| Van Morrison |

Van
Morrison at Marin Civic Center, 2007
|
| Background information |
| Birth name |
George Ivan Morrison |
| Born |
August 31, 1945 (1945-08-31) (age 61) |
| Origin |
Belfast, Northern
Ireland |
| Genre(s) |
Rock
Blue-eyed soul
R&B
Folk
Blues
Jazz
Country |
| Occupation(s) |
Singer-songwriter, Musician |
| Instrument(s) |
vocals, guitar, harmonica, saxophone, keyboards, drums and tambourine |
| Years active |
1960–Present |
Associated
acts |
Them |
| Website |
VanMorrison.co.uk |
George Ivan Morrison OBE (generally known as Van
Morrison) (born August 31, 1945) is a Grammy Award-winning Northern
Irish singer,
songwriter,
author, poet and multi-instrumentalist,
who has been a professional musician during the last five decades. He
plays a variety of instruments, including the guitar, harmonica, keyboards,
drums, and saxophone.
Featuring his characteristic growl — a unique mix of throaty folk,
blues, Irish, scat, and Celtic influences — Morrison is widely
considered one of the most unusual and influential vocalists in the
history of rock and roll.Critic
Greil
Marcus has gone so far as to say that "no white man sings like Van
Morrison."
Known as "Van the Man" by his fans,
Morrison first rose to prominence as the lead singer of the Northern
Irish band, Them, penning their seminal
1964 hit "Gloria". A few years
later, Morrison left the band for a successful solo career.
Morrison has pursued an idiosyncratic musical path. Much of
his music is tightly structured around the conventions of American
soul
and R&B,
such as the popular singles "Brown
Eyed Girl", "Moondance", "Domino" and "Wild
Night". An equal part of his catalogue consists of lengthy, loosely
connected, spiritually inspired musical journeys that show the
influence of Celtic tradition, jazz, and stream-of-consciousness
narrative, such as his classic album Astral
Weeks and lesser known works such as Veedon
Fleece and Common One.
The two strains together are sometimes referred to as "Celtic Soul".
Morrison's career, spanning some five decades, has influenced
many popular musical artists. In 1993 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame in
2003. In 2000, Morrison ranked
#25 on American cable music channel VH1's list of its 100 greatest artists of rock
and roll, and in 2004,
Rolling Stone Magazine ranked
Van Morrison
42nd on their list of The Immortals: 100 Greatest Artists of
All Time.Paste
Magazine ranked him 20th in their list of 100 Greatest Living
Songwriters In 2006and
Q
Magazine ranked him 22nd on their list of 100 Greatest Singers
in April 2007.
|
Contents
- 1 Biography
- 1.1 Early
life
- 1.2 1960s
- 1.3 1970s
- 1.4 1980s
- 1.5 1990s
- 1.6 2000s
- 2 Influence
- 3 Awards
and Recognition
- 4 Discography
- 4.1 Albums
- 4.2 Compilations
- 4.3 Limited
Editions
- 4.4 DVDs
- 4.5 Selected
Singles
- 5 Notes
- 6 References
- 7 Further
reading
- 8 See
also
- 9 External
links
|
Biography
Early life
George Ivan (Van) Morrison was born on August 31, 1945, and grew up at
125 Hyndford Street
in Bloomfield, Belfast,
Northern
Ireland as the pampered, only child of George, a shipyard
worker and Violet, a singer. Morrison was exposed to music from an
early age, as his father, having spent time working in Detroit, Michigan
collected American jazz, country
and western, and blues
albums.
His father's taste in music was passed on to him and he grew up
listening to artists such as Jelly Roll Morton, Ray
Charles, Lead
Belly and Solomon Burke. In a 2005 Rolling
Stone article he said, "Those guys were the
inspiration that got me going. If it wasn't for that kind of music, I
couldn't do what I'm doing now."
In a taped 1969 interview, his mother said that he was
listening to recordings
from the age of two, when he would tug at her apron strings urging her
to play more records. (His grandmother) "used to come up and take
turns, because he'd have you play them morning, noon and night." There
were sing-songs in the house on Saturday nights with family and friends
and, although shy, the young Morrison would always sing upon request.
He gave his first performance as a child with a rendition
of Lead Belly's "Goodnight Irene".
He would perform this same song years later with another of his boyhood
idols, Lonnie Donegan, on his
album, The Skiffle Sessions - Live in Belfast 1998.
