Hurdy Gurdy Man
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" is a song by the Scottish singer-songwriter Donovan. It was recorded in April 1968 and released the following month as a single. The song gave its name to the album The Hurdy Gurdy Man, which was released in October of that year in the United States. The single reached number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US and number 4 on the UK Singles Chart.
Donovan wrote "Hurdy Gurdy Man" while in Rishikesh in India, where he was studying Transcendental Meditation with the Beatles. The recording features a harder rock sound than Donovan's usual material, supplying a range of distorted guitars and aggressive drums. It also features an Indian influence with the use of a tambura, a gift to Donovan from George Harrison, who also helped write the lyrics. The song may have been influenced by "Green Circles", a psychedelic 1967 song by Small Faces. The similarity is in the melody of the descending verse, the strange vocal delivery, and the topic of being visited by an enlightened stranger. In 2012, Donovan revealed that he had become friends with Small Faces in 1965.
According to some sources, the song was written for the band Hurdy Gurdy (which included Donovan's old friend and guitar mentor Mac MacLeod with Donovan intending to be the producer, but the collaboration was cancelled due to creative disagreements, leading Donovan to record the song himself. In the chapter dedicated to the song in Donovan's autobiography, he says that he originally wanted it to be recorded by Jimi Hendrix.
Musicians for the song
There is some dispute regarding the musicians who performed on the song. In the booklet that came with Donovan's 1992 double CD, , Allan Holdsworth and Jimmy Page are listed as the electric guitar players and John Bonham and Clem Cattini as drummers on the recording. John Paul Jones, who arranged and played bass on the track, was reported to have said by email that Clem Cattini played the drums and Alan Parker played the electric guitar. This line-up was confirmed by Cattini. In Donovan's autobiography, he credits Cattini and Bonham for the drums. In a published interview circa 2013, Donovan is quoted as primarily crediting Cattini for the drums but saying he wasn't sure whether Bonham was also involved, and said he and Jones both credit Holdsworth for the guitar.On Jimmy Page's website, he lists this song as one on which he plays. Engineer Eddie Kramer also cites Jimmy Page as playing on the track, but says that John Bonham did not.In Hannes Rossacher's 2008 documentary Sunshine Superman: The Journey of Donovan, Donovan said that Page was the guitarist; he also asserted that the song ushered in the Celtic rock sound which would lead to Page, Jones, and Bonham forming Led Zeppelin soon afterwards. In Donovan's autobiography, he credited both Page and "Allen Hollsworth" as the "guitar wizards" for the song. However, he also says that "Hollsworth" had played with Blue Mink, which was a band that Alan Parker had played in. In the autobiography, Donovan said that perhaps this session inspired the creation of Led Zeppelin.
The four-string tambura that Donovan plays on the track had been given to him in India by George Harrison, who also helped write the lyrics. In his autobiography, Donovan recalls that he began writing "Hurdy Gurdy Man" on the tambura after Harrison discussed the sitar scales he had learned from Ravi Shankar. Donovan also says that with the drone of the tambura on the song, he had created "Celtic Rock".
The session was produced by Mickie Most and engineered by Eddie Kramer. Donovan had originally hoped Jimi Hendrix would play on the song, but he was unavailable. In fact, Donovan said he wanted to give the song to Hendrix for him to record, but that Mickie Most "flipped out" when he heard the song and insisted that Donovan should record it himself as his next single.
Lyrics
The lyrics recount the tale of a nameless narrator being visited in his dreams by the eponymous "hurdy gurdy man" and his close associate, the "roly poly man", who come "singing songs of love". The song invokes "histories of ages past" with "unenlightened shadows cast" and the "crying of humanity" through "all eternity", and says tis then when the hurdy gurdy man comes singing songs of love".Additional verse
On his 1990 live album The Classics Live and in his autobiography, Donovan has said that there is also an additional verse that had been written by George Harrison that was not included on the radio single:When performing the song in concert, Donovan often relates to his audience the story of how this final verse came about. He played the song for Harrison when they were together in Rishikesh, and Harrison offered to write a verse for the song, which he recorded. Since the running time had to be kept below the three-minute maximum generally allowed for singles at the time, the producer had to choose between the extra verse and the guitar solo, and ended up keeping just the solo.
Donovan has said that the additional verse is a summary of the explanation given by their meditation teacher, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, on the way in which transcendental consciousness is eventually re-awakened after having been forgotten for a long period of time, and is based on part of the Maharishi's commentary on the Bhagavad Gita. Donovan said the Hurdy Gurdy Man is the one who re-awakens this knowledge – in this case, the Maharishi.
Cover versions
The song has been covered by many musicians over the years, including:- Progressive rock musician Steve Hillage, on his 1976 album L.
- Eartha Kitt in 1972 as a B-side to "Catch the Wind".
- Neil Pye, the hippie character from British comedy series The Young Ones in 1984 for an album called Neil's Heavy Concept Album.
- Alternative rock band the Butthole Surfers, on their 1991 album piouhgd.
- Brix E. Smith and Nigel Kennedy on the 1992 Donovan tribute album Island of Circles.
- Radio host Howard Stern performed the song with his band, The Losers, in 2000, basing their version around a sample of the John Bonham intro of Led Zeppelin "When The Levee Breaks".
- American Glam metal band L.A. Guns on their 2004 covers album Rips the Covers Off.
- American alternative band Wild Colonials on their "Life As We Know It EP 1/4".
- Viva Voce included a cover of the song on the vinyl edition of their 2009 album, Rose City.
Soundtrack appearances
- The 1994 film Dumb and Dumber
- The 1996 Barry Levinson film Sleepers
- The 2001 Michael Cuesta film L.I.E.
- The 2002 independent film Spun
- The 2005 film Edison
- The 2006 film Man of the Year
- The 2006 film Bobby
- The 2007 David Fincher film Zodiac
- The 2011 German TV melodrama Familiengeheimnisse
- The 2012 Fringe episode "Black Blotter"
- The 2013 horror film The Conjuring
- The 2016 film Milton's Secret
- The 2018 British TV fantasy drama Britannia
- The 2018 film American Animals
- The 2018 Brooklyn Nine-Nine episode "Safe House"
- The 2018 Chilling Adventures of Sabrina episode "October Country"
- The 2018 The Cool Kids episode "Margaret Dates the Zodiac Killer"
- The 2019 film The Best of Enemies