Label: Background Records (UK), HBG 122/11
Style: Progressive Rock, Rock, Hard Rock
Country: Denmark
Time: 40:27
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 253 Mb
Hurdy
Gurdy emerged from the Danish group Peter Belli and the Boom Boom
Brothers (aka The B.B. Brothers) in June 1967, when three members of the
B.B. Brothers, guitarist Claus Bohling, drummer Jens Peter Marquard
Otzen and British vocalist and bassist Mac MacLeod formed the power
trio.[1] Inspired by Cream but with more psychedelic leanings, they
split from Peter Belli and MacLeod named the band 'Hurdy Gurdy'. They
had considerable success in Scandinavia, breaking many attendance
records for their live shows.[citation needed] The band moved to England
in early 1968, after MacLeod had been deported from Denmark.
From
Denmark, MacLeod wrote to Donovan's manager Ashley Kozak on 19 December
1967 to ask if he could help the band in any way. Donovan wrote his song
"Hurdy Gurdy Man" for them as a gift for MacLeod. MacLeod came back to
the U.K. in the new year to see Donovan and, a few weeks later, the rest
of the band followed. After hearing Donovan's demo tape, the band set
up outside his Little Berkhamsted cottage and played their version of
the song. Donovan did not like the heavy take on the track they played
as he wanted a softer, acoustic arrangement. Soon after, he released his
own version of the song which became a hit, his version in the end had a
similar arrangement to the Hurdy Gurdy version. Donovan told Keith
Altham of the NME (and Hit Parader) in December 1968:
"Hurdy Gurdy
Man" was originally written for a Danish group by that name (...) There
is a friend of mine in the group - Mac MacLeod - whom I looked to in the
early days to learn how to pick the guitar. I wrote the song especially
for them but then we got into a disagreement over how it was to be
produced. I wanted to do it one way and they another. So I said, 'Right
then - I'll do it myself because I think it's good enough for a single.'
So I did it. And it's out.[2][3][4]
While they were in the UK, they
did some recordings produced by Chris White and Rod Argent of The
Zombies. Two tracks by the MacLeod era of Hurdy Gurdy, "Tick Tock Man"
and "Neo Camel", are on the Mac MacLeod anthology The Incredible Musical
Odyssey of the Original Hurdy Gurdy Man and showcase the free-flowing
power trio psychedelic rock sound.
Otzen and Bohling had to return to
Denmark shortly after those recordings, as they were unable to secure
work permits from the Musician's Union. A new bassist (Torben Forne) was
recruited to replace MacLeod and, in early 1971, they released a
self-titled album for CBS which has recently been reissued on CD.
MacLeod briefly joined the post-Zombies group Argent.
In 1993, Bohling re-formed the band and performed two concerts at the Cavern Club in Exeter.
(en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hurdy_Gurdy_(band))
01. Ride On (05:10)
02. The Giant (05:00)
03. Tell Me Your Name (04:29)
04. Peaceful Open Space (05:20)
05. Babels Tower (03:17)
06. Spaceman (04:20)
07. Lost In The Jungle (08:45)
08. You Can't Go Backwards (04:02)
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