Donovan
Fairytale (1965)
Label:   
Date:  1965
Length:  56:34
Genre:  Folk
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Colours    2:48
      2.  
      To Try For The Sun    3:39
      3.  
      Sunny Goodge Street    2:58
      4.  
      Oh Deed I Do    2:10
      5.  
      Circus Of Sour    1:54
      6.  
      The Summer Day Reflection Song    2:15
      7.  
      candy man    3:29
      8.  
      Jersey Thursday    2:13
      9.  
      Belated Forgiveness Plea    2:59
      10.  
      The Ballad Of A Crystal Man    3:54
      11.  
      Little Tin Soldier    3:01
      12.  
      The Ballad Of Geraldine    4:43
      13.  
      universal soldier    2:12
      14.  
      The Ballad Of A Crystal Man    3:19
      15.  
      15-The War Drags On    3:44
      16.  
      16-Do You Hear Me Now    1:50
      17.  
      17-Turquoise    3:31
      18.  
      18-Hey Gyp (Dig The Slowness)    3:09
      19.  
      colours    2:46
    Additional info: | top
      Donovan - Fairytale : [1965] 2002 re-issue

      1 Colours (2:48)
      2 To Try for the Sun (3:39)
      3 Sunny Goodge Street (2:58)
      4 Oh Deed I Do (2:09)
      5 Circus of Sour (1:54)
      6 Summer Day Reflection Song (2:15)
      7 Candy Man (3:29)
      8 Jersey Thursday (2:15)
      9 Belated Forgiveness Plea (2:59)
      10 Ballad of a Crystal Man (3:54)
      11 Little Tin Soldier (3:01)
      12 Ballad of Geraldine (4:42)
      13 Universal Soldier (*) (2:15)
      14 Ballad of a Crystal Man (*) (3:19)
      15 War Drags On (*) (3:44)
      16 Do You Hear Me Now (*) (1:50)
      17 Turquoise (*) (3:31)
      18 Hey Gyp (Dig the Slowness) (*)


      Donovan's second album found the Scottish folkie in possession of his own voice, a style of earnest, occasionally mystical musings indebted neither to Woody Guthrie nor Bob Dylan. True, Fairytale's highlights -- "Sunny Goodge Street," "Jersey Thursday," and "The Summer Day Reflection Song" -- use a sense of impressionism pioneered by Dylan, but Donovan flipped Dylan's weariness on its head. His persona is the wistful hippie poet, continually moving on down the road, but never bitter about the past. The folkie "Colours," already a hit before the album's release, is also here (though without Donovan's harmonica). A few of his songs are inconsequential and tossed-off ("Oh Deed I Do," "Circus of Sour"), but a few of these ("Candy Man" especially) succeed too, thanks to Donovan's effervescent delivery. [A 2002 Castle reissue added six bonus tracks, including a version of "Universal Soldier" and the B-side "Hey Gyp (The Slowness)."]
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