Nick Harper: The Wilderness Years – part of the intro

Foreword

I’ve known Nick Harper for most of his life. I was a young student living the bohemian life of the sixties underground and he was the young son of Roy Harper. I’d just been knocked for six by Roy’s take on music, society and the universe at large and he invited me round to glimpse his life. Nick was part of it.

Since then I’ve been a teacher, writer, parent, partner, traveller and avid devotee of rock music.

I love guitar playing. When it comes to guitar playing I have seen all the greats up close playing in small halls – from Jimi Hendrix to Bert Jansch, Jimmy Page to Peter Green, Davy Graham to Eric Clapton; but there is one who stands out for me. His sheer brilliance is beyond anything else I have seen. What Nick Harper can do with a guitar is magical.

To quote Rob Adams from the Glasgow Herald – ‘If you haven’t heard Nick Harper you are missing out on one of the musical phenomenons of our age.’

The strange thing is that the bending of the strings, the tuning and retuning of strings within songs, the creation of new upside down chords and even the surround sound delay is never a gimmick. It isn’t showing off. It actually works to create great music and the tricks are integral parts of the songs that always add to the composition. He is recreating the sounds in his head. Nick expands upon the possibility and generates extensions of improbability.

I have only ever seen one person capable of such a thing and he was Jimi Hendrix. Nick’s limitation, as with Jimi, is merely the extent of his imagination. It goes without saying that Nick’s imagination is of the scope of galaxies. It is phenomenal.

I have been fortunate to observe Nick’s talents develop over decades and I never get tired of the crispness and range that his fingers tease or pound. He can make the guitar thunder or trill with delicate melodies. Nick produces music you can get lost in.

If it were only the guitar playing it would be wonderful. However he is so much more. Nick marries this instrumental genius to a voice that is incredible in range and texture and a song-writing ability that is up there with the best. He now has a catalogue of songs that would challenge any great songwriter of our time. The content is both poetic and meaningful. What more could you possibly ask for?

Nick’s live performances are impressive. He is a showman who deploys wit and cutting humour along with sharp observation. He is a warm, sensitive but forceful man whose sensibilities are complex, always intelligent and forthright. You never get short-changed at a Nick gig. He puts his soul into it.

The one mystery surrounding Nick’s career concerns the level of success he has so far achieved. It boggles me to think that he has not risen to the heights, received the recognition and walked away with awards. He surely deserves it. His time will undoubtedly come. Skills like his do not go unnoticed forever.

I suggested writing a book with and about Nick many years back but he was not keen. Nick is a modest man who neither seeks to inflate his achievements nor crow about them. He simply did not feel he had done enough to warrant a book. There was also the business side of it. Nick naturally shies away from any aspect of the business that is concerned with money making. He abhors anything smacking of exploitation. He feels that he is privileged to be able to do what he does; which is to create and play music. That should be sufficient. He is grateful when anybody enjoys his music and still amazed that he has a ‘career’ and people actually pay to see him. Nick refuses to see himself as a part of the music business or his songs as a commodity. Despite the fact that he knows he has to make a living he is not about to exploit his supporters by producing ‘product’. He does what he feels is right. He writes songs because they are an expression of how he feels. He is the same person on and off stage. There is no eye on the market.

A Couple of Great Reviews for my Nick Harper Book!!

Andy Bott

5.0 out of 5 stars Two old friends, one take newly told.

