Harvest Festival

RELEASE
1999
LABEL
EMI Music Distribution
GENRES
Pop/Rock, British Invasion, Blues-Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Alternative Pop/Rock, British Folk, Experimental Rock, Album Rock, Alternative/Indie Rock, British Psychedelia, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Heavy Metal, Post-Punk, British Folk-Rock, Rock & Roll, Hard Rock, Prog-Rock, Folk-Rock, Psychedelic

Album Review

Harvest Festival is a genuinely comprehensive and thorough look at the one British major label venture into psychedelia and progressive rock that actually worked, commercially and artistically; it's a panoramic journey though a major part of British rock as it developed over a period of just under a decade. Over the five CDs and 119 songs, more than two dozen acts are featured, ranging from purely English phenomena like Michael Chapman, Quatermass, and Pete Brown to mega-arena acts like Pink Floyd, and the set comes complete with a built-in 120-page book that would be worth 35 dollars by itself. Beginning with the Edgar Broughton Band's Jimi Hendrix meets the Crazy World of Arthur Brown track "Evil," the programming goes a long way to explaining why Harvest worked while other attempts at forming psychedelic and progressive labels in England failed -- in contrast to the slick, commercial psychedelic ventures at rival Deram Records, Harvest always gave its artists the freedom to be louder (or softer) than the norm, and to be bold in their expressions. Moreover, the diversity of form was astonishing, from the acoustic instrumental chamber music rock of the Third Ear Band, to the lively acoustic psychedelia of Syd Barrett and Kevin Ayers, to the high-energy attack of Deep Purple, Quatermass, and Bakerloo -- it all sounds amazingly strong, well crafted, and exciting. Harvest had room for jugband music, traditional acoustic folk, progressive folk-rock, spoken word, and, full-circle commercially from Harvest's late-'60s origins, psychedelic Beatles-influenced commercial rock by way of ELO. Harvest also grew to embrace sounds that would have been inconceivable for EMI to have signed when they started, including Be-Bop Deluxe (versions 1 and 2), Bill Nelson's Red Noise, the reggae outfit Matumbi, the Shirts with Annie Golden, and the punk band Wire. It's all fascinating stuff, told in great detail in the accompanying book, but ultimately, a set like this stands or falls on the music. The archivists have dug deeply enough to find material that makes Barrett's output look tame and conventional, specifically Tea & Symphony, whose "Maybe My Mind (With Egg)" is a truly dissonant and strange journey into thought processes bent by the prism of drugs and meditation. Not everything on this set will be to everyone's liking, but anyone inclined to enjoy Pink Floyd or Syd Barrett's solo stuff will be entranced by most of the content. The sound has been treated first-class, with new state-of-the-art 1999 remasterings. The other measure of success of this box is that there's a huge amount of material here that leaves the listener wanting more from a lot of the acts featured.
Bruce Eder, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Evil
  2. It Didn't Work Out
  3. Hard Road (Wring That Neck)
  4. Morning Call
  5. Tom Tiddler's Ground
  6. Stone Circle
  7. Real Cool Word
  8. Octopus
  9. Round and Round
  10. Mother Dear
  11. Maybe My Mind (With Egg)
  12. Postcards of Scarborough
  13. A Glade Somewhere
  14. Out Demons Out
  15. Living Life Backwards
  16. Black Sheep of the Family
  17. Big Bear Ffolly
  18. Good Mr. Square
  19. The Lady Rachel
  20. A Forsaking -- Our Captain Cried
  21. Speed King
  22. Things May Come and Things May Go But the Art School Dance Goes on ...
  23. Apache Dropout (Apache Intro Droupout Boogie)
  24. Everyday
  25. Butterfly Dance
  26. Mocking Bird
  27. Kodak Ghosts
  28. Words of Aaron
  29. Fireball
  30. 10538 Overture
  31. Breathe
  32. Medicine Man
  33. Stranger in Blue Suede Shoes
  34. Fennario
  35. The Same Old Rock (End Section)
  36. Hotel Room
  37. Effervescing Elephant
  38. Song from the Bottom of a Well
  39. Money
  40. South Africa
  41. Interview/International Anthem
  42. The Mexican
  43. Do Ya
  44. Something Said
  45. Adventures in a Yorkshire Landscape
  46. Dear Elaine
  47. Take Me to Tahiti
  48. Things on My Mind
  49. Hombre de la Guitarre
  50. Another Day [Live]
  51. Roll Over Beethoven
  52. Maid in Heaven
  53. You Make Me Sick
  54. Ball Park Incident
  55. Showdown
  56. I'll See You Again
  57. Poor Old Horse
  58. Old Hog or None
  59. Hopping Down in Kent
  60. Postman's Knock
  61. Spring Song
  62. Have You Ever Seen the Rain?
  63. Fair Exchange
  64. Ballad of a Salesman Who Sold Himself
  65. Electrical Language
  66. Short and Sweet
  67. When an Old Cricketer Leaves the Crease
  68. Erotic Neurotic
  69. Reuters
  70. (This) Perfect Day
  71. Lonely Android
  72. Little Girl
  73. I Am the Fly
  74. Swing for the Crime
  75. Revolt into Style
  76. A Touching Display
  77. Black Night
  78. Flying Hero Sandwich
  79. California Man
  80. Magic Woman Touch
  81. Caribbean Moon
  82. The Calendar Song
  83. Rock, Pt. 1
  84. I Should Have Known Better
  85. Life in a Scotch Sitting Room [Excerpt]
  86. The Young Ones
  87. Sabre Dance
  88. Ships in the Night
  89. Breathless
  90. Dancing in the City
  91. Radar in My Heart
  92. Child of the City
  93. Hallelujah
  94. Wells Fargo
  95. Mess Around
  96. Golden Hair
  97. Up Yours!