DPRP Mark Hughes Review – Roy Harper On Track… Every Album, Every Song

Opher Goodwin — Roy Harper: On Track… Every Album, Every Song [Book (157 pages)]

Opher Goodwin - Roy Harper: On Track... Every Album, Every Song

info:

 sonicbondpublishing.co.uk

9

Mark Hughes

Another title in the rapidly growing list of books published by SonicBond, this time featuring original maverick and friend to a guitar rock god or two, Roy Harper.

As a long-standing Harper fan I know that tackling his discography is not a task for the faint-hearted. With albums going in and out of print, reissues, alternative versions and limited editions, there is a lot to get to grips with. Thankfully Goodwin handles everything with aplomb, clarifying where extra tracks on various re-releases originally stemmed from and where they fit into Harper’s recording chronology. It makes it easy to disentangle the frequently messy and confusing slew of releases from a prolific writer.

Of course, it helps that Goodwin has been friends with Harper since 1967, just after the release of Harper’s surprising debut album Sophisticated Beggar; surprising in that it eschewed the folk and blues numbers that Harper had gained a reputation for from his busking and folk club performances and comprised all-original material. Perhaps more startling was that it also featured a full band in places, not what the folk crowd that had primarily been his audience up to that point had been expecting. These were the first signs that Harper would stick to his own plans and not be pushed into doing what others necessarily wanted or expected.

What will be alien to modern bands is the fact that Harper’s first two albums, released on different labels, were both commercial failures. Yet the musical environment of the time meant that it was the music that mattered and the lack of commercial appeal was not considered a black mark against the artist. He found a longer-lasting home on Harvest Records for his third album, Flat Baroque And Berserk, the first of seven essential albums he recorded for the label over the next decade.

Goodwin’s personal memories and analysis of the songs and albums adds a lot to the book and offer insights that keep things interesting, more than some other titles in the series in being a sterile list of songs. Harper was never an artist that was likely to trouble the singles chart but he did consistently release such items. Although a lot of the songs unique to the format, particularly from the earliest years, have been compiled and re-issued, his b-sides remain some of the hardest items to locate for the collector. In that respect this book is a valuable guide to what was released, and in some cases what has not been released, both of which can be quite frustrating for the searching completist!

I would have liked to have seen a bit more on the live Roy Harper as, despite the brilliance of the studio output, it was on stage that Harper excelled. As at least a couple of the official live albums were assembled from a multitude of recorded concerts, there is potentially a lot of recorded material that remains locked in the vaults. However, considering that recording details and locations were omitted from Inbetween Every Line as all the tapes were mixed up and it wasn’t deemed necessary to sort them out, it could be a major task sorting them out if, indeed, they still exist.

Despite his long recording career, there doesn’t appear to be much studio material left languishing in the vaults and it seems increasingly unlikely that Harper will return to the studio to record a new album, despite how well his last album, 2013’s Man And Myth was received. So it is from these putative live archives that any future releases will presumably be drawn.

As such, this volume can be assumed to be as complete a record of the musical legacy of one of Britain’s finest and most idiosyncratic singer-songwriters as you are likely to find. Written in a relaxed and enjoyable style, it is an easy-to-read volume that will introduce, and re-introduce, the reader to the delights of the Harper catalogue. I certainly dug out a few of his lesser-played albums from my collection and listened to them in a new light after reading the book. And if that is not recommendation enough, I don’t know what is.

Now, back to searching for the missing items. Anyone know where I can find Goodbye Ladybird?

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/U1TC6S4syl0

Roy Harper: Every Album, Every Song (On Track): Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789521306: Books

Roy Harper and Renee Good

I was reeling from the murder of Renee Good and the response by Trump, Vance and MAGA. I found it disgusting. A mother was callously shot three times in the face. She was described as a lesbian and called a domestic terrorist (as if her sexuality had anything to do with anything). I was shocked by the mocking and gloating that subsequently took place. She deserved it. She was peacefully protesting the lawful operations of ICE – as if that deserved to be shot three times in the face. What is going on in this horrendous tribal division where all humanity is lost. In the heated cauldron we seem to have lost all compassion, humanity and truth.

Then I found myself typing out a section written by Roy back in the late 80s and thought it pertinent:

This attitude manifested itself to me whilst shopping in the supermarket yesterday. Upon seeing a woman who was about to load up with ‘Cape’ apples, the lady I was with said to her ‘those are from South Africa, you know’. The woman smiled and put the apple she had hold of down, but I watched her because I was naturally interested in someone who would buy an apple with South African written all over it (Nb. the anti-apartheid boycott of South African goods was at its height in the late 80s). As soon as she thought that the lady I was with wasn’t looking, she went back and picked some up and continued on. I wasn’t surprised but I was annoyed and said to my consort ‘she bought them you know’. We passed her later on and I guess my friend couldn’t stop herself. ‘So, you bought them then?’ she said. The woman just said ‘Yes’ and walked away completely unconcerned, a statement in favour of apartheid, of absolute complacency. Careless in the extreme of how other men and women on the planet are being made to suffer. Just another partygoer.

This little true story is perhaps generally indicative of the manner in which humans treat each other and the world they live in at the moment. While I’m not a very public-spirited person myself, I’m of the opinion that the majority of my ‘leaders’ leave me standing when it comes to aloofness, greed, selfishness, vanity, megalomania, cowardice, pomposity, pretention, improbity and the like. I’m not in the same race. The stable door has been bolted ……… etc.

To my mind, permanently electing these kind of people to public office is tantamount to social suicide.

