Album Origins of Tracks
The following is a list explaining the original releases of each song:
- "I Love My Shirt" (from Barabajagal, released 11 August 1969)
- "Happiness Runs" (from Barabajagal)
- "Sun Magic" (released as "The Sun Is a Very Magic Fellow" on The Hurdy Gurdy Man, released October 1968)
- "People Call Me Pied Piper" (from the 1972 film The Pied Piper)
- "Little Boy in Corduroy" (from A Gift from a Flower to a Garden, released December 1967)
- "Colours" (from Fairytale, released 22 October 1965)
- "Jackie Beanstalk" (previously unreleased)
- "A Funny Man" (from H.M.S. Donovan, released July 1971)
- "Mandolin Man and His Secret" (from A Gift from a Flower to a Garden)
- "Nature Friends" (previously unreleased)
- "Wynken, Blynken and Nod" (from H.M.S. Donovan)
- "Little Teddy Bear" (previously unreleased)
- "Voyage of the Moon" (from H.M.S. Donovan)
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Read more about this topic: Pied Piper (Donovan Album)
Famous quotes containing the words album, origins and/or tracks:
“What a long strange trip its been.”
—Robert Hunter, U.S. rock lyricist. Truckin, on the Grateful Dead album American Beauty (1971)
“Lucretius
Sings his great theory of natural origins and of wise conduct; Plato
smiling carves dreams, bright cells
Of incorruptible wax to hive the Greek honey.”
—Robinson Jeffers (18871962)
“Our law very often reminds one of those outskirts of cities where you cannot for a long time tell how the streets come to wind about in so capricious and serpent-like a manner. At last it strikes you that they grew up, house by house, on the devious tracks of the old green lanes; and if you follow on to the existing fields, you may often find the change half complete.”
—Walter Bagehot (18261877)