Young Morrison's father, noting his son's genuine interest,
bought him his first guitar at age twelve. Van learned to play
rudimentary chords, while studying the songbook The
Carter Family Style. He soon formed a skiffle band
named the Sputniks with school friends. They played at some of the
local cinemas,
and even at this young age, Van was already taking the lead and doing
most of the singing and arranging. At fourteen, he formed another
modified skiffle band, Midnight Special and played at a school concert. When
this band broke up he wanted to join the Thunderbolts, but they turned
him down because they already had a guitar player. After talking his
father into buying him a saxophone, Van took lessons in tenor sax
and music reading from George Cassidy, a local teacher, and practiced
playing unremittingly for a month.
He then joined the Thunderbolts, playing in church dance
halls and hospitals around town. The young Morrison was already noted
for his uncommunicative nature and his inadequate social
skills by his fellow band members, who remarked that his parents were
remarkably patient with their only child. His mother disclosed that she
took him aside one day to tell him he needed to learn to talk to
people. According to his mother, "Van said to me that it wasn't that he
didn't want to talk but tunes were running through his head all the
time. He said he didn't know whether he'd been blessed or cursed
because the words and music wouldn't leave him."
When Morrison finished school at fourteen, coming from a hard
working family, he was expected to get a regular, full-time job.After
several short apprenticeship positions, he settled
into a job as a window cleaner,
referenced in the autobiographical songs, "Cleaning
Windows" and "Saint Dominic's
Preview". Young Morrison also played with the Harry Mack Showband, the
Great Eight, with his older workplace friend, Geordie Sproule. He was
later to name Sproule as one of his biggest influences. Morrison was
drinking wine
regularly by the age of fifteen, and had learned to perform an
outlandish and attention-getting stage act by watching Sproule.
Many of the places of Morrison's childhood, such as "Cyprus
Avenue",Fitzroy,
Hyndford Street, Sandy Row and "Orangefield", (the boys'
school he attended), would find their way into the lyrics of some of
his most famous songs. His contented and self-absorbed childhood
would be an important factor in the nostalgic and searching tone of
much of his music throughout his long career.
After the death of his father in April 1988, Van would honour
his father's memory with the song, "Choppin' Wood", which he often
performs in concert.
1960s
Morrison left home at seventeen to tour Europe with the
group the Monarchs alongside his boyhood friend, George Jones,
who later founded the showband Clubsound. Upon returning to East
Belfast, the Monarchs disbanded.
Morrison connected with Geordie Sproule again and played with him in
the Manhattan Showband along with guitarist Herbie Armstrong. When
Armstrong auditioned to play with Brian Rossi and the Golden Eagles,
Morrison went along and both were hired. He had acquired his first
position as a blues singer as the band was not in need of a
saxophonist, but he soon left to form an R&B Club at the Maritime Hotel. Needing
a group to perform with there, he joined up with the members of The
Gamblers. Before the first opening night at the Maritime in April 1964,
the group changed their name to Them from a Fifties horror
movie.
Morrison soon came to prominence fronting the band, as he was the only
song-writer. Them had a number of chart hits, most notably the rock
standard "Gloria", subsequently
covered by many artists, including The Doors, Shadows
of Knight, and Jimi Hendrix. In June 1966, while Them
was headlining a three-week residency at the famed Whisky-a-Go-Go,
Jim
Morrison and The Doors were the opening act on the last week. Van's
influence on Jim's developing stage performance was noted by John
Densmore in his book Riders On The Storm, "Jim
Morrison learned quickly from his near namesake's stagecraft, his
apparent recklessness, his air of subdued menace, the way he would
improvise poetry to a rock beat, even his habit of crouching down by
the bass
drum during instrumental breaks."
On the last night the two Morrisons and the two bands jammed together
on "Gloria".
Van and Jim would eventually become good friends, often joking that
they were brothers.
Morrison and the other Them band members became involved in a
dispute with their manager, Decca Records' Phil Solomon, over the
revenues paid them on the two month United States of America
west coast tour.
He returned to Belfast, intending to quit the music business. Them’s
one-time producer, Bert Berns, persuaded him to return to
New York and record solo for the Bang Records label.
From these early sessions emerged one of his best-known songs, "Brown
Eyed Girl", which reached No.10 in the US charts in 1967. Master
session drummer
Gary Chester played on that song.
The album that came from those sessions was Blowin'
Your Mind!. Morrison later admitted he wasn't
pleased with the results, claiming in a Rolling Stone interview in
1969, "It came out wrong and they released it without my consent."