Roy Harper ruined my career

Back in the 80s and 90s I was working on a book of lyrics and anecdotes with Roy. We were at it for twenty years but it never quite reached fruition. I have been revisiting the four volume book for my own interest. Great fun. Here’s a little of the intro for Vol 2:

I discovered Roy back in 1967 when I was just eighteen. I was immediately smitten. At the time I was wrestling with the purpose of life. My parents and school were attempting to direct me towards the security of qualifications, a career offering a good income and a life that looked sterile and boring. Kerouac and the Beats were offering an exciting alternative. I was trying to make sense of this society I found myself marooned in and the madness and hypocrisy of the species I was related to. I was completely immersed in music. The music of the day reflected my thoughts, emotions and feelings. The mood of the day, with its rebellion, civil rights, anti-war and rejection of organised religion and the social hierarchy was something I could totally buy into. I felt like I was peering through a fog of propaganda into the mechanics of a corrupt establishment. I had no wish to be a cog in that mad power structure. The trouble was that, in the haze of teenage angst, hormones and rebellious madness I was still trying to ascertain my ‘real’ feelings. My little coterie of friends spent our time gigging, giggling, sitting around in bedrooms sharing musical discoveries and talking in insane torrents about the universe, meaning, purpose and life.

Back then I was moved by the ‘realness’ of blues, the social commentary of the Kinks and Bob Dylan and anything that seemed to mean something. The sixties underground was about to explode. The blue touch-paper had been lit. I was listening to Bert Jansch, John Renbourn and my hero Jackson C Frank.

Then, at Les Cousins, I happened across a maniac who seemed to mirror the thoughts bouncing around my skull. Authentic, unrestricted, mad as a hatter and as sharp as a laser. His words snarled and illuminated, whether spoken or sung. Dylan had blown my mind open with songs like ‘It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) with its scathing evisceration of society and religion but Roy was taking that a step further. Nobody else was exploring the darker side of human nature with such poetic precision. Nobody else was tackling such panoramic vistas with insightful scalpel. Just what I needed.

Harper ruined my career.

Roy Harper albums – my own ratings

Before I start to indulge myself in assessing the merits of Roy’s output, which I fully recognise is a potential disaster from the very beginning (and would probably change day to day – or following another listening); I first need to clarify a few points.

These are my very own subjective judgements. I fully realise that everybody else has their own preferences, all equally valid.

I’m sure your own  ratings are based on a number of factors – your personal preferences for genres of songs, the time when you first discovered Roy, relating periods in your life to sentiments in the songs, the musicality of a piece – and a host of other reasons.

With me the songs that really matter are the ones that delve into the social matters. I love the poetry and the ideas. I love the epic songs (not to say that I do not rate the others as well).

The other point to note is that I do not believe there has been a bad album. I just like some more than others.

I just thought it would be fun to have a go and might stimulate everyone else to disagree. It might also get some of you delving into your collection for a replay. It did with me.

So let the fun begin:

AlbumRatingWhy
Sophisticated Beggar8 A great album. Has a nice feel to it. Stand out tracks – Legend, Forever and China Girl.
Come out fighting Ghenghis Smith9As an eighteen year old in the midst of A-Levels I really related to this. The poetry and philosophy. Circle was great.
Folkjokeopus9Should have been a ten but for me the production let it down. McGoohan’s Blues, She’s the One and One for Al(l) are amazing.
Flat Baroque and Berserk10Fantastic album – I Hate the Whiteman and Another Day, Tom Tiddlers Ground and East of the Sun.
Stormcock10I’d give this one 11. Four superb masterpieces. Me and My Woman is incredible.
Lifemask10Has to be a 10 just for the brilliance of The Lord’s Prayer. But there is also All Ireland, Highway Blues and South Africa. – Brilliant
Valentine8Had some highlights such as Male Chauvinist Pig Blues, Commune. I’ll See You Again and Twelve Hours of Sunset but lacked a real epic song.
Flashes from the archives9I love Flashes – I was there at the gigs and it captures that for me. I wish he would do an up to date version of Kangaroo Blues.
HQ10A superb album – one of his best – The Game, The Spirit Lives, Hallucinating Light and Cricketer – sublime.
Bullinamingvase10One of those Days in England – another epic – plus These last Days, Naked Flame and Cherishing the Lonesome – Perfecto.
Unknown Soldier9Short and Sweet, The Fly Catcher and the Unknown Soldier – a great album
Born in Captivity8Love these acoustic versions of Work of Heart, Drawn to the Flames and No Woman is Safe
In between every line9I love this album – great live versions that capture the moment – I like the continuity too.
Whatever Happened to Jugula8Hangman, Elizabeth, Frozen Moment and Twentieth Century Man were great – but it did not quite work for me. I think I was expecting something more.
Work of Heart8Work of Heart almost makes it as a masterpiece but is not as strong for me as The Lord’s Prayer or Me and My Woman. Then you have Drawn to the Flames and I still care.
Descendants of Smith (Garden of Uranium)9Garden of Uranium, Desert Island, Pinches of Salt and Still Life – but lacks a real walloping song.
Loony on the Bus8Love that riff in Loony On The Bus. Then there’s Ten Years Ago, The Flycatcher and Sail Away.
Once8Once and Black Cloud of Islam make this for me.
Burn the World9A brilliant single – and we are burning the world.
Born in Captivity 2 (Unhinged)9Great Live album (missing Short and Sweet off the tape??)
Death or Glory8The Fourth World, The Tallest Tree, Miles Remains, On Summer’s Day – all great but lacking an epic.
Commercial Breaks8Interesting version of Ten Years Ago, Too Many Movies, The Fly Catcher and Sail Away.
Live at Les Cousins9A doorway into the Roy of 1969 – a little tentative but superb. A piece of history.
Heavy Crazy10Atmospheric live album with some great versions of old favourites.
BBC Tapes – 1-69-10Fabulous insight into Roy live in the studio from the 60s through to 78.
Poems, Speeches, Thoughts and Doodles8Roy the poet – loved these.
Dream Society8These Fifty Years, Broken Wing, Songs of Love and Drugs for everybody
Green Man8The Green Man is superb – then the Monster.
Royal Festival Hall8A great live album and memento of a superb evening.
Today is Yesterday8A compilation of outtakes from the first album and some singles and rarities. Interesting to me.
Beyond the Door8Good live material
Man and Myth8This won a lot of awards and is a great album – Time is Temporary, the Enemy and Cloud Cuckooland
Live at the Metropolis9A superb live album. More controlled.
Songs of Love and Loss9A collection of love songs.
East of the Sun9A great compilation of love songs
Counter Culture9Another great compilation
From Occident to Orient7A rip-off compilation (Can’t fault the music)
Hats off7A rip-off compilation

