gives me just what I am looking for. All 14 tracks are indeed the original recordings and the disc also includes three tunes not included on the original Epic "Greatest Hits" package. They are "To Susan On The West Coast Waiting", the Top Ten hit "Atlantis" and finally a song I had not heard in years (somehow I survived the trauma) "Goo Goo Barabajagal" which Donovan recorded with the Jeff Beck Group. Donovan proved to be equally popular on both sides of the Atlantic, achieving approximately the same chart success is Britain as he did here in the States. He had a considerable amount of success on the Billboard Hot 100 Album charts as well. In the early 1970's Donovan walked away from it all. According to the liner notes "Six years of fame was enough. I had done everything. It was extraordinary; you couldn't get any more famous and any more successful." In the early 1990's, my wife and I saw Donovan perform in a local park about a mile from our home. It was just him, his guitar and a microphone. He clearly was enjoying himself and the crowd loved him.
One final note--the remastering job on this CD is first rate. Combine that with the aforementioned liner notes and a great price and you have pretty good bang for your buck.

8 out of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4 of 5 stars  Adequate Compilation...But Doesn't Replace "Greatest Hits"
Tuesday, March 30, 2004
After checking out Epic/Legacy's latest repackaging of Donovan's Sixties material, one has to wonder if they had been smoking those banana skins referenced in "Mellow Yellow." Yes, this single-disc collection includes all twelve of Donovan's Top 40 hits [plus "Colours" (No. 61) and "Season of the Witch" (not released as a single)], but so does 1999's expanded GREATEST HITS, which also included 1970's "Riki Tiki Tavi" (No. 55).

So if you're looking for a top notch single-disc collection, I'd recommend GREATEST HITS. [I first bought it on vinyl when it was originally released in 1969.] If that isn't enough to satisfy your appetitie for the music of this folkie-turned-hippie flower child, 1992's 45-track TROUBADOUR should satisfy even the most die-hard fan.

Bottom line? This is a terrific collection, but there's nothing new here to justify its release.


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