Van Morrison
@ the HMV Hammersmith Apollo
29 June 2012
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
Born George Ivan Morrison, 31 August 1945, Belfast,
Northern Ireland. The son of a noted collector of jazz and blues
records, Morrison quickly developed an interest in music. At the
age of 12 he joined Deannie Sands And The Javelins, an aspiring
skiffle band, but within two years was an integral part of the Monarchs,
a showband which, by 1963, was embracing R&B and soul. Tours
of Scotland and England were undertaken before the band travelled
to Germany where they completed a lone single for CBS Records, “Bozoo
Hully Gully”/ “Twingy Baby,” before disbanding.
The experience Morrison garnered - he took up vocals, saxophone
and harmonica - proved invaluable upon his return to Belfast and
a subsequent merger with members of local attraction the Gamblers
in a new act, Them. This exciting band scored two notable UK Top
10 hit singles with “Baby Please Don’t Go” and
“Here Comes The Night” (both 1965), while the former's
b-side “Gloria,” a snarling Morrison original, is revered
as a classic of the garage-band genre. The band's progress was hampered
by instability and Morrison's reluctance to court the pop marketplace
- a feature continued throughout his career - but their albums showed
the early blossoming of an original stylist. His reading of Bob
Dylan’s “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” (Them
Again) is rightly regarded as one of the finest interpretations
in a much-covered catalogue.
Them disbanded in 1966 following an arduous US
tour, but within months the singer had returned to New York at the
prompting of producer Bert Berns. Their partnership resulted in
“Brown Eyed Girl,” an ebullient celebration of love
in a style redolent of classic black harmony groups. The single
deservedly reached the US Top 10 in 1967, in turn inspiring the
hurriedly issued “Blowin’ Your Mind.” Morrison
later claimed the set was culled from sessions for projected singles
and, although inconsistent, contained the cathartic “T.B.
Sheets,” on which Morrison first introduced the stream-of-consciousness
imagery recurring in later work. Berns’ premature death brought
this period to a sudden end, and for the ensuing 12 months Morrison
punctuated live performances by preparing his next release. Astral
Weeks showed the benefit of such seclusion, as here an ambition
to create without pop’s constraints was fully realised. Drawing
support from a stellar backing band which included Miles Davis’
bass player Richard Davis and Modern Jazz Quartet drummer Connie
Kay, Morrison created an ever-shifting musical tapestry, inspired
by blues, soul and gospel, yet without ever imitating their sound.
His vocal performance was both assured and highly emotional and
the resultant collection is justifiably lauded as one of rock’s
landmark releases. On “Moondance” the artist returned
to a more conventional sense of discipline, on which tighter, punchier,
jazzier arrangements formed the platform for the singer’s
still-soaring inflections. “Caravan,” “Into The
Mystic” and the title track itself (with an intro highly reminiscent
of Kenny Burrell’s “Midnight Blue”), became a
staple part of Morrison's subsequent career, offering an optimistic
spirit prevalent in the artist’s immediate recordings.
Both His Band And The Street Choir and Tupelo Honey
suggested a new found peace of mind, as a recently married Morrison
celebrated the idyll of his sylvan surroundings. “Domino”
and “Wild Night” were the album’s respective US
hit singles, both of which invoked the punch of classic Stax Records-era
soul, and if the former set offered a greater debt to R&B, its
counterpart showed an infatuation with country styles. Both preoccupations
were maintained on Saint Dominic's Preview, one of Morrison’s
most enigmatic releases. Having opened the set with “Jackie
Wilson Said,” an effervescent tribute to the great soul singer
later covered by Dexys Midnight Runners, Morrison wove a path through
rock and late-night jazz which culminated in two lengthy compositions.
Laced with chiming acoustic 12-string guitar, “Listen To The
Lion” and “Almost Independence Day” resumed the
singer’s vocal improvisation; by alternately whispering, pleading,
shouting and extolling, Morrison created two intoxicating and hypnotic
performances.