The only ones dropping below an 8 are the two rip-off compilations that Roy had nothing to do with.

What an incredible catalogue of brilliance.

I wonder how you’d rate them?

Roy Harper – The Lord’s Prayer – Probably the best song ever recorded.

Never has there been a song written with such scope and meaning. It is veritably the greatest ‘classical’ track of popular music – a piece that is so intricate and complex, both lyrically and musically, that it propels Rock Music to another level.

The song has a number of movements starting with a poem. This is about the journey of mankind from the neolithic to the present time. It is a poem based on opposites and delivered with panache and some great production effects.

The central sections, featuring the mesmeric genius of Jimmy Page’s guitar work, is based on the image of Geronimo that was presented to Roy by James Edgar (responsible for Hipnosis who did the artwork for Roy and Pink Floyd). Roy took a tab of acid and got into the head of a man who was a relic from the stone-age – a man who still lived in harmony with the land; a man who knew the harshness of nature and felt the passion and fury of life in an untamed world. Each line is a poem in itself to ponder.

The last section was a song that Roy melded on. It brings us back to Roy and modern life and hopes for the future. Is it too late?

This is not a poem to be taken lightly. It has to be studied and thought about. It has so much crammed into it that it makes you shudder with sudden realisation. The music, with its repetitive riff, is mesmeric and develops with such intensity that it ensnares you. To think that a work of this immensity had its genesis in the roots of Jack Kerouac, Jack Teagarden and Elvis Presley – unbelievable.

This must be the peak of poetry and music fused into something beyond the bounds of mere popular music.

This is a masterpiece.

