Tim Hardin: Tim Hardin 1

Tim Hardin: Tim Hardin 1

Album #63 - July 1966

Episode date - October 26, 2016

The Alternative Top 40
    0:00
    0:00

    For most of my life, Tim Hardin was little more than a name. I knew very little about him or his music, only that he was a Greenwich Village musician who always existed on the periphery of the folk music scene without ever catching the limelight. 

    I knew his music exclusively from others who covered his best-known songs (Bobby Darin with “If I Were a Carpenter”, Rod Stewart with “Reason to Believe”), but never felt led to pursue him any further. It was my loss. For a long while, I harbored a prejudice against the pre-rock and roll folk movement, because it struck me as too precious, too strident, too self-righteous, or some combination of all these things. I still hear that in some material from the pre-‘64 era, but my prejudice closed my mind to genuinely talented songwriters like Fred Neil, Dave Van Ronk and most significantly, Tim Hardin. It was like I put up blinders that prevented me from acknowledging one of the most important musical movements of the 20th century, so when I finally allowed myself to think openly, I had some catching up to do. 

    It wasn’t until I was in my fifties (yes, I know, and I am ashamed to admit it) that I grew genuinely curious enough to spare thirty minutes of my life to listen to Hardin’s debut release, “Tim Hardin 1”, and the experience was disarming. The album is so understated that I almost let it slip by even with my full attention. The opener seemed nice enough, but a few blues-styled tracks cropped up early in the tracklist that struck me as generic (“Smugglin’ Man”, “How Long”) and allowed me to grow distracted enough to think that maybe I was right all along. I stuck with it, though, and found the album not only growing on me, but enveloping me. “Reason To Believe” is an undeniably gorgeous piece of work, but listening to Hardin deliver his own words in that gentle, vulnerable way gave me chills. Other songs, like “Never Too Far” and “While You’re On Your Way,” sounded almost as familiar, and in all likelihood probably were, as they’d existed for decades without my acknowledgment. How could I have ignored something as beautiful as this? 

    Reading up on the album, I discovered that Hardin himself had reservations about this record. Some of the blues numbers were demos that he did not intend for release, and he took exception to the strings that were laden over some of the more sensitive tracks. While I agree that the blues numbers are not of the same caliber as his more introspective material, they at least provide pacing and with all due respect, I completely disagree with his assessment of the strings. Hardin probably didn’t like them because he rehearsed and recorded the songs without them, and certainly didn’t want a producer to take license with his debut album, but the strings here are a model of sensitive restraint. When the album ended, I needed to play it again, and then again, until I found myself listening all day, loving a record that I deliberately neglected for decades. Prejudice is an ugly thing. It prevents you from seeing plain truths and allows you to hold uninformed opinions. I’m quite grateful that I finally let go of my own. 

    July 1966 – Billboard: Did Not Chart

    Related Shows

    Miles Ahead - Miles Davis +19

    Miles Davis +19: Miles Ahead

    Album #14 - October 1957

      0:00
      0:00
      Johnny Cash With His Hot and Blue Guitar

      Johnny Cash: With His Hot and Blue Guitar

      Album #13 - October 1957

        0:00
        0:00
        Cookin'  with The Miles Davis Quintet

        The Miles Davis Quintet: Cookin'

        Album #12 - July 1957

          0:00
          0:00
          Ray Charles

          Ray Charles: (Self Titled)

          Album #11 - June 1957

            0:00
            0:00
            Sonny Rollins: Volume 2

            Sonny Rollins: Vol. 2

            Album #10 - June 1957

              0:00
              0:00
              Chuck Berry - After School Session

              Chuck Berry: After School Session

              Album #9 - May 1957

                0:00
                0:00
                Thelonius Monk: Brilliant Corners

                Thelonius Monk: Brilliant Corners

                Album #8 - March 1957

                  0:00
                  0:00
                  Miles Davis - 'Round About Midnight

                  Miles Davis: 'Round About Midnight

                  Album #7 - March 1957

                    0:00
                    0:00
                    B.B. King - Singin' The Blues

                    B.B. King: Singin' The Blues

                    Album #6 - February 1957

                      0:00
                      0:00
                      Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio

                      Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio

                      Album #5 - December 1956

                        0:00
                        0:00
                        Louis Prima: The Wildest

                        Louis Prima: The Wildest

                        Album #4 - November 1956

                          0:00
                          0:00
                          The Louvin Brothers - Tragic Songs of Life

                          The Louvin Brothers: Tragic Songs of Life

                          Album #3 - July 1956

                            0:00
                            0:00