Recordings from these sessions have been occasionally re-released by
Bang and in bootleg form, under various names. Most of these recordings
were remixed and repackaged in 1991 as the Bang
Masters. The compilation included an alternate
take of "Brown Eyed Girl", as well as early versions of "Beside You"
and "Madame
George", songs that would appear with slightly different chord changes,
instrumentation, and lyrics on Morrison's second album.
Morrison's seminal 1968 album Astral Weeks
After Berns’ death in 1967, Morrison was involved in a contract
dispute with Berns' widow that prevented him from performing on stage
or recording in the New York area .
The song, "Big Time Operators", released in 1991, chronicled his
dealings with the New York music business during this time period.
He then moved to Boston,
Massachusetts
and was soon confronted with personal and financial problems; he had
"slipped into a malaise"
and had trouble finding gigs.
However, through the few gigs he could find, he regained his
professional footing and started recording with the Warner
Bros. Records label.The
record company was able to buy out his contract with Bang Records, and
Morrison fulfilled a highly unusual clause that bound him to submit
thirty-six original songs within a year by recording thirty-two
nonsense songs in one session.
His first album for Warner Bros. Records was Astral
Weeks (which he had already performed in
several clubs around Boston), a mystical song
cycle, considered by many to be his best work.
Morrison has said, "When Astral Weeks came out, I was starving, literally."
Released in 1968, the album was critically acclaimed, but received an
indifferent response from the public. To this day, it remains in an
unclassifiable music genre and has been described as
hypnotic, meditative, and having a unique musical power. It has been
compared to French Impressionism and mystical Celtic
poetry.
Perhaps the best known review in rock history was written by the
influential music journalist Lester Bangs in 1979, describing the
effect that Astral Weeks had on his life.
It has often been placed on the most authoritative lists of best albums
of all time. In the 1995 MOJO list of 100 Best Albums,
it was listed as #2, and was #19 on the Rolling Stone Magazine's The 500 Greatest
Albums of All Time in 2003.
1970s
Van Morrison in concert, mid 70s.
Morrison then moved to Woodstock,
New York, and released his next album, Moondance,
in 1970. Moondance reached #29 on the Billboard
charts. The style of this album was in great contrast to that of Astral
Weeks. Whereas Astral Weeks was a
sorrowful and vulnerable album, Moondance was a
much more optimistic and cheerful affair. The title
track, although not released in the US as a single until 1977, was heavily
played in many radio formats. The evocative song "Into
the Mystic" has also gained a wide following over the years. The single
released was "Come Running", which reached the US Top 40. Moondance
was both well received and favourably reviewed. Lester Bangs and Greil
Marcus had a combined full page review in Rolling Stone
Magazine, stating that Morrison now had "the striking
imagination of a consciousness that is visionary in the strongest sense
of the word.""That
was the type of band I dig," Morrison said of the Moondance
sessions. "Two horns and a rhythm section - they're the type of
bands that I like best." He produced the album himself as he felt like
nobody else knew what he wanted.Moondance
was listed at #65 on the Rolling Stone Magazine's The 500 Greatest
Albums of All Time.In
March 2007, Moondance was listed as #72 on the NARM
Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame list of the "Definitive 200".
Over the next few years, he released several acclaimed albums,
among them a second one in 1970. His Band and the
Street Choir had a freer, more relaxed sound
than Moondance, but not the perfection,
in many critics' opinions, and contained the hit single "Domino". The
last song "Street Choir" took on a more serious tone.
In 1971, he moved with his family to a hilltop home in Fairfax,
California
and released another popular album, Tupelo
Honey. This album produced the hit single "Wild
Night", and the catchy title song that has a very country
and western feel about it. It ended with another country tune,
"Moonshine Whisky". Morrison said he originally intended to make an all
country album.
His co-producer, Ted Templeman, was impressed with
Morrison's ability as a musician, arranger and producer,
describing it at the time as the "scariest thing I've ever seen. When
he's got something together, he wants to put it down right away with no
overdubbing."He
claimed later, "I'd never work with Van Morrison again as long as I
live, even if he offered me two million dollars in cash. I aged ten
years producing three of his albums."
He later regretted the statement, however.
Released in 1972, Saint Dominic's Preview,
was an indication that Morrison was breaking away from the more
accessible style of the last three albums and moving back towards the
more daring, adventurous, meditative aspects of Astral Weeks.
