This is another of Roy’s best love songs off Flat Baroque and Berserk to fill my daily Roy Harper slot. I was privileged to watch him record this.
The man’s a genius.
One of the most beautiful love songs ever written with a perfect production. David Bedford’s strings are so brilliantly arranged that they really augment the performance.
I was twice privileged.
I was among the first to hear it performed. At that time I was going to every gig I could get to – and that was most of them – two or three a week. When he introduced it into his act I was there.
‘Another Day’ knocked me out the minute I heard it. He won’t like me saying but I remember thinking at the time that the warble in his voice sounded a bit Donovanish. The song instantly quietened the audience. They were rapt. Everyone recognised that it was special right from the off.
Those early gigs were such a range of contrasting songs. Roy had his rousing songs of anger and fury, like ‘Whiteman’, which he sang with great passion, he had his zany humorous pieces, like ‘Feeling all the Saturday’, which he peppered the gig with, he had instrumentals like ‘One for Al(l)’ and he had these haunting love songs like ‘Another Day’. Perfect.
He never used a setlist back then. He intuitively moved from one to another, with lengthy diatribes, discussions, observations, explanations and comments in-between, as the mood suited – altering the tempo and feel of the gig accordingly. Those gigs were often up to three hours long and sometimes a third of them would be Roy talking. I enjoyed the talking as much as the playing. Roy shared. It wasn’t your standard performance. If it came into his head it came out of his mouth. There were humour, wry observation and all manner of asides.
I was also there in Abbey Road studio when Roy recorded it. I remember watching him from the control room willing it to be perfect. It was. I don’t remember David Bedford and the strings though. That must have been added later.
‘Another Day’ is still one of my favourite songs these fifty years on.
I felt like I’d been fortunate enough to witness history being made.
This is one of Roy’s most beautiful love songs. A song about a youthful romance, making love in among the sand dunes on the beach at Lytham St Anne’s where he was growing up. It takes me straight back to the days of my own youth.
It has a haunting melody and is sung with such tenderness.
I remember him recording this in Abbey Road Studios. He was having great trouble with the harmonica. It kept going out of tune. He was getting very frustrated. They could not find a replacement in the right key anywhere in the entire studios. It was late at night so nowhere was open to purchase one. They tried soaking it in water.
Eventually they managed to get it to last for the duration of the song.
The relief was apparent. I remember Roy smashing the harmonica in the jamb of the heavy studio door.
I had taken this annoying American girl who was staying with us along with me and she dutifully picked up the mangled harmonica. I had it lying around the house for ages! Somehow it got lost down the years!
Aaaah – the memories!
The bumble bees stumble
The butterflies tumble
The birds on the water-line stare
The heavens have crowned her
The star grass grows round her
Her dreams fill the very still air
Just east of the sun
Where our loving was done
I can still see her breasts on the edge of the morning
I can still taste the salt in her hair
I thought I needed so beautiful memories to buoy me up in lockdown today!
I prefer the original version on Roy’s first album – Sophisticated Beggar. It is a beautiful, haunting love song – so delicate and sweet – a real contrast to the more strident beasts of social comment that he is famous for.
There are a lot of strings to the Roy Harper bow – social, humour, instrumental, poetic, political, love, epic, antireligious and scientific to name but a few. This is an example of his more poetic love song.
He sang this for me and Liz in Kingston back in 1971. Memorable!
We’re just spinning leaves
In the flight of a dawn, little girl
Falling through an eternal horizon of time
But as we lie here I’d like to think
That all we’ve got will be ours forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
I can hear a voice
On the wings of a dream, little girl
Melting me into love as it touches my heart
But sheltered in the distance of your sleep
Is all that I could love in a lifetime
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
Open your eyes
To the call of the winds, little girl
Can’t you here them all saying I’ll always be yours
Lying in the misty morning sun
The pillow of the night still beneath you
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
This was a very early love song. Roy isn’t all vitriol and caustic social comment. He writes the most beautiful love songs too.
This one appeared on his first album – Sophisticated Beggar, and was rerecorded for the Valentine album.
It is a delicate beauty showing his great finger-picking style and use of harmonics. The words are absolutely brilliant. A great poem put to music.
Roy sang this for me and Liz in 1970 in Kingston at a gig in the pub there. I remember it well.
Forever – Roy Harper
We’re just spinning leaves
In the flight of dawn
Little girl
Falling through an eternal horizon of time
But I’d like to think as we lie
That all we’ve got will be ours forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
I can hear a voice
On the wings of my dream
Little girl
Melting me into love as it touches my heart
But sheltered in the distance of your sleep
Is all that I could love in a lifetime
Don’t you think we’re forever
Open your eyes
To the call of the winds
Little girl
Can’t you here them all saying I’ll always be yours
Lying in the misty morning sun
The pillow of the night still beneath you
Don’t you think we’re forever
I’m loving this new discovery of these films of five songs from 1969/70. It’s a little restrained but great to see.
If you are at all interested in my writing on Blues and Rock Music you can check out my books here:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Opher-Goodwin/e/B00MSHUX6Y/ref=sr_tc_2_0?qid=1474797981&sr=1-2-ent
I would recommend the Blues Muse or In Search of Captain Beefheart to get you started:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Blues-Muse-Opher-Goodwin/dp/1518621147/ref=asap_bc?ie=UTF8
or
537 Essential Rock Albums Pt. 1
Opher’s tributes to Rock Geniuses
If you would like some of my Sci-fi I recommend Ebola in the Garden of Eden or Sorting the Future to get you started:
If you would like a sixties novel I recommend Danny’s Story or Goofin’ with the Cosmic Freaks
Happy Reading!!
I prefer the first version of this on the first album, simply recorded live in a make-shift studio. It captures the heart and essence.
It is the most incredible evocation of the love that burns and you think will be there for eternity as the endorphins soar.
You can picture two young people together, in love and dreaming of being in that moment for the rest of time and a day.
Sadly that was not to be. Moments pass. But the beauty of that moment was captured in this gem. We can hold it and watch it sparkle. It radiates the emotions that were captured and locked inside the words.
Forever
We’re just spinning leaves
In the flight of a dawn, little girl
Falling through an eternal horizon of time
But as we lie here I’d like to think
That all we’ve got will be ours forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
I can hear a voice
On the wings of a dream, little girl
Melting me into love as it touches my heart
But sheltered in the distance of your sleep
Is all that I could love in a lifetime
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever
Open your eyes
To the call of the winds, little girl
Can’t you here them all saying I’ll always be yours
Lying in the misty morning sun
The pillow of the night still beneath you
Don’t you think we’re forever
Don’t you think we’re forever