There are many ways to get the attention of an old flame in the hopes of rekindling a spark, but Donovan mightโve taken the cake for most creative and culturally significant in the summer of 1966. On July 1, the Scottish singer-songwriter released what would become one of the first notable psychedelic rock records, โSunshine Supermanโ.
But Donovan didnโt have genre pioneering on the brain when he wrote it. He had someone on his mind.
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Donovan Wrote โSunshine Supermanโ for an Old Flame
In the mid-1960s, Donovan met a woman named Linda Lawrence while on the set of Ready Set Go! The pair struck up a relationship, but it was short-lived. Lawrence had recently gotten out of a relationship with The Rolling Stonesโ multi-instrumentalist Brian Jones. She had a baby to look after. The two parted ways. Donovan never stopped thinking about her.
โI wrote โSunshine Supermanโ knowing sheโd hear the lyrics and realize I still loved her,โ Donovan explained in a 2016 interview with The Guardian. โI sang, โItโll take time, I know it / but in a while / Youโre gonna be mine, I know it / Weโll do it in style.โโ Donovan sent out his musical message in a bottle, so to speak. But this was the 1960s, and Lawrence had moved from the United Kingdom to the United States. The musician would have to wait quite a while before knowing if she heard the song and realized he was singing about her.
It took four years in total. In the late 1960s, Donovan bumped into Lawrence again after she returned to the U.K. with her American friend, Lorey. Somehow, Lorey put two and two together and realized that Donovan, the musician from whom she was renting a cottage during her visit, was Lawrenceโs old flame.
โTo this day, I donโt know if Lorey was setting us up,โ Donovan said. โBut she told Linda, โIโm renting a cottage. Want to see it?โ I met them when they came round, and Lorey said, โOh, do you two know each other?โ We were married a few weeks later and have been together ever since.โ
The Pair Had a Full-Circle Moment Years Later
Speaking to Jeff Tamarkin in 2016, Donovan recalled a full-circle moment with Linda Lawrence, his โSunshine Supergirl.โ The married couple was riding in the car together when Donovan noticed a song on the radio that sounded a lot like โSunshine Supermanโ. โI said, โHey, listen to that. Itโs another band that was influenced by what we did,โโ he said. โAnd she said, โDonโt be stupid, Don. That is you!โ It was โSunshine Supermanโ. I was listening to it at such a low level that all I could hear was the essence of the track.โ
From hoping Lawrence would notice his song on the radio from across the pond to her being the one to remind Donovan that it was, in fact, him singing on the radio, this psychedelic love story is certainly among the sweetest in 1960s rock โnโ roll lore.
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