I greatly enjoyed researching and writing this book. Listening to every single track that Ian produced was a great pleasure. Playing them with a view to analyse and explain is a different experience. It’s a bit like putting pieces of a jigsaw together. This is the finished puzzle!!
I can’t wait!! My Ian Dury book finally hits the shops in 2 days time!! You can order it now and have it delivered in time for Christmas.
I loved putting this book together, listening to every single thing he recorded, live concerts and all, and reading everything about him. A real labour of love!
I am in a great position of having been given book contracts through the fabulous Sonicbond Press to write books about all the songwriters I most Admire:
From the smoke-filled clubs of Chicago to the barricades of Brixton, Through DNA, We Remember Everything is a visceral, time-travelling memoir of music, resistance and soul. Ron Forsythe — sound engineer, chronicler, and genre-defying witness to the counterculture — takes us backstage and front-row through decades of revolution, revelation and raw rhythm. Whether jamming with Hendrix at Electric Ladyland, riding the chaos of the Rolling Thunder Revue, or watching the Sex Pistols ignite Islington, Forsythe captures the pulse of every era with poetic clarity and unflinching truth. This is not nostalgia. It’s testimony. A love letter to the spirit of rebellion, the power of sound, and the communities that refused to be silenced — this book is a living archive of the moments that shaped us, scarred us, and sang us into being. “Music isn’t a genre. It’s a continuum. It burns in the soul.”
Having ordered through Amazon and still in the process of enjoying Opher Goodwin’s paperback book detailing Roy Harper’s most illustrious recording career, i have to declare that this is one heck of a read! the author has personally known Roy, as a friend, since the mid 1960s,even attending Harper’s very early gigs at London’s celebrated Les Cousins club, in deepest Soho, where many later famous Singer/Songwriters played nightly, such as Al Stewart, John Martyn, Sandy Denny. Bert Jansch, Davey Graham Paul Simon Martin Carthy ,and ,of course, Roy Harper himself! Harper later went on to a fairly famed career as a Poet/Alternative ‘Singer-Songwriter’, being musically admired by the likes of such famed Luminaries as Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page, Pink Floyd’s Dave Gilmour, Kate Bush, Jethro Tull’s Ian Anderson(who later admitted Roy’s Music was a big influence on his career ,in the 1960s!..Having myself personally attended, over 4 decades ,..scores of live Roy Harper concerts. Roy Harper will always remain, for me, personally, quite probably Britain’s very finest Songwriter ,of unusually deep and profound Poetic depth ,and with an acoustic guitar style far far greater than most other Musicians aspired to…(inspired, of course by his contemporaries at the time, namely Bert Jansch, and the legendary Davey Graham!).This book, just now released is a great insight behind the actual meaning of Roy’s Lyrics, and goes song by song, through all of Roy’s amazing Albums ,right up to the present times, that is from 1966’s ‘Sophisticated Beggar’ to his last recorded Album, namely ‘Man & Myth’ and further covers live Recordings and still unreleased songs…what makes Roy Harper stand out way above his musical contemporaries is the undeniable depth of Lyrical Mastery to his Songs, many which now have become ‘Classics’.’ I hate the White Man’/’Another Day’/’When an Old Cricketer’/’Me and my Woman’/’Highway Blues’;/’One of those Days in England’/”Hallucinating Light’/’South Africa’/’12Hours of Sunset’/etc etc ,the list is of course Endless! For me surely surely England’s finest ever Singer/Songwriter, who also possessed a wonderful Vocal delivery, a voice so much more distinctive than most!….,Opher’s excellent book is a lovingly written reflection of Roy Harper’s amazing Musical output, and a successful attempt at revealing more of just what his songs were about! i find it an essential read, and it sits perfectly as a later companion to Roy’s own Musical Biography book, namely his ‘Passions of Great Fortune’, from 2003.!!no-one but Opher could have released a book on Roy Harper ‘s songs quite like this one, i say. Full marks
Reading the book and playing each song after reading Opher’s insight for each has created a whole new listening experience. Having the back story on these songs just adds layers to the unique lyrics and sound of Roy
I am a Roy AND Nick Harper fanatic, and wouldn’t you know it… The industrious and illustriously wonderful Opher Goodwin has written a book about both of their musical journeys!!! I love reading both, especially the one highlighting Roy’s songwriting. Opher is still in touch with Roy as far as I know and was actually present at several recording studios during the making of more than one of those brilliant albums! I can’t say enough good things about his thoughts on each album’s songs and Roy’s life. Truly a must have for any Harper fan because there’s definitely no other book like it! An in depth biography or even autobiography would be most welcome as well! Cheers!