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 8 January 2020

Verified Purchase

This is not just a book, it is a Labour of love. Other has known Nick for most of Nick’s life. He has a pride in him like a father, or at worst the best of teachers (though he will deny having taught Nick anything.) The book was intended as a companion to three L.P. Collection. It is more than that. Much more. It is the story of a songwriter, musician and maverick. It tells of a man who is committed to two things, his family and his musical integrity. The former should be the first consideration for any person with a family, the latter the method to support and provide for the former. Music is love. I have known Nick since 1984, but not as Opher does. I do not have bragging rights, but I know who he is. Looking back I realise he was enigmatic. I watched him over the years. I saw him to from passenger to team player to engine driver in his musical journey. Biscuits playing from very good to superb and peerless. His songs have taken a simi?at journey. His style has woven down many lanes, albeit closely linked. Through them all you hear Nick’s character.This story was familiar to me, like talking to an old friend. But there was more. The story is bigger than what I knew, the songs more complex, and intellectual.
If you know Nick Harper’s music, this book is essential. If you don’t, this is a guide to some of the most satisfying stuff you will hear this side of Killing Joke, classic 60s and 70s songwriters, modern day guitar wizzkids. A great read in easy style, with delightful interview responses from Nick himself to put flesh and blood to the story. Designed as a companion, but stands up by itself as a great little biography. Not just another chord in your song.

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Amazon Customer

5.0 out of 5 stars A cracking escape into Harperspace

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 January 2020

Verified Purchase

The Short Review:
Great little book; whether you’re familiar with the music of Nick Harper or not, this is a worthwhile and entertaining read about one of the finest living British musicians and songwriters.
Accessibly written in an engaging style and with numerous direct contributions from Nick (Harpic) Harper himself and some very cool photographs, this book examines Nick’s work and contextualises it against his life, the Universe and everything he holds important– including remarkable charity work.
Buy it… ideally buy Nick’s three-album retrospective too…and take a journey into Harperspace.

The Longer Review:
As above; but framed against this background…
Nick once corrected me to the effect that “No-one here is a poor-man’s anything…”, when I played support to him and dared suggest that I was simply a low-level copy of another singer-songwriter who bears his surname. Nick was effusive about the true artistic value of original and self-driven artists; I learnt and grew in confidence from that straightforward endorsement at close-quarters.
My experiences of Nick early in his solo gigging career led me to believe that he is an important and often overlooked talent whose fans and followers know as a humourous, thoughtful, exciting and dynamic entertainer whilst remaining a grounded and private individual.
Opher’s fine book takes a deeper look into what it is that constitutes the magic of Nick’s work, and the man himself; a lovely man I’ll readily buy a pint for any time we cross paths.
Anyone who considers themself to be a lover of music will be rewarded through reading this – and enlightened about what it can mean to be genuinely creative and original, too.

Thanks to both of you! Much appreciated!!

Nick Harper: The Wilderness Years: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Opher: 9798815185630: Books

Nick Harper: The Wilderness Years Paperback 

The Nick Harper book –

Nick Harper: The Wilderness Years Paperback 

Is available in paperback or digital from your local Amazon.

I first met Nick when he was a young child and over the years he has become a close friend. This book illuminates the genius that I feel is Nick Harper and is designed to accompany ‘The Wilderness Years’, a trilogy of vinyl albums. Nick talks candidly about many aspects of his music and career. I include, with Nick’s permission, the lyrics of all the songs featured in the trilogy. There are also many photos dating from his childhood to the present day.

One review:

‘Humorous anecdotes and autobiographical exposition, paralleled with notes on the complex work of Harper bring the reader on a journey of wonderful insight into this quiet troubadour. Lovely entertaining read.’

In the UK:https://read.amazon.co.uk/kp/card?preview=inline&linkCode=kpd&ref_=k4w_oembed_eqcn5JovUleTCI&asin=1678850667&tag=kpembed-20

In The USA:https://read.amazon.com/kp/card?preview=inline&linkCode=kpd&ref_=k4w_oembed_ASw0bdV3BbfiUr&asin=1678850667&tag=kpembed-20

In India:https://read.amazon.in/kp/card?preview=inline&linkCode=kpd&ref_=k4w_oembed_3WQJ1nbsNrj1k5&asin=1678850667&tag=kpembed-20

If you would like me to sign a copy you can purchase a book directly from me – please PM me. (Or leave a message in the comments).

