Puneet Varma (Editor)

King Harvest (Has Surely Come)

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Released
  
September 22, 1969

Length
  
3:39

Writer(s)
  
Robbie Robertson

Genre
  
Roots rock

Label
  
Capitol

Producer(s)
  
John Simon

"King Harvest (Has Surely Come)" is a song by The Band, which originally appeared as the final track on their second album, The Band.

The song is credited solely to Robbie Robertson, although Levon Helm claimed that "King Harvest" was a group effort. It is sung in the first person from the point of view of a poverty-stricken farmer who, with increasing desperation, details the misfortune which has befallen him: there was no rain and his crops died, his barn burned down, he has ended up on skid row. A labor union organizer appears, promising to improve things, and the narrator tells his new associates, "I'm a union man, now, all the way", but, perhaps ashamed of his station, begs them to "just don't judge me by my shoes." The events depicted in the song are most likely a reference to the organizing drives of the Trade Union Unity League, which created share-cropper unions from 1928 to 1935, throughout the U.S. South.

The rock critic Greil Marcus called it "The Band's song of blasted country hopes" and suggested that "King Harvest" might be Robertson's finest song and the best example of the group's approach to songwriting and performing. Author Neil Minturn praised its "dark, eerie earnestness."

The song's structure is unusual: the verses, sung by Richard Manuel, are energetic, while the choruses (sung by Manuel and Levon Helm) are more subdued, in contrast to typical song structure, possibly reflecting the desperate if unsure hope the protagonist holds in the union.

Personnel

  • Richard Manuel - lead vocals, backing vocals, piano
  • Rick Danko - bass guitar
  • Levon Helm - drums, backing vocals
  • Garth Hudson - Lowrey organ
  • Robbie Robertson - electric guitar
  • John Simon - Wurlitzer electric piano through "black box"
  • References

    King Harvest (Has Surely Come) Wikipedia