Original released on Double LP Dawn DNLD 4001
(UK, July 1971)
Anyone who
likes the Donovan of "Sunshine Superman" or "Mellow Yellow"
will probably want to ignore this album - but anyone who liked the Donovan of
"Colours," "Turquoise," or "Poor Cow," or "A Gift
from a Flower to a Garden", will have to track it down, because they'll find it
essential. One has to give Donovan a lot of credit for attempting a release
like "HMS Donovan" in 1971, although it never came close to charting at the time
of its release. The drugged-out hippie era that had spawned trippy folk-based albums
such as "A Gift from a Flower to a Garden" was long past, and acoustic folk
recordings were considered passe, yet here was Donovan setting words by Lewis
Carroll, Thora Stowell, Ffrida Wolfe, Agnes Grozier Herbertson, Lucy Diamond,
Edward Lear, Eugene Field, William Butler Yeats, Natalie Joan, and Thomas Hood,
among others, to what were often hauntingly beautiful melodies, mostly strummed
on a guitar. What's more, it just about all works perfectly, once one gets past
the tape-effect tricks and other silliness of the opening track, "The
Walrus and the Carpenter." Spawned at a time when the singer/songwriter
was about to become a father, the album has a decidedly playful tone, even more
so than its obvious predecessor, "For Little Ones". Lovely as that record was,
there are also long stretches of "HMS Donovan" that have far prettier melodies,
arrangements, and accompaniment, played at more attractive tempos.
The playing
here, which is mostly just Donovan's solo guitar with maybe a string bass and
organ, and an unnamed female singer or two backing him on a few tracks, is
crisper and more focused (along with the recording), and the tunes are seldom
short of gorgeous, whether written by Donovan or simply his arrangements of
traditional folk melodies. "HMS Donovan" marked the singer's last venture of this
kind, into his mid-/late-'60s folk style, or into folk-style children's songs,
and it was the last of his albums to be characterized by whimsy. As a sign of
some of the behind-the-scenes tensions that characterized its production, "HMS
Donovan" contains one attempt at a rock track, in the form of
"Homesickness" - this failed attempt to emulate such late-'60s
singles as "Hurdy Gurdy Man" is the only failed track on the album,
and was also the only track here on which Donovan's longtime producer Mickie
Most had any input. "Lord of the Dance" (written by Sydney Carter and
utilizing a melody that Americans may know better as "Simple Gifts"),
"Queen Mab," and "Celia of the Seals" are worth the price
of admission by themselves.




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