The Lord’s Prayer – Roy Harper

There once was a man from the old stone age
And he used to follow the weather
But now he’s got hung up on filling a page
Upon whether to go or together
And he’s been around for so damn long
With his whooping and wailing
Crushing questions between right and wrong
And impaling
The best he can hope and the worst he can fear
On the solstices of an illusion
A massive erection of pushy defence
Up the whole of the prosecution
Great solace the wound, great relish the pain
To be loosing the reins of a poem
To bleed from the tip of my tongue yet again
That part of my heart that is showing
These children conceived in the womb of this crash
To be the sponsors of nothing much more
Than rearguard directions of cross fingered sections
Of purpose pot – looking for nothing
But what is this last desperate vestige of heart over head
But another conjecture
No more the tomb of the martyred dead
Than the ghost of our parting gesture
And a hundred billion crystal balls
Represent a remarkable failure
To swell the song each moment long
At the counterpoint of nature
As four thumbs flick the tarot deck
And two tongues fork eight aces
Maybe sixteen fingers feel
The fool lives in two places
Where rosy lee can read this tea
And leave me living the story
A white dove with a hawks’ head
And an open mind before me
To sail for a land where life is a high
Not a word to be heard or be spoken
But the soul – woven web of the endless touch
Of a child who could never be broken
Who plays a new world on the brink of the ebb
As the fish cats prowl in the harbour
And now soars high on the beckoning tides’ long arm
To weigh his last anchor
And the sou’westers sing as the lifeboat bells ring
In the heads on the faces of changes
The heavens collage on Excalibur’s edge
The star in his movie converges
With fate, in his task, and doom on his brow
And a ship in his eye in a bottle
Who speeds, to force, to want, to have,
To find, to further fortune,
Who comes from the north, west, south and east
Of the passions of a spirit
With all the flight of the wildest beast
To ever spurr a stirrup,
Whose pulse is the master of action
Whose heart is an everlasting secret
Whose arms are desire
Whose lips are welcome
Whose eyes tell stories
Whose head is a journey
Whose hands unfold
Whose feet fly
Whose face is the stained glass window of a continuous orgasm.
Whose being is mine
Whose wounds are precious
Whose poem is a flower
Whose gentleness is the devil
Whose identity is naked
Whose magic is a gift
Whose power is the transparent tapestry of history
Whose stamp is a freak
Whose wits are battles
Whose cousin is dog
Whose times are well fought for
Whose stone age is clever
Whose poets know
Whose music is barbarian
Whose artists are helpless spherical mirrors spinning on the horns of a tidal
wave
Whose information is belief
Whose complexes become religion
Whose foundation is spread
Whose word is god
Whose books are projectiles
Whose message is must
Whose excuse is holy
Who passed it down to me;
Whose enemies are landmarks
Whose fear is himself
Whose hope is lust
Whose wish is fresh
Whose position is wary
Whose mottoes are covers
Whose name is hidden
Whose nose is suspicious
Whose technology is a tangent
Whose strategy is dissent
Whose thoughts are games
Who shares his lot
Whose ace is death
Whose fingers invent
Whose tales weave
Whose knots are tied
Whose mouth is open
Whose ears pierce
Whose direction is out
Who is aware of disease
Who feels the need to cleanse his soul
Whose style is disguise
Whose dream is innate
Whose woman is soothing
Whose little children are the delicate blossom of an orchard of electricity
Whose spell is for conflict
Whose quest is strength
Whose war declared
Whose suicide is noticed
Whose shadow is cast
Whose vibes you feel
Whose pedigrees are haunted
Whose age is unknown
Who takes under his wing
Whose freaks are real
Whose reality is hunger
Whose words are jagged
Whose tears are shed
Whose sick hang
Whose weak are kicked
Whose cities are bad shelters
Whose sanctuary is an idea
Who sat round a fire
Whose teeth chew
Whose faith is change
Whose old age comes quickly
Whose youth burns
Whose systems are white sticks tapping walls
Whose prize possession is the planet;
Whose wildest lust is escalation
Whose cul-de-sacs are feelers
Whose main route is massive
Whose run is a dance
Whose vehicle is fantasy
Whose home is high
Whose role continues
Whose bearing is savage
Whose saints are dead
Whose sons bark
Whose daughters play
Whose strength is against
Who grows in the sun and sleeps in the moon
Who roams deserts, plateaux, mountains, forests and plains with vast armies
Who am I
The spirit of those who were not here
And never knew it
Who left this prayer to elope
A lover’s journey through it
So children leave your windows open
Across the sea
Join our hands across the many land
You and me
Never grown old
Seeing without ever being told
Something to say
Shut away
Blackboard so grey
Anyway
I’m dreaming
Out along the back row
Out the window
Cast away
Be free with me
Today
Great heart mean streak
Spare part speed freak
I set myself a problem when I built myself a wheel
I got myself another when I rode a horse to feel
The plains underneath my reins
As fast as running water
And the big lady I’m playing with
Has played a game of poker
With me and cat and this and that
Until she scored my joker
Now we ride in chariots
By the side of one another
Her soft side
My rough ride,
Nothing to fear
The unknown soldier’s grave is already here
Is it too late
To create
A world made with care
Is it there
Or fleeting
Here today and gone
Tomorrow’s child
Looking so wild and free
Are we a choice
With no voice
Can it be
Great heart, mean streak
Spare part speed freak

Roy Harper – The Lord’s Prayer (Remastered) – YouTube

Nick Harper at Barton Gig Review

Nick Harper – The Ropery Barton 17.10.2025 Pt 1

I’ve just come back from a journey on a time machine courtesy of the magician Nick Harper! What a trip!

I found myself both mesmerised by Nick’s incredibly hot nimble finger-work on those cold steel frets along with the resurfacing of long buried memories.

It all centred on 58 Fordwych Road but it took me on a voyage into inner space as various memories floated through – recalled recollections of times at Fordwych Road, evenings at Les Cousins, gigs with the luminaries of the day. The reminiscences of gigs, meetings and times were dredged up from the depths leaving me drenched with nostalgia.

Nick’s present tour is extraordinary as he regaled us with anecdotes and tales accompanied by illustrative songs from the luminaries that visited with his father back in the sixties – musical geniuses one and all. Roy and Mocy were part of that extraordinary scene, their flat a centre for all the best of the sixties contemporary singer songwriters to gather, compete, challenge and share. What a time! What a scene! What talent!

Nick was born into that milieu and soaked it in by osmosis. If anybody can profess to be the legitimate successor of those extraordinary musicians it’s Nick. He epitomises the best of everything they stood for in both his musicianship and song writing. He’s adrift, in a scene of his own that harks right back to those halcyon days of the sixties.

I find it hard to believe that my friendship with Nick actually spans fifty seven years. As I watched him play and listened to his stories it took me straight back. The first time I met Nick was in the Summer of 1968. Roy had invited me round to Fordwych Road. I remember, as a nervous eighteen-year-old, walking into that flat. I paused. Roy and Mocy were on the sofa. Nick, who was a toddler, chortled, ran across the room as I bent down to greet him, flung his arms around my neck and planted a big slobbery kiss on my lips. It kinda broke the ice!

But back to the set. This was no ordinary gig. This was Nick’s homage to the greats who had gone before.

Nick started his set with the ancestor of the whole contemporary folk scene – the crazy Davey Graham -the guy who invented DADGAD tuning and incorporated Middle Easter music into English Folk. Roy had regaled me with numerous tales of their mad exploits in London. At one time he and Roy were going to perform as a duo. That would have been a different direction and outcome for both of them.

Back in the 60s I saw Davey play in Cousins. His fingers were a blur. He was fiery. Sadly I last saw him in the 70s at a lacklustre gig in a large bare hall where he ran through his repertoire like a highly skilled automaton. Nick took me back to the 60s Davey. The eloquent folk number She Moves through the Fair  was followed by the spectacular Angie whose stormy picked runs and spicy chords summoned up all the exotic feel of a Moroccan Casbah. I’ve seen and heard many live versions of this classic, seminal number and Nick’s masterful rendering was as good as you get.

