Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith Explained

Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith
Type:Studio album
Artist:Roy Harper
Cover:Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith album cover.jpg
Released:1967
Recorded:England
Genre:Folk rock, progressive folk, folk baroque
Length:45:40
Label:CBS BPG 63184
Awareness AWCD 1035
Science Friction HUCD006
Science Friction SFLP004
Producer:Shel Talmy
Prev Title:Sophisticated Beggar
Prev Year:1966
Next Title:Folkjokeopus
Next Year:1969

Come Out Fighting Ghengis Smith is English folk / rock singer-songwriter and guitarist Roy Harper's second album and was released in 1967. The album was re-issued in 1977 as The Early Years, re-issued once more on Compact disc in 1991, and was re-released again in December 2017 in both Remastered, 180 Gram Vinyl and CD formats.

History

Columbia Records, recognising Harper's potential, hired American producer Shel Talmy to produce the album. Talmy later claimed that 'Harper was difficult... truculent... we battled. But we got round to it'.[1] The album was orchestrated by Keith Mansfield.

Musically, the album was notable for the 11-minute track "Circle" comprising several movements, "a soundscape of Harper's difficult youth" that, according to Harper, was "totally unlike anything anyone else was doing. The Beatles weren’t doing anything like that at the time. The Stones weren’t doing anything like it, either. No-one was"[2]

Career-wise, the album was notable for establishing a broadening in Harper's musical style away from the more traditional side of contemporary folk music then played. Harper had an interest in traditional folk but did not consider himself a bona fide member of the folk scene. He later explained:-

Harper's record company had different expectations. "They wanted me to write commercial pop songs and when they heard the album... they didn’t have a clue. They wanted hits. And I gave them "Circle"".[2] Bert Jansch contributed sleeve notes for the album. The first song on the album is called "Freak Street" on the back cover of the Science Friction CD but "Freak Sweet" in the liner notes; elsewhere it is referred to as "Freak Suite". During this period, Harper was managed by American music entrepreneur Jo Lustig; manager of The Pentangle and former agent to Julie Felix.

Single

The same sessions produced a non-album single (CBS 3371), "Life Goes By", with "You Don't Need Money" on the B-side. The A-side, also produced by Talmy and orchestrated by Mansfield, has never been reissued.

Re-releases

In 1977 the album was re-issued by CBS with different cover art under the title The Early Years. In 1991 the album was re-released again by Awareness Records with new artwork and additional content. The 2017 remastered album removed those 1991 bonus tracks, reverting to the original 1968 tracklist.

The track "You Don't Need Money" appeared on the first bargain priced sampler album, The Rock Machine Turns You On, as "Nobody's Got Any Money In The Summer".

Personnel

Technical

References

  1. Web site: 2017 Shel Talmy Interview . Record Collector Magazine. April 2017 . 5 April 2017.
  2. Web site: 2011 Roy Harper Interview . Uncut.co.uk. July 2011 . 24 November 2013.