Morrison’s next release, “Hard Nose
The Highway,” proved disappointing as the artist enhanced
an ever-widening palette with contributions by the Oakland Symphony
Chamber Chorus and such disparate inclusions as “Green,”
culled from the educational children’s show, Sesame Street,
and the folk standard “Wild Mountain Thyme,” herein
retitled “Purple Heather.” Despite the presence of “Warm
Love” and “The Great Deception,” the album is
generally regarded as inconsistent. However, Morrison reclaimed
his iconoclastic position with the enthralling “It’s
Too Late To Stop Now,” an in-concert selection on which he
was backed by the Caledonia Soul Orchestra. Morrison not only re-stated
his own impressive catalogue, but acknowledged his mentors with
a series of tight and outstanding recreations, notably of Sonny
Boy “Rice Miller” Williamson (“Take Your Hand
Out Of Your Pocket”), Ray Charles (“I Believe To My
Soul”) and Bobby Bland (“Ain’t Nothing You Can
Do”). The result was a seamless tribute to R&B and one
of rock’s definitive live albums. It was succeeded by the
pastoral Veedon Fleece, a set inspired by a sabbatical in Ireland
during 1973. Its sense of spirituality - a keynote of Morrison’s
later work - was best captured on “You Don't Pull No Punches,
But You Don't Push The River,” but “Streets Of Arklow”
and “Country Fair” were equally evocative. The judicious
use of uillean pipes and woodwind enhanced the rural atmosphere
of a collection which, although received with mixed reviews, was,
in retrospect, a linchpin in the artist’s subsequent development.
A three-year hiatus was ended with the release
of “A Period Of Transition,” a largely undistinguished
set on which the singer collaborated actively with Dr. John. Wavelength,
which featured former Them organist Peter Bardens, was welcomed
as a marked improvement and if lacking the triumphs of earlier work,
contained none of its pitfalls and instead offered a mature musical
consistency. Similar qualities abounded on “Into The Music”
which included the noticeably buoyant “Bright Side Of The
Road,” Morrison's first solo, albeit minor, UK chart entry.
It also featured “And The Healing Has Begun,” wherein
Morrison celebrated his past in order to address his future, and
the shamelessly nostalgic “It’s All In The Game,”
a cover version of Tommy Edwards’ 1957 hit single. Although
a general penchant for punchy soul suggested part of a continuing
affinity, it instead marked the end of a stylistic era. “On
Common One” Morrison resumed his introspective path and, on
the expansive “Summertime In England” referred to the
works of Wordsworth, Coleridge and T.S. Eliot in a piece whose gruff,
improvisatory nature polarised critics proclaiming it either mesmerising
or self-indulgent.
A greater sense of discipline on “Beautiful
Vision” resulted in another much-lauded classic. Although
noted for “Cleaning Windows,” a joyous celebration of
the singer’s formative Belfast years, the album contained
several rich, meditative compositions, notably “Dweller On
The Threshold” and “Across The Bridge Where Angels Dwell.”
“Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart” and A “Sense
Of Wonder” continued in a similar vein, the former boasting
the compulsive “Rave On, John Donne,” wherein Morrison
again placed his work on a strictly literary pantheon, while the
latter opened with the equally evocative “Tore Down A La Rimbaud.”
The title track of the latter set the style for many of the beautifully
wandering and spiritually uplifting songs of the next fertile period.
Live At The Grand Opera House, Belfast was an insubstantial resum‚,
failing to capture the sense of occasion demonstrably apparent in
person, but Morrison confirmed his artistic rebirth with No Guru,
No Method, No Teacher. Here he openly acknowledged his musical past
- the set included the punningly titled "Here Comes The Knight"
- as well as offering a searing riposte to those perceived as imitators
on “A Town Called Paradise.” “T¡r Na Nog”
and “One Irish Rover” continued his long-running affair
with Celtic themes, a feature equally prevalent on Poetic Champions
Compose. The wedding of love and religion, another integral part
of the artist's 80s work, was enhanced by the sumptuous “Sometimes
I Feel Like A Motherless Child,” on which the singer's contemplative
delivery was truly inspirational.