I had my first injection of Roy Harper in Les Cousins in 67, wedged between Bert and John. Both of whom were regular at Fordwych, rivals and friends, who shared, stole and learnt from each other. They all contributed to each other’s early albums.

Nick chose a Bert Jansch  number, Black Water Side, from his third album Jack Orion – a beautiful gem. Took me back to watching Bert’s fabulous playing. He could pick the most beautiful melodies and also attack those steel strings with ferocity.

For the John Renbourn he once again spurned the first two albums and went for The Earle Of Salisbury from Sir John Alot Of Merrie Englandes Musyk Thyng & Ye Grene Knyghte a beautiful melodic number reminiscent of merry olde England that Nick delivered with great tenderness and skill.

For Paul Simon we received an ancient version of Parsley Sage Rosemary and Thyme which had more than a nod to Martin Carthy.

He followed that with an emotional rendition of a song his father had written for his mother Mocy. Forever! It’s been many a year since I heard Roy deliver it. He’d once sung it for Liz and I in a gig in Kingston. Took me right back. Nick’s version was immaculate. The melody sparkled as his voice flowed and cracked with feeling. He was living it.

Next we were treated to a dose of the tousle-haired troubadour with the dazzling fingers and plaintive voice that was John Martyn. Another man whose feet we had sat at and been moved by. Nick chose John’s signature tune ‘May You Never’ to beguile us. A song of love, friendship and comradeship possibly about his great friendship with Danny Thompson or Andy Matheou. John was another of the supremely talented who life was wrecked by drink.

Rather incongruously we had a dose of Marc Bolan and strangely that worked too. He’d chosen a T Rex track which I thought was a little out there. I thought he might have gone for a Tyrannosaurus track like ‘Deborah’ or ‘Salamander Palaganda’ which I remember Marc and Steve Took performing at those seminal outdoor festivals back in the day.

I think it was the Bowie which came next. Nick recounted the story of how Bowie, before he was famous, had come round to meet Roy in Fordwych Road. We then met ‘The Man Who Sold the World’.

The fabulous Jackson C Frank came next – another pioneer who had a huge impact on Roy and a tragic figure of epic proportions. I bought that one and only album back in 1965. A friend of mine, Bob Ede, who I haven’t seen since 1966, introduced me to it and it’s remained a favourite all these years. His succulent voice and lingering melodies wormed their way into my brain and have lodged forever.

Jackson was extremely badly burnt in a High School fire that killed his girlfriend Marlene along with fourteen other classmates. He never got over it. When he received his settlement he boarded the Queen Mary, ostensibly to purchase classic cars, but really an attempt to outstrip the trauma that haunted him. On board he wrote the songs that were to grace that fabulous album. Their melodies and honey-coated vocals still waft around my head. ‘The Blues Run The Game’ captured the mental anguish of the PTS he was suffering from. They ran his game.

Jackson set up in Les Cousins and befriended Roy. They spent many a night talking, talking, talking. I can hear Jackson’s influence on Roy’s first two albums on the delicious melodies of numbers like ‘Don’t You Think We’re Forever’ and in the philosophy on ‘Come Out Fighting Ghenghis Smith’ that emanated from their laughter laden stoned ramblings.

Unfortunately, Jackson found he could not outrun the horrors in his head. I last saw him in 1969 in a room in a pub on Ilford High Street. My mate Pete and I sat at the front table and were sucked in to the splendour. Afterwards we chatted. He was meant to be joining Roy at his watershed St Pancras Town Hall gig the next week but failed to show. His life fell apart. The mental illness sucked the life out of a beautiful man and he died destitute having been living from dustbins in New York. Tragic. If only that first album had led to more of the same. I still cherish it.

We ended the tributes with that most wonderful track by Sandy Denny – her of the most luscious voice in popular music. Nick took me straight back to those early days with Fairport Convention. Richard Thompsons guitar and Sandy’s voice as English as warm summer rain. Sandy was another tragic figure whose life was ruined by alcohol. At just 31 she died after a fall down the stairs. But she left us a legacy of memories and songs. ‘Where Does The Time Go?’ Where indeed. Has it really been nearly sixty years?

With the aid of Nick’s time machine I was back in the room with all those magical times and talented people.

He finished up with a couple of his own masterpieces (he reminded us that he was there too in 58 Fordwych Road)– ‘The Man of a Thousand Days’ – a song that aptly described that autobiographical journey being brought up in Wiltshire by his mother and Paul. ‘The Verse Time Forgot’ was about his mother Mocy and once again was soaked in the heartfelt emotions of loss.

This wasn’t entertainment so much as sharing. Nick had treated us to a slab of his life and its intersections with our own worlds. Amazingly he was able to deliver the best of all those incredible musicians, to capture their essence, but not as a tribute act. No. So much more than that. The songs were not note for note copies but Nick inspired interpretations that captured their essence and imbued them with his own experience and spirit.

He ended with another Roy track – the powerful ‘Highway Blues’ – once again taking the Roy Harper masterpiece and twisting it with Nick’s genius. A fine way to end.

So – if you take a look down your highway and see Nick appearing anywhere near seize the opportunity to see and hear a legend. Whether or not you manage that life changing experience you can at least sample the delights of this rare Harpic tour by purchasing the album. It’s brilliant. You can buy the complete concert version with all the chat or have just the songs (with 2 bonus tracks) – why not buy both and help put Nick at the top of the charts where he belongs! They complement each other. Indispensible!

