The Kinks. I love them. I love Ray Davies, the writer of this song, “Autumn Almanac,” an absolute stunning piece of musical genius from 1967. A lot happened in 1967. It was the year when the Beatles released Sgt. Pepper to critical and international fame, when Jimi Hendrix was revolutionizing the use of the electric guitar, and when the world’s youth was dropping acid and dreaming of the future. Ray Davies was thinking of the past; of autumn days, his old school notebook, hiking in the woods, and Sunday dinners. There is no better writer of nostalgic pop then Ray, and this song is his shining anthem to that feeling. At his creative height, Ray challenged the Beatles in terms of melodic brilliance and was as good as Bob Dylan in creating emotive original lyrics. He was that good, and “Autumn Almanac” is one of his best songs and greatest examples of his powers. The song is a stream of consciousness, both lyrically, and melodically, but its not without coherence, form, and beauty. The song exists at the limit of creativity a person can achieve with an acoustic guitar writing in the pop song format. I hope you enjoy it.
The Kinks, Autumn Almanac
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