Jonathan Tatomer5.0 out of 5 stars This whole book series is indispensable to the collector
I have everything Roy Harper ever released. Showing wisdom as a youth and still growing. He is one of a small handful who can still write and sing at 80. We are all waiting for the next one
In Search of Captain Beefheart stands out among rock music memoirs because it blends personal storytelling with cultural analysis. Unlike traditional musician biographies that focus solely on an artist’s career, Opher Goodwin’s book is a deeply personal reflection on how rock music shaped his identity and worldview.
Compared to memoirs by musicians themselves, such as Keith Richards’ Life or Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run, Goodwin’s book is more about the experience of a fan rather than an artist’s firsthand account of fame and music-making. It’s similar in spirit to books like Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung by Lester Bangs, which explore rock music’s impact on culture rather than just recounting events.
Additionally, Goodwin’s memoir is unique in its historical scope, covering major world events like the Civil Rights Movement, Vietnam War, and Cold War, showing how rock music was intertwined with these moments. This makes it more than just a music memoir—it’s a cultural history seen through the lens of rock.
German/Dutch Synthesiser Bands of the 1970s – Krautrock
Britain and the United States had totally dominated the Rock Music Scene with hardly anyone else getting in on the act. There were the odd Australian, Spanish or French intrusions but little of note. Even the Spanish band Los Bravos sung in English. The brilliance of some foreign musicians and innovations went unnoticed. They languished in the backwaters. To get noticed you had to sing in English. The major labels controlled the market and they were English speaking.
By the 1970s Rock Music was truly international. Nearly every country round the world had their Garage, Psychedelic and Heavy Metal Bands. There were examples as far as Peru, Japan, China, New Zealand, Afghanistan and behind Iron Curtain in Russia and Czechoslovakia where it was actively suppressed. Long hair sprouted all over the planet complete with flares and kaftans. Everyone was turned on by the Beatles and Stones.
Not all of these bands were weak imitations of British and American bands and even the ones that were, as with many of the Australian and New Zealand Garage Punk Bands like the Masters Apprentices, often brought an invigorating enthusiasm into their music.
If we consider the possibility that the Beatles never happened, or had not caught on in America, Britain may well have ended up in the same state. The US would have dominated on its own or Rock music might have died away all together – it was in the doldrums in 1962 and reduced to Teen Pop. It could have become terminal. Before the success of Beat music Britain had a national scene but there was little of significance that had any impact on the rest of the world.
The Continent now had the opportunity to get in on the Progressive Scene.
The 1960s Psychedelic and Progressive bands, such as Soft Machine, Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd and Cream toured the Continent and had a huge impact on the young kids. This had a two-fold effect: firstly they created a market for this type of music and secondly they stimulated the indigenous musicians to form their own bands and experiment with their own brands. The main countries where this was greatly successful were Holland, Germany and Sweden.
The German and Dutch bands were highly influenced by British Psychedelia and brought their own electronic improvisations to bear using the new synthesisers. They were greatly buoyed by the success of Focus and Tangerine Dream. The result of this was a new electronic sound that was completely different to anything that had gone before and was quite acceptable to the Progressive Rock audiences in Britain. They were spearheaded by Focus and Tangerine Dream and then Kraftwerk. Following that there was a large influx of bands including: – Birth Control, Novalis, Spermuul, Epitaph, Can, Brainticket, Guru Guru, Amon Duul, Jane, Grobsschnitt and Karthago.
Many of these bands became resident in Britain and greatly enhanced the Progressive scene.