Thanks Nick for a slice of your life and the transportation back to better days!!

PS – so good to meet up with Jacqui and a number of old friends from the past!! Great to see you all!

Roy Harper Review 27.9.2025 – Bridgewater Hall Manchester

Roy Harper Review 27.9.2025 – Bridgewater Hall Manchester

It was with some trepidation that Henry and I headed off from Driffield to Manchester in bright Yorkshire sunshine.

He was now 84, was his voice going to hold up?

Could those fingers still pick that guitar?

At the best of times he stumbled over words, would he still be able to remember all those complex poetic lyrics?

Would that sharp wit and spontaneous insightful comments leap off his tongue?

In short, was he still up to the job?

Questions stalked my thoughts like spies.

On the way we played some vintage Harper. I chose Come Out Fighting Ghenghis Smith because it harked back to the times when I first started going to his gigs fifty-eight years ago! We topped it off with Burn The World which seemed to epitomise the present state of the world.

As we approached Manchester it started to rain.

Inside the magnificent Bridgewater Hall, with its 2,341 capacity, I couldn’t help but marvel at how far the lad has come. Les Cousins had a capacity of 200 when rammed!

I looked around at the remnants of the sixties underground (some with eager kids in tow). We come in all shades of bright colour, lengths or absence of hair and assorted sizes – some with sticks, crutches and wheelchairs. It was great to meet up with so many old friends! Hanging on to a fading philosophy? The refugees gather to shelter from the storm. We’re older and wiser, perhaps a shade less idealistic, more realistic! I sat on our plush padded seat and thought back to the hard wooden seats of yesteryear.

Could Roy recreate the vibe?

The lights dimmed and the ageing raver stepped out from the wings. A roar went up? ‘So what’s all this?’ quipped Roy. Roy was back. He made his way to his seat riding on the crest of great affection. Fittingly he informed us that he was heading back to 1969 when he was twenty-eight and dedicated his first song to Lonnie Donnegan, the skiffle King who inspired his first venture into showbiz with his brothers asThe Brothers. How Does It Feel. Well it felt great. The voice, the guitar and the asides, all spot on. All questions answered. It was real!

Nick came out on stage to another rapturous reception. Roy told us how he’d written the next number – Another Day – in a caravan at the Cambridge Folk Festival before having a swipe at US Senators and informing us that the world’s an ass (as if we didn’t know). Immediately Nick and Roy gelled into a glorious, intuitive blend. It’s genetic!

With a kick at Ted Cruz and the barbed quip – ‘Who are these people?’ – we were back in the familiar Harperian social commentary with Hors d’Oeuvres. Took me straight back to the early seventies where Roy would direct the number at the music press drinking at the bar. The two melded guitar runs sure made me think! This was just the starter. The main meal was still to come.

We stayed back in 1968 as Roy recounted his first crossing of the Atlantic and the fabled A and B chords. The haunting 24 Hours of Sunset gave his powerful, controlled vocal full sway. As good as ever.

Roy was enjoying himself. ‘I’m 84,’ he gleefully reminded us, as much astounded by it as we were, ‘It’s amazing!’

The stage was set for an abbreviated epic as Roy told us about an interview in St Antonio, Texas where he first came in contact with the insane US gun culture.  The early MAGA cult did not take kindly to I Hate The Whiteman. One of the white men, who he suggested could not be considered human, threatened to come and ‘put you out of your misery’. Seemed that the bare-foot dream of life was not free to laugh and cry its fill! We loved it though.

Roy’s 70’s dream of living together with all of his friends got off to a hesitant start but gained in momentum as it progressed – the delicate melodic Commune providing a great vehicle for duelling guitars.

Roy reiterated his detestation of social sanctioned murder asking ‘Do we need to be savages? Are we savages?’  But the power chords of Hangman suffered from tuning problems with a little wobbly stumbles. None-the-less Roy’s chords and strums provided a sound base for Nick’s lyrical notes and chords to dance across.

The interval seemed to settle him back down.

The warmth resumed as Roy entered from the wings and was made to feel at home with an eruption of joy, the huge hall once again becoming an intimate setting with all the same inane heckling.

The intro for this traditional song didn’t mention Bob Dylan or Paul Simon by name but, for the first time that I’ve heard, sanctioned plagiarism and admitted that ‘borrowing and thieving’ was a valid means for providing inspiration and songs ‘travelled’. His still nimble fingers treated us to a perfect version of North Country.

Nick rejoined him for a brilliant Hallucinating Light which he dedicated to Mocy, Nick’s mum, reflecting poignantly that ‘she was a good girl’. I delighted in a typical Harper moment as he stopped partway in to explain the lyrics. The poetry always meant so much, enough to pause and dissect. We were moved by that familiar laugh as he explained that he was referring to his eyes struggling across a room full of people to fix on the goggle box – where ‘the sick majority infest the myths of doom’. Those guitars intermeshed, the voice soared as the years dropped away.

A new song ‘Man in a Glass Cage?’ had Roy explaining his understanding of Pater Noster. As a lad his father would take him fishing off the North pier at Blackpool. They used a heavy baited five hooks that ‘would take your ear off’ if not cast right. It was called the paternoster

East of The Sun was an absolute triumph. He explained that he had written it for his first girlfriend, Gillian, who was present that evening. He’d lived next door to her when he was 6 and recalled teasing her by not giving her ball back. A most beautiful, heartfelt rendition with Nick beautifully picking out the notes for the first verse in a most poignant manner followed by Roy’s vocals caressing the memories.