The combination of two styles of music gave it a versatility that had
been lacking before in his previous albums. Two songs ("Jackie Wilson
Said (I'm In Heaven When You Smile)" and "Redwood Tree") reached the
Hot 100. Two other songs ("Listen to the Lion" and "Almost Independence Day")
were ten and eleven minutes long and employed the same poetic imagery
not heard since Astral Weeks.
It was his highest charting album ever.
Van Morrison, early 70s
By 1972, despite being a performer for nearly 10 years, he
began experiencing stage-fright when performing for
audiences of thousands, as opposed to the hundreds that he had
experienced in his early career. He became anxious on stage and would
have difficulty establishing eye contact with the audience. He once
said in an interview about performing on stage, "I dig singing the
songs but there are times when it's pretty agonizing for me to be out
there."
After a brief break from music, he started performing in clubs,
regaining his ability to perform live, albeit with smaller audiences.
He then formed the backing group The Caledonia Soul
Orchestra and ventured on a three month US tour with them. The tour was
captured for posterity on the live double album, It's Too Late to Stop Now,
regarded as one of the great live albums in rock history.
Soon after recording the album, Morrison restructured the Caledonia
Soul Orchestra into a smaller unit, the Caledonia Soul Express. For
many years, his parents, George and Violet, owned a record store in
Fairfax, California named Caledonia Records.
In 1973, Morrison divorced his wife of five years, actress and model,
Janet (Planet) Rigsbee, with whom he had a daughter, the
singer-songwriter, Shana Morrison. Shana has appeared on
stage with her father on several occasions and has duetted with him on
his albums, (1994s) A Night in San Francisco and
(1995s) Days Like This. Morrison had mixed, but
mostly negative, reviews with his 1973 album, Hard
Nose the Highway. It contained the popular song
"Warm
Love" but otherwise has been largely dismissed.
He then released the introspective and poignant album, Veedon
Fleece, in 1974. Though it attracted little
attention at the time of its release, its critical stature has grown
over the years, and Veedon Fleece is now considered
one of Morrison's best works.""You
Don't Pull No Punches, But You Don't Push the River", one of the
album's side closers, exemplifies the long, hypnotic, cryptic Morrison
with its references to visionary poet William
Blake and to the apparently Grail-like Veedon Fleece object.
Morrison would not release a follow-up album for the next
three years. After ten years without taking time off, he said in an
interview, that he just needed to get away from music completely and
even ceased listening to it for several months. Also suffering from writer's
block, he later confessed that he seriously considered leaving the
music business for good. During this time, he lived in isolation "far
from the beaten path." Greil Marcus said that he drove by on the road
one time and there was this big sign that said, Van
Morrison's Self-Improvement Camp. "I have no idea if someone
put it up there as a prank or if he'd put it up; (nor whether) you went
there to improve yourself or whether you went there to improve him, but
it somehow struck me as very appropriate."
A new album was often rumoured to be ready for release under such
titles as Mechanical Bliss, Naked in the
Jungle and Stiff Upper Lip. Morrison
later was to say the project was nothing more than an extended jamming
session.
In November 1976, Morrison performed at the farewell concert
for The
Band, which took place on Thanksgiving Day. It
was his first live performance in quite some time and Morrison
considered skipping his appearance until the last minute, even refusing
to go on stage when his name was called. His manager, Harvey
Goldsmith, said he "literally kicked him out there." Morrison was on
good terms with The Band. They were near-neighbours in Woodstock,
and they had shared experience of stage-fright. At the concert, Van
performed two songs, one of them being, "Caravan", from his 1970
album Moondance which was described by All
Movie Guide as "a rousing performance."
Greil Marcus was even more impressed and wrote that "Van Morrison
turned the show around...singing to the rafters and ...burning holes in
the floor. It was a triumph, and as the song ended Van began to kick
his leg into the air out of sheer exuberance and he kicked his way
right offstage like a Rockette. The crowd had given him a fine welcome
and they cheered wildly when he left."
The concert was filmed and later issued in Martin
Scorsese's 1978 film, The
Last Waltz, which is considered a landmark
concert film.
It was during his association with The Band, that he acquired
both of his fans' nicknames for him: "Belfast Cowboy" and
"Van the Man". While Van was singing the duet "4% Pantomime" that he
co-wrote with Robbie Robertson, Richard
Manuel calls him, "Oh, Belfast Cowboy". It would be included in The
Bands album Cahoots. When he
left the stage, after performing "Caravan" on The Last Waltz,
Robbie calls out "Van the Man!"
Morrison, in 1977, finally released A Period of Transition,
a collaboration with Dr. John, who also appeared at The
Last Waltz. It received a mild critical reception and began a
very prolific period of song making. The following year, Morrison
released Wavelength;
It was the fastest selling album of his career, at the time, and soon
went Gold.