Nick harper Book – The Wilderness Years

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I have now completed the book. It has been through its eighth rewrite, thoroughly edited and the photos all annotated and placed. It was quite a task.

I then went down to Wiltshire to share it with Nick. I wanted him to be totally happy with what was in it. He has given a great deal of his time and contributed a number of photos and I did not want him to feel it was not right. I think he was embarrassed by some of the things I have said about him – he is a modest man – but liked what has come out at the end.

I wanted a book that was entertaining and revealing. A lot of Nick’s songs are very personal but contain the philosophy that rules his life. I wanted to illuminate how that ethos pervades all his work. I think it does that.

The book was intended to be a companion to the triple vinyl album set. That has been out a while but this is still relevant.

The book is now being professionally designed and laid-out. It will then go to the publishers.

It should be out this Autumn!!  I’m excited!!

Nick Harper – The book – The Wilderness Years – start of the epilogue.

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I have been working on the 7th draft of this book for days now and still finding things to tweak. I’ve been adding photos, writing captions, standardising presentation, checking spelling, grammar, writing blurb, adding discographies and selected works, adding author notes and generally pulling it into its final form.

I thought I would share the final first section of the epilogue with you. I’d be grateful for your responses before I go down on Wednesday to Wiltshire to put the final bits in place and send it off to be graphically designed for publication.

Epilogue

Fuck, I am passionate about this book and Nick’s music. Having the privilege to listen to Nick’s entire incredible back catalogue, to sit down with Nick for days and interrogate him about his music, to hang out and talk, have the time to play boules and get thrashed at my own table football, to share meals and laughter and discuss everything under the sun, to immerse myself in his music, to touch minds. That is invigorating.

In this day of collective hypnosis where the mass music scene is under the spell of Simon Cowell, where tribute bands pull in more punters than creative artists, where music is a ‘product’ to be mass produced, and the lowest common denominator rules the studios, it is vital to have artists like Nick. I’m clinging on like he’s a life-line. His music is real. It gives me hope.

I find it hard to believe that we live in an age like this. How did we get here? Nick was only partly right: it’s like punk, the sixties, blues and reggae never happened. Once music used to mean something! It was the centre of our culture. It was a living, mind-expanding rebellion. Now it is a piece of Muzac to be shunted from iPod to iPod and played as background. Now the mindless zombies are screaming en masse, with their American whoops, for bland pop crap. Now festivals are things to be consumed like circus jamborees.

What happened to the gathering of the tribes? The endless hours of wonder, lowering the stylus into the groove and sharing the experience, the intense discussion? What happened to the vital importance of it all? When did it cease to be a motivator of young minds and become a product to be consumed?

Real music – it’s still there. It has been pushed to the periphery but it still exists. There are the numerous acts that still create and produce music with integrity, passion and purpose. But for me Nick is leading the way.

Nick Harper day – Today is a quiet day. I am devoting the whole day to the Nick Harper book.

nick 16

If you happen to know who took this photo I’d be grateful.

Today I will be off air. I will be tucked in doors with a transcript of the Nick Harper book and a pen. I will be reading making notes, editing, improving and attempting to get the thing as perfect as I can make it.

I want this to be my best book!

I’ll let you know how it goes.

Nick Harper book – I need help identifying photographers.

I need your help.

A lot of people sent in some great photos for the Nick Harper book. Unfortunately my computer had a complete meltdown and I lost lots of data. I’ve managed to retrieve these photos but do not have the information of who they originated from.

If you are the photographer or known who the photographer was, please let me know so that I can acknowledge you in the book.

I’m really grateful for any help.

Please have a look and get in touch if you can assist. Thanks – Opher

PC – Paula Cuccurullo

1 nick 1

2. nick 38

3. PC Nick 2

4. PC Nick 3

5. PC  Nick 4

6. PC  Nick 5

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10 PC .nick 9

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13. PC Nick 12

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25  Nick 24

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30 PC  nick 29

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