When An Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease elicited the story of his grandfather playing for Didsbury and asking his mother if he should pursue it as a career with her replying ‘Nay lad, there’s no money in it’. Once again the two guitars gelled into sublime lyrical phrasing for an immaculate rendition.

Even though we had been treated to some brilliant stuff The Same Old Rock surpassed everything. Roy explained some of the lyrics – the pope always straggling a hundred years behind where society is – the lock being religion. Then they launched into the best version of the song I’ve ever heard. I’ve seen it duetted with Jimmy Page and Any Roberts but never better than this. The power and intermeshing of the two guitars was monumental, the poetic lyrics majestic, the vocal soared in what was a consummate performance. He still has that high register! Those guitars thundered, explosive, incendiary. They burnt the hall down in a feast of synergy.

They made their exit but the crowd went mad. There was no way to escape an encore. A humbled Roy came back to provide us with a new song we’d heard those six years ago. I Loved My Life. He claims to be a simple human and tells us that life is but a moment. Time is short but that he has loved his time here. It was appropriate.

We loved the time he’d spent with us. A chance to once again sample the delights of a legend.

The sophisticated beggar left us with the words: ‘Time is against me – but I hope to be back again.’

We hope so too! What a concert! A sharing. A few stumbles but we forgive them all – once again we had shared a magic evening.

As we drove back through the torrential rain all our questions had been answered!

Thank you Roy (and Nick). A privilege and a treat. ‘Aye Lad, I always knew you had it in you.’

Folkjokeopus – McGoohan’s Blues

Folkjokeopus was the showcase for McGoohan’s Blues – one of Roy’s masterpiece epics.

The debut album had shown great versatility and ambition both in terms of lyric writing and music. Instead of a straightforward solo acoustic album, the like of which we were hearing at his early gigs at Cousins and the small clubs, we were treated to a range of styles from psychedelic phasing on China Girl to out and out heavy metal on Committed.

The second offering was even more adventurous. There were no holds barred. We had poetry reading and the first of Roy’s sprawling epics with Circle.

By the time we were moving to the third album things had progressed even further. Roy was not courting commercial success even though he had by now firmly established himself as a force on the Underground scene. In many ways he was still finding his way.

I see this as a major experimental phase with Roy trying out different things – many of which would become cul-de-sacs. He was not only influenced by the audacity of The Incredible String Band but was still in the thrall of Jack Kerouac and Beat poetry.

He’d signed to Liberty and they’d retained the producer Shel Talmy – both of which were to prove problematical.

Shel had been used to creating hit singles for the likes of the Kinks and Who.

Liberty thought Roy had commercial potential.

Roy was not interested in playing that game. For him it was all about the integrity of the music. The songs he was writing did not conform to the two and a half minute pop treatment. He was still trying out different instruments and style. He fell out with Shel so that the album was basically produced as first takes, live performances in the studio. Shel was struggling with how to turn McGoohan’s Blues and She’s The One into commercial projects and Roy would not compromise. Liberty were MIA. The battle of the recording sessions took its toll. The range of instruments and styles were Roy’s forages into giving full rein to his creative juices.

I remember Roy introducing McGoohan’s Blues at its first outing – the Prisoner being about the only decent thing on telly at the time and very much a product of its time. Compulsory viewing. Sitting there in the gloom of a small club hearing McGoohan’s Blues for the first time was an experience that sticks with me. I was blown away by the scope, depth, poetry and meaning coupled to that musical intensity. I had never heard anything as powerful. The only thing that comes near for me is Dylan’s It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) and Buffy St Marie’s ‘My Country It Is Of Thy People You’re Dying’ both of which were epics of intense emotional impact.

At this time McGoohan’s and She’s The One were the centre pieces of Roy’s live performances. Both delivered with passion and incredible power.

I’ve searched for a bootleg from this period (without success) because in my mind nothing subsequently came near to the power of those early days. Roy was on fire.

The anticipation for the album mounted. I could not wait to hear the recorded versions of the stuff we were hearing live. It was going to be monumental.

Roy, at this time, had a foot both sides of a divide. He was gaining in popularity with long queues outside his gigs, being discovered by the media and being heralded as an emerging star. Roy was busy sabotaging all that. He tended to alienate the media and viewed commercial success with suspicion. He was determined to do it his way or no way.

The album cover was designed by Roy and serendipity. He wanted the album to be a diamond not a standard square. Liberty made it a square and Roy entered into a lengthy battle to have his diamond. Even at the end it isn’t quite right – just a little off. He portrayed himself eyes shut with face whitened and his pet monkey on his shoulder – the jester. Was he taking himself seriously? Yes he was. He was throwing the fireworks into the court.

The back cover sat on his sitting room table for friends to scribble on.

The release was frustratingly delayed and delayed (because of that cover) until the anticipation was unbearable.

I finally got it home and excitedly plonked it on the record player. I was disappointed. I wanted McGoohan’s to be perfect. It wasn’t. Instead of enhancing the power of the track I thought that the production (Roy doing 1 take in the studio with the addition of genius musicians like Nicky Hopkins) did not quite capture the passion of those electrifying live performances. But that was probably just me and the unrealistic expectations.

For me that album was a watershed and the transition to a brilliant set of albums.

I still play it regularly and love it – but I can’t help wondering what it might have sounded like with Pete Jenner at the helm and Harvest as the label.

That’s me with my original copy. It hasn’t changed. I haven’t changed too much inside.