The engaging title track became a modest hit and peaked at #42. The
opening track, "Kingdom Hall", about Morrison's own childhood
experience around Jehovah's Witnesses also
foreshadowed the religious turn in Morrison's next album, Into
the Music.
| “ |
The
album's last four songs, "Angeliou", "When the Healing Has Begun", and
"It's All in the Game/You Know What They're Writing About" are a
veritable tour de force with Morrison summoning every vocal trick at
his disposal from "Angeliou"'s climactic shouts to the
sexually-charged, half-mumbled monologue in "When the Healing Has
Begun" to the barely audible whisper that is the album's final sound. |
” |
|
—Scott Thomas Review
|
Released in 1979, Into the Music, was
hailed as a masterpiece: "An erotic/religious cycle of songs that
culminates in the greatest side of music Morrison has created since Astral
Weeks".
This album for the first time alludes to the healing power of music,
which had become an abiding interest of Morrison's, and would dominate
his music from this point on. "Bright Side of the Road" was
a joyful, uplifting song that would appear on the soundtrack
of the popular movie Michael.
1980s
With his next album, the new decade saw Morrison following his
own muse
into uncharted territory and merciless reviews. In 1980 he took a group
of musicians with him to Super Bear, a studio in the French
Alps, on the site of a former abbey, to record his "most daring and
unclassifiable" album since Astral Weeks.The
album, Common One,
consisted of only six songs of varying lengths. The longest,
"Summertime In England" was fifteen and one-half minutes long and ended
with the words,"Can you feel the silence?" NME magazine's, Graham
Locke, called the album "colossally smug and cosmically dull; an
interminable, vacuous and drearily egotistical stab at spirituality."
Even Greil Marcus, who had formerly supported Morrison, said: "It's Van
acting the part of the 'mystic poet' he thinks he's supposed to be."Morrison
insisted that the album was never "meant to be a commercial album;"
but, perhaps stung by the harsh reviews, "he would not
attempt anything so ambitious again."Later
the critics would reassess the album more favourably with the success
of "Summertime in England" and other tracks that seem to take on new
meaning in live performance. Lester Bangs wrote in 1982, "Van was
making holy music even though he thought he was, and us (sic) rock
critics had made our usual mistake of paying too much attention to the lyrics."
Morrison's next album, Beautiful
Vision, was released in 1982 and saw him
returning once again to his Belfast roots. It was well received by the
critics and public, producing a popular single, "Cleaning
Windows", that documented one of Morrison's first jobs after leaving
school.Several
other songs on the album, "Vanlose Stairway", "She Gives Me Religion",
and the instrumental, "Scandinavia", on which Morrison plays piano, show the
presence of a new physical muse: a Danish Public
Relations agent, who would share Morrison's spiritual interests and
serve as a steadying influence on him throughout most of the 1980s.He
had quit drinking alcohol, sometime during the years of 1973 or 1974,
and now drank "gallons" of coffee a day,
according to friends. However, he was to once again have problems
with alcohol, beginning later in the decade, after his father's sudden
death.
In the early 1980s, Morrison moved back to Europe and at first
settled in the Notting Hill Gate area of London.Later,
he moved to Bath, where he bought Wool Hall
Studios.He
became increasingly more in control of the music that he produced.
Much of the music Morrison released throughout the 1980s
continued to focus on themes of spirituality and faith as Morrison's
compositions steered towards New Age territory. He gave a special thanks
to L.
Ron Hubbard on his 1983 album, Inarticulate Speech
of the Heart, although he has never been
formally associated with Scientology or any other Church.
In 1985, he released a new album, A
Sense Of Wonder, that contained the opening
track "Tore Down A La Rimbaud". Morrison said he had been reading about
Rimbaud
in 1974, when he was suffering through a period of writer's
block. He then carried this song around with him for eight years,
before he could complete it.
Morrison's 1986 release, No Guru, No Method,
No Teacher, earned enthusiastic reviews from
many, but not all critics. During the recording, the artist's
characteristic deep growl was in grand form and the album featured some
of the grittiest acoustic arrangements since the days
of Astral Weeks, but not all critics were
comfortable with the increasingly religious content.
Unflustered, Morrison was slightly less gritty and more adult
contemporary with the well received 1987 album, Poetic Champions Compose,
considered to be one of his highlights of the 1980s.
