Donovan entered EMI studios at Abbey Road with Mickie Most and new arranger John Cameron on 19 December 1965 to work on the song inspired by his breakup with Lawrence. The word "sunshine" in the song's title was slang for LSD, Satisfied with the result, most of the same musicians recorded what was intended to be the new single's flip side, "Sunny South Kensington", with the addition of
Shawn Phillips on sitar. The single's release was set for 28 January 1966 which would have predated both The Byrds' "
Eight Miles High" and The Yardbirds' "
Shapes of Things" which, coincidentally, also began work the same week as "Sunshine Superman". The release date was postponed, however, when Donovan's UK label
Pye claimed that they could not release a Mickie Most production, since he was contracted to EMI. "Bert's Blues" and "House of Jansch" were penned in tribute to Donovan's friend, British folk personage
Bert Jansch, while the artist claimed "Legend of a Girl Child Linda" had come to him in a dream, where he had seen himself composing it. The second phase of the album's recording took place in Los Angeles during the first week of April 1966, where Donovan played a ten day residency at The Trip, a hip Sunset Strip nightclub. Time was booked at CBS Studios where Donovan recorded "Season of the Witch", "The Trip" and the outtake "Superlungs" with a West Coast rock combo that included Bobby Ray on bass, Lenny Maitlin on Hammond organ and "Fast"
Eddie Hoh on drums. "The Trip" had been written that week in Hollywood, as Donovan and a friend looked over the Sunset Strip from their guest house while on an acid trip, with references to Dylan, Joan Baez and Linda Lawrence's son Julian. Trouble arose during the recording of "Season of the Witch" when the engineers refused to turn the bass levels up, afraid of moving the needle into the red, before eventually being persuaded after a long conference with Most. "Superlungs" referred to marijuana use but, due to its sensitive subject matter, was left in the can and eventually, after several more attempts to re-record it, released on 1969's
Barabajagal. During that same week a different set of songs, acoustic-based and pioneering a fusion of Celtic folk and Indian music, were recorded. The personnel for these tracks, including "Guinevere", "The Fat Angel", "Ferris Wheel" and "Three King Fishers" included Donovan on acoustic guitar, Shawn Phillips on sitar, "Candy" John Carr on bongos and Peter Pilifian on electric violin. "Guinevere" had been inspired by
The Lady of the Land of Faery in Celtic mythology, along with medieval imagery of
King Arthur's court. "The Fat Angel" referred to singer
Mama Cass of
The Mamas & the Papas whom Donovan had befriended during his residency at The Trip, and also namechecked the new San Francisco band
Jefferson Airplane; they would return the favor by covering the song at their concerts, eventually appearing on the 1969 live album
Bless Its Pointed Little Head. "Ferris Wheel" stemmed from time spent in New York City a month prior with a girl whose hair was cropped because she claimed it had been caught in the strands of a ferris wheel. The final song recorded for the album, "Celeste", was a classically inspired piece featuring acoustic guitar, drums, bass,
bouzouki (played by
Cyrus Faryar), sitar, electric violin, celeste, and harpsichord. Besides "Superlungs", other outtakes from the sessions included "
Epistle to Dippy" (a January 1967 US single), "Young Girl Blues" (to be included on
Mellow Yellow), "Museum" (re-recorded for
Mellow Yellow) and "The Land of Doesn't Have to Be", all from the album's January-February sessions in London, along with "Breezes of Patchulie" (originally called "Darkness of My Night" and released on Donovan's 1964 demo collection
Sixty Four), given a full band arrangement that April in Los Angeles. The
Sunshine Superman recordings of "Superlungs", "Museum" and "Patchulie" were all included on
Troubadour The Definitive Collection 1964–1976, while "The Land of Doesn't Have to Be" was a bonus track on the 2005 rerelease of the album. ==Style==