Roy Harper – The Beginning

The Beginning

Back in the heady days of 1966/67 I was free. I did what I wanted. Reckless and like a sponge, absorbing everything. At seventeen/eighteen I was technically at school – although my head was elsewhere. I was thoroughly immersed in girls, Kerouac, music and the burgeoning underground scene. No time for studies. As a volatile idealistic young fool it seemed like there was a whole world to be discovered – literature, poetry, drama, art, politics, philosophy, spirituality, love and sex. Wow! Heady days! Talk about rapid development. My brain was firing electricity like nobody’s business. They could have connected me up to the grid. Days spent sitting around with mates, smoking and listening to music and talking madly as a stream of madness came pouring out. The world was flooding in and barely being processed before excitedly gushing out. My head was exploding.

School were none too pleased with my hair, beard and coloured clothes. Who cared? Drop out! I spent a lot of time at home.

Music was the medium. I devoured albums. I’d been nurtured on the Beatles and Stones, Dylan, Pretty Things, Yardbirds, Kinks and Who but I was discovering more obscure stuff by the minute. We excitedly shared out discoveries. Jackson C Frank, Woody Guthrie and Bert Jansch were never off my turntable.

At the age of sixteen, in 1965, I bought a motorbike and was mobile. At seventeen I bought a car and could turn up places warm and dry. And what places there were to go back then. Amazing gigs. Eel Pie Island, Middle Earth, the Marquis, Fishmongers Arms, Three Horseshoes, Bunjis and the Toby Jug. There were a host of people to see. In 67 Pink Floyd was creating mesmerising madness at Middle Earth, Hendrix and Cream were playing clubs, the old Blues guys were touring (I got to see Son House, Jimmy Reed, Muddy Waters, Bukka White, Skip James and loads more). There were free gigs in Hyde Park. Edgar Broughton was ousting demons Arthur Brown Had a weird thing going with the god of hellfire. The Incredible String Band had no difficulty being incredible.

The West Coast bands were taking off – Frank Zappa, Country Joe and the Fish, Doors and Captain Beefheart. Free, Traffic, Jethro Tull and the Bonzos were playing most nights. We bounced about to Fleetwood Mac. We bopped to John Mayall. Every night they were available and the entrance fee was between 10p and 25p. 25p for Pink Floyd and Blossom Toes at Eel Pie Island! Just imagine. I later paid 25p to see Led Zep at the Toby Jug. I was skint but I could afford it.

We had one long endless party. The camaraderie between us long hair beatnik freaks was amazing. Everywhere you went it was joints and new friends. Grok? We shared a philosophy. It was decidedly anti-establishment and ridiculously idealistic, but it was magical. We had our own separate society based around sharing.

In among all the endless mayhem of gigs, parties, girls and friends I discovered this little basement club on Greek Street in the midst of all the night-time strip clubs and cafes, called Les Cousins. It was like a little refuge, a family, a dark dingy basement in which a bunch of hairy guys and colourful girls sat and concentrated, rapt and serious, entranced by the new sounds and poetry of the acoustic scene dubbed contemporary folk. Not sure where that came from. These were a bunch of new incredible songwriters who happened to play acoustically and usually about contemporary issues, topical dramas, real life. Just my thing – serious, deep, extraordinary, brilliant. I spent many a night there basking in the likes of John Martyn, Al Stewart and Jackson C Frank. Magical days. I wish I’d kept my membership card!

One night I rolled up, parked my motorbike on the pavement, bounced down the stairs into the fetid cellar and got a seat at a table near the front. I’d come for Bert Jansch and John Renbourn – two of my favourites. Sandwiched in between them was this manic guy with long blond hair a moustache and acoustic guitar. He giggled a lot and spouted whatever came into his head. I can’t remember what but it all hit me like a hail of bullets. He was mirroring my thoughts. He sang three songs. One was Goldfish and I think another was Blackpool. He blew me away. The guitarwork, the poetry but most of all that mind! That was it – short and sweet!

I’d discovered Roy Harper!

My Sonicbond collection!

The new Leonard Cohen book is the eighth I have out on Sonicbond publishing. It’s brilliant to be able to write about the songsters that I love and who have been a huge part of my life.

Music is human. Music is life. We share the beat!

These are the ones I have produced so far:

Roy Harper

Roy Harper: Every Album, Every Song (On Track): Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789521306: Books

Captain Beefheart

Captain Beefheart On Track: Every Album, Every Song : Opher Goodwin: Amazon.co.uk: Books

Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan 1962 to 1970 On Track (Decades) : Opher Goodwin: Amazon.co.uk: Books

Phil Ochs

Phil Ochs On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789523263: Books

Neil Young

Neil Young 1963 to 1970: Every Album, Every Song (On Track…): Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789522983: Books

Leonard Cohen

Leonard Cohen On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Opher: 9781789523591: Books

Beatles – White Album

The Beatles: White Album – Rock Classics: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789523331: Books

Bob Dylan – Bringing It All Back Home

Bob Dylan Bringing It All Back Home: Rock Classics: Amazon.co.uk: Opher Goodwin: 9781789523140: Books

Ian Dury will follow later this year!

Ian Dury On Track: Every Album, Every Song: Amazon.co.uk: Goodwin, Opher: 9781789523744: Books

PS – I do have other books available on Rock Music and other stuff!!

Amazon.co.uk : opher goodwin

If you don’t like Amazon you can purchase directly from the publisher at Burning Shed:

Search – opher goodwin

BTW – Thanks for all the stunning reviews!! Much appreciated!