Morrison, many years into his career, was now producing
an astonishingly high standard of work. His albums during this period
were events, not mere releases. “Irish Heartbeat,” a
festive collaboration with traditional act the Chieftains, offered
a joyous but less intensive perspective. Although the title track
and "Celtic Ray" were exhumed from Morrison’s own
catalogue, its highlights included moving renditions of “She
Moved Through The Fair” and “Carrickfergus.” By
this time Morrison was resettled in London and had invited R&B
vocalist/organist Georgie Fame to join his touring revue. Avalon
Sunset enhanced the singer's commercial ascendancy when “Whenever
God Shines His Light,” a duet with Cliff Richard, became a
UK Top 20 single in July 1989, Morrison's first since Them’s
halcyon days. The album had once again a strong spiritual feel combined
with childhood memories. Morrison, however, was also able to compose
and deliver quite immaculate love songs, including the stunning
“Have I Told You Lately.” Enlightenment thus engendered
considerable interest although Morrison, as oblivious to pop’s
trappings as ever, simply maintained his peerless progress. The
mixture was as before, from the pulsating opening track, “Real
Real Gone,” itself once considered for Common One, through
gospel and the biographical, where “Days Before Rock ‘N’
Roll” recalls the singer’s discovery, by radio, of Ray
Charles and Little Richard.
Another unlikely collaboration occurred in 1991
when Morrison composed several songs for Tom Jones, one of which,
“Carrying A Torch,” was remade for “Hymns To The
Silence.” This expansive double set confirmed the artist’s
prolific nature, yet reviews lauding its sense of grandeur also
queried its self-obsession. “Too Long In Exile” revisited
his R&B roots and included a duet with John Lee Hooker on a
reworked “Gloria.” In February 1994 he was honoured
at the BRIT Awards for his outstanding contribution to music. The
following year’s “Days Like This” was highly accessible,
easy on the ear and probably the most contented Morrison album since
“Tupelo Honey” 24 years previously. The same year a
lacklustre tribute album, “No Prima Donna,” was issued
by Morrison’s Exile productions. Featuring contributions from
diverse names including Shana Morrison (his daughter), Lisa Stansfield,
Elvis Costello and the Phil Coulter Orchestra, the album was a grave
disappointment for Morrison’s fans. “How Long Has This
Been Going On”, recorded with Georgie Fame at Ronnie Scott’s
club, was a comfortable jazz album which revisited the artist’s
roots. He continued in this vein with Fame, Ben Sidran and one of
his idols, Mose Allison, recording a tribute album to the latter
in 1996. The same year, Morrison was awarded the OBE for his services
to music.
Morrison’s 1997 offering was The Healing
Game. Breaking no new ground, this album featured more original
songs using the familiar glorious chord changes which the converted
love. Morrison, whose disdain for the press is legendary, doubtless
remained unmoved by his critics, yet the paradox of a man capable
of sumptuous music and a barking temper is indeed intriguing. It
is a tribute that such aberrations can be set aside in order to
enjoy his enthralling catalogue. The following year’s The
Philosopher's Stone was a compilation of unreleased material.
Morrison guested on albums by B.B. King and Lonnie
Donegan before releasing his first album for the Virgin Records
subsidiary “PointBlank” in 1999. “Back On Top”
was yet another highly satisfying album, and together with the enthusiastic
backing of a new record company it became his most commercially
successful release in many years. Morrison was probably wryly amused
to find he had a hit single on his hands when “Precious Time”
hit the UK Top 40 in March. Nothing on this record was that much
different to the beautiful vision he has followed for over 30 years.
Three distinctive tracks, however, restated Morrison’s towering
presence. “Philosopher’s Stone” showed his continuing
ability to write a profound song with lush dynamics. “When
The Leaves Come Falling Down” proved that he has retained
his touch as a writer of great romanticism. Lastly, “New Biography”
abruptly silenced so-called friends, critics and journalists who
continue to dig and probe into his personal life. This lyric alone
should warn off would be “cut-and-paste” biographers
who have little or no understanding of what makes Morrison tick.
Later in the year he collaborated with Donegan on an engaging collection
of skiffle classics. The following year he teamed up with Linda
Gail Lewis on “You Win Again.” The album proved to be
Morrison’s last for the PointBlank label. He returned to Polydor
and released the lethargic “Down The Road” in May 2002.
Although the themes, chords and moods are often
similar, taken as a whole, Morrison’s body of work is one
the most necessary, complete and important collections in rock music,
and it is still steadily growing.
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