The romantic ballad, "Someone Like
You", from this album was featured in the soundtrack of several popular
movies, including 1995's French Kiss and, in 2001, both Someone Like You and Bridget Jones's
Diary.
In 1988, he released Irish
Heartbeat, with the Irish group, The
Chieftains. It was a popular-selling album, which demonstrated the full
range of Morrison's unique vocal power on a collection of traditional
Irish folk songs. Morrison played drums on this album.
In 1989, Morrison released an even more popular seller, Avalon
Sunset, which featured the hit duet with Cliff
Richard "Whenever God Shines His Light" and the ballad "Have I Told You Lately" on
which "earthly love transmutes into that for God"This
is often said to be his most spiritual album, but it also contained the
sensual song, "Daring Night": "It deals with full, blazing
sex, whatever it's churchy organ and gentle lilt suggest."Morrison's
preoccupation with the erotic/religious theme was once again in
evidence. He can be heard calling out the change of tempo in the ending
of this song, indicative of his belief that music should be
spontaneous. He often completed albums in two days time, with first
takes being the norm.
1990s
Morrison was able to capitalise on the success of Avalon
Sunset with the release of The Best of Van Morrison,
in 1990. Not to be mistaken with a similarly-titled compilation,
released in 1967, (and long out of print), this was the first
collection ever to survey his entire career. Compiled by Morrison
himself and focusing on his hit singles, it became a multi-platinum
success and was one of the best selling albums of the 1990s.
In 1990, Morrison joined many other guests for Roger
Waters' massive performance of The Wall in Berlin. He sang "Comfortably
Numb" with Roger Waters, and his friends from the Band, Levon
Helm, Garth
Hudson and Rick
Danko. This version of the song was included in the soundtrack of Martin
Scorsese's 2006 film The Departed.
BBC2
filmed a career overview entitled One Irish Rover
in 1991, which opened with Van Morrison and Bob Dylan
singing a duet on the Hill of the Muses above Athens, Greece. Dylan and
Morrison performed duets on "Crazy Love" "Foreign Window" and "One
Irish Rover". The Independent described "the Irish
singer flanked by Bob Dylan and the Acropolis: all three of them legendary,
all looking their age, and all a waste of time talking to with a microphone
in your hand."
In January 1993, Van Morrison was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame. He did not attend the award ceremony, and instead his friend from
The
Band, Robbie Robertson accepted the award
for him.
Although Morrison's commercial success would continue
throughout the 1990s, the critical reception to his work began to
decline. 1990's Enlightenment
yielded one hit single, "Real Real Gone", (first recorded ten
years earlier); 1991's double album Hymns
to the Silence was one of his most ambitious
works; 1993's Too Long in Exile
and 1995's Days Like This
had large sales even though the critical reviews were not always
favourable.
In contrast, the 1994 live double album, A Night in San Francisco
was a "tour-de-force", showing Morrison's talents and his influences in
equal measure.
On February 14, 1994, Van Morrison was awarded the BRIT
Award for his Outstanding Contribution to British Music.
He was presented with the award by former Beirut hostage, John McCarthy who
testified to the importance of Morrison's song, "Wonderful Remark":
| “ |
...a
song that he wrote more than twenty years ago, which was very important
to us. |
” |
|
—John McCarthy
|
Morrison performed before an estimated audience of 60-80,000
people when US President Bill
Clinton visited Belfast,
Northern
Ireland on November 30, 1995. His song "Days
Like This" had become the official anthem for the Northern
Irish peace movement.
In June 1996, Morrison was awarded an OBE by Queen
Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace for his service
to music.
This period was also marked by a number of side projects,
including the live jazz performances of 1996's How Long Has This
Been Going On, 1997's Tell Me
Something: The Songs of Mose Allison, and
2000's The
Skiffle Sessions - Live In Belfast 1998, all of
which found Morrison paying tribute to his long-time favourites.
In 1997, Morrison released The
Healing Game. The following year, Morrison
finally released some of his unissued studio recordings in a warmly
received two-disc set, The Philosopher's
Stone. His next release, 1999's Back on
Top, was a modest success, being his highest
charting album in the US since 1978's Wavelength.
In September 1999, Morrison became the first musician to be
inducted into the newly opened Irish Music Hall of Fame. Bob Geldof
presented Morrison with the award remarking, "I believe there is only
one genius in Irish music, and that's Van Morrison."
During this decade, Morrison developed a close association
with two vocal talents at opposite ends of their careers: Georgie
Fame, with whom Morrison had already worked occasionally,
lent his voice and