Artist
Stand out tracks
Focus
Hocus pocus Sylvia
Kraftwerk
Ruckzuck Autobahn
Tangerine Dream
Alpha Centuari Ultima Thule Atem Phaedra
Novalis
Sonnengeflect
Sperrmull
Me and my girlfriend
Guru guru
The LSD March
Grobsschnitt
Solar music
Can
Spoon I want more Moonshake Future days
Brainticket
Black sand
Anyone’s daughter
Swedish nights
Amon Duul 11
Im garten Sandosa Phallus Dei Yeti Toxicological whispering
Rock Routes is my definitive book on the story of Rock Music. It gives you insight and detailed info about all the best genres, bands and tracks. (BTW – the cover is one I took of The Grateful Dead in San Francisco!)
Here’s another slab:
British Psychedelic Bands of the 1960s Underground
Towards an end of the Progressive scene were the songs that were trying to create the sounds that were convivial to the use of LSD. These bands created a spacey type of music with soaring movements and electronic effects. They extended out long ethereal pieces of music using organs, synthesisers and guitar effects to create echoey wafting sound, with tape loops, building, with a basic rhythm towards peaks and crescendos reflecting the mind blowing experience of an acid trip. The music was more complex and with the use of light shows created a total environment to augment the experience of the audience and the band. Their minds would get lost in it.
The British psychedelic scene was closely connected to the US Acid Rock scene. They respected and fed off each other. They were influenced by bands such as the Jefferson Airplane, Doors, Captain Beefheart, Grateful Dead, Byrds and country Joe & the Fish.
A number of clubs sprang up to satisfy the need and provide all-night venues for psychedelic experience. These included Middle Earth, UFO Club, and The Roundhouse. These were places for experimenting with mind expansion and were the model for other similar ventures around the world like ‘The Paradiso’ in Amsterdam.
Many of the Progressive Rock Bands of the Underground contained elements of Psychedelic music or played psychedelic material along with their other material and many of the established bands dabbled successfully with the new psychedelic sounds. They all buoyed each other along. The ground breaking work of these established bands can be seen on albums such as the Beatles ‘Revolver’, Srgt Peppers Heart Club Band’, ‘Beatles (Double white)’, the Rolling Stones ‘Their Satanic Majesties Request’, the Pretty Things ‘S F Sorrow’, the Animals ‘Winds of Change’, the Who ‘Tommy’ and the Small Faces ‘Ogden’s Nut Gone Flake’.
The Pink Floyd was the stand out Psychedelic Band. They had evolved out of an R&B band due mainly to the genius of Syd Barrett. The name was taken from a Blues record from Barrett’s collection of Pink Anderson and Floyd Council. The group had previously been known as Sigma 6, the T-Set and the Abdabs. They were signed up by Peter Jenner for Blackhill Ents and started out at the Marquee and UFO clubs developing one of the first light shows in the business.
Syd was heavily into LSD at the time and the music he dreamt up reflected the state of his consciousness.
Peter Jenner put on the infamous ‘Games for May’ and other similar free events similar to Kesey’s ‘Acid Tests’ in 1967. They released a couple of singles without success and hen it all came together. Their unusual ‘Arnold Lane’ – a song about a fetishist who stole washing off washing lines – and then ‘See Emily play’ were hits. It paved the way for their quintessential psychedelic album ‘Piper at the gates of Dawn’. They were up and oaring as Britain’s top Psychedelic act.
Unfortunately no sooner had they achieved success than Syd became an Acid casualty and cracked up. Roger Waters took over and they drafted in Dave Gilmour and managed to keep up the standard with ‘Saucerful of Secrets’.
Syd was persuaded back into the studio with the aid of Dave Gilmour and Rick Wright to produce two extraordinary albums that were psychedelic masterpieces in their own quirky way – ‘Syd Barrett’ and ‘The Madcap Laughs’.
The Soft Machine was Floyd’s stable mates and took part in the free festivals and underground club scene. They featured Kevin Ayres and Robert Wyatt and produced a number of psychedelic Jazz/Rock fusion albums. They became jazzier as they went along.
