"Black Sheep Boy" Tim Hardin Remembered on New Tribute Disc

Part of: New Indie CDs

1980 was a sad year for rock and roll. John Bonham drank himself to death, taking with him the legacy of Led Zeppelin. AC/DC's Bon Scott died of alcohol poisoning. Joy Division's Ian Curtis committed suicide. Darby Crash of The Germs OD'd and died. Most shocking of all, Mark David Chapman murdered John Lennon.

Last on the calendar, and almost forgotten among those legendary names and tragic lives, was singer-songwriter Tim Hardin, who died of a heroin overdose at the age of 39 on December 29, 1980 after a stop-and-start 1960s career followed by years of obscurity.

But Hardin was a big enough name even at the end of the '60s to be invited to perform at Woodstock, and it isn't only Woodstock completists who remember his participation in that most famous music event of all time, especially his drug-addled, uncertain, yet tender performance of one of his most famous songs, "If I Were a Carpenter."

Joe Strummer called Hardin a "lost genius of music." Patti Smith wrote in a memoir, "My brother gave us a new needle for our record player…we happily listened to Tim Hardin, his songs becoming our songs, the expression of our young love." Singers ranging from Helen Reddy, Bobby Darin, and Rod Stewart to Johnny Cash, Joan Baez, and Mark Lanegan have recorded his songs. But while "If I Were a Carpenter" and "Reason to Believe" may still echo faintly in the culture of pop music, the name Tim Hardin is spoken seldom today.

On February 12, Nigel Adams and his Full Time Hobby label, which put out 2006's Dream Brother: The Songs of Tim and Jeff Buckley, are releasing Reason to Believe, a tribute disc with 13 Tim Hardin songs recorded by a variety of mostly moody, sometimes experimental-sounding artists, many of whom I'd never heard of before, but who include both Lanegan, who does the drug-themed "Red Balloon," and Okkervil River – whose 2005 album Black Sheep Boy takes its name from a Hardin song – doing "It'll Never Happen Again."

Hardin recorded his folk songs with acoustic sounds and sparse arrangements, but the realizations on the new disc take his songs very far from their folk and blues roots, with quirky vocals, deep drones, and dense atmospherics that say unmistakably, "21st century." How much they say "Tim Hardin" will be for fans to decide. Listen to the Smoke Fairies' version of "Carpenter" here:

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Article Author: Jon Sobel

Jon Sobel is Co-Executive Editor of Blogcritics and lead editor of the Culture section. As a writer he contributes most often to Culture, where he reviews NYC theater; he also covers interesting music releases and writes a semi-regular review round-up of independent albums. …

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