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SINGSONG PR NEWS: Appleseed RecordingsDonovan - Beat Café Donovan is back with a brand new album of songs in the cool 'Beat Café supported by US and Europe dates
Seconds into the first verse of the opener to Beat Café and there's the shimmering voice, the seductive lyrics, framed in a haze of music - the familiar and welcome sound to generations of music lovers of one of the world's most individual singer-songwriters. From folksinger to flower-child to philosopher Donovan has ploughed an individual furrow through our musical landscape with distinctive and magical songs, from hit singles like "Mellow Yellow," "Sunshine Superman," "Catch the Wind" and "Atlantis," through jam-band covers by the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers ("There is a Mountain"), to TV and film soundtracks, and a precious, infrequent trickle of new releases broken in 2004 with a fine new album on Appleseed. "Beat Café" features eleven new Donovan compositions (plus a version of the traditional "Cuckoo") recorded by multiple Grammy-winning producer John Chelew (Blind Boys of Alabama, Richard Thompson, John Hiatt) "in the spirit of the Bohemian café happenings" that date back to the mid-19th Century, as Donovan writes in his liner notes. Donovan's goal on "Beat Café" was to "view 'modern life' as seen from 'Bohemia'," to capture the musical and intellectual freedom of a hip, underground hangout. "The new generations must create their own 'beat café'," he writes. "It can be described as a state of mind, an oasis of culture and an actual café. Able support is provided by a world-class rhythm section in long-time Donovan cohort and renowned folk/jazz double bassist Danny Thompson (Nick Drake, Richard Thompson, The Pentangle, John Martyn) and drummer/percussionist Jim Keltner, a favoured sideman of Bob Dylan, Ry Cooder and George Harrison, while producer Chelew brings keyboards to the warm instrumental mix. Love, both spiritual and physical, is a primary concern here on tracks like the opening, hypnotic "Love Floats," "Yin My Yang," "Two Lovers" and "Whirlwind." Donovan's characteristic wordplay turns "The Question" into a conundrum, "Lord of the Universe" into a tongue-in-cheek boast, and "Poorman's Sunshine" into a declaration of independence. An appropriately defiant arrangement of Dylan Thomas's poem "Do Not Go Gentle" adds a reminder of the preciousness of life, and the album closes with "Shambhala," a hushed yearning for a return to a peaceful, perhaps metaphorical, home. The release of "Beat Café" is preceded by several "underground" club performances in San Francisco and New York followed by a world tour in 2005. Some Donovan Did-You-Knows
Issued July 2004 by Singsong Entertainment
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