Hawkwind were a community band, indeed often joined up with the Pink Fairies to create Pinkwind, and featured such individuals as Dik Mik, Del Detmar, Lemmy Kilminster (Later of Motorhead), Dave Brock and Nik Turner. They were based at Notting Hill and produced a space-Rock Sci-Fi type of psychedelia. In their early development they were closely associated with the Sci-fi writer Michael Moorcock who actually performed with the band. They were infamous for their intricate light shows, soaring music as well as playing a lot of benefits in aid of drug busts and the like.
Tomorrow feature Steve Howe and Keith West and were briefly one of the up and coming psychedelic acts before Keith had his very light-weight hit with his ‘Excerpt from a teenage opera’ and lost all credibility with the underground scene. Tomorrow had an impressive stage act with strobe lights and the use of long colourful gowns that jerked around with the flashing light.
The Misunderstood started of as the Blue Notes in California. They had played Surf Music and had the trade mark blue colour. This included guitars, hair, shoes, and clothes. In 1965 they changed their name to the Misunderstood and began playing Garage Punk. By 1966 this had become psychedelic and they were discovered by John Peel. He persuaded them to try heir luck in London. Their sound was based around Glen Ross Campbell’s distinctive wild steel guitar on numbers like ‘Children of the sun’. Unfortunately they then got visa problems and most of the band had to leave. Glen formed Juicy Lucy and went on to do psychedelic versions of things like Bo Diddley’s ‘Who do you love?’.
The Crazy world of Arthur Brown was an extremely theatrical outfit. Arthur used to wear long gowns and big headdresses that he set on fire. He’d be lowered on to stage from a crane. It was a four piece band with Vincent Crane, Nick greenwood and Drachen Theaker who went on to form Atomic Rooster.
Other Psychedelic bands included the Pop songs from early Status Quo – ‘Pictures of matchstick men’ and ‘Ice in the sun’; the Lemon Pipers ‘Green Tambourine’, Purple Gang’s ‘Granny takes a trip’.
There were the minor bands – Dantalion’s Chariot, Syn, Mandrake Paddle Steamer, Smoke, and Wimple Wynch.
Established bands got into the scene like the Move – with ‘Night of Fear’ & ‘I can hear the grass grow’.
The Beatles released ‘Srgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band’ and the Rolling Stones ‘Their satanic majesties request’. The Yardbirds released ‘Roger the Engineer’ and the Pretty Things ‘SF Sorrow’.
Artist
Stand out tracks
Pink Floyd
Arnold Layne See Emily play Candy & a currant bun Astronomy Domine Lucifer Sam Take up your stethoscope and walk Interstellar overdrive The Scarecrow Bike Chapter24 Pow R Toc H Flaming Set the controls for the heart of the sun Mathilda mother Saucerful of secrets Let there be more light Green is the colour Cirrus minor Cymbaline Careful with that axe Eugene Grantchester meadows Fat old sun Atomic heart mother Julia dream
Soft Machine
I did it again Joy of a toy Priscilla
Hawkwind
Hurry on sundown Silver machine Masters of the universe Children of the sun
Tomorrow
My white bicycle Revolution Strawberry fields forever
Misunderstood
Children of the sun I can take you to the sun
Juicy Lucy
Who do you love Willie the pimp
Crazy World of Arthur Brown
Fire Fanfare/Fire Poem Prelude/nightmare
Move
I can hear the grass grow Night of fear Flowers in the rain Fire brigade Cherry blossom clinic
Dantalion’s chariot
Madman running through the fields
Syn
Flowerman 14 hour technicolour dream Created by Clive
Mandrake paddle steamer
Overspill Cooger & Dark
Smoke
My friend Jake High in a room
Wimple Wynch
Save my soul
Kaleidoscope
Flight from Ashiya
Fleurs de lys
Moondreams Circles
Blossom Toes
What on Earth Look at me I’m you
Idle Race
Here we go round the lemon tree
Man
Erotica Spunk box My name is Jesus Smith
Beatles
Lucy in the sky with diamonds Strawberry fields forever A day in the life
Rolling Stones
She’s a rainbow 2000 light years from home Sing this all together
Pretty Things
LSD SF Sorrow is born Walking through my dreams
Yardbirds
Over under sideways down Psycho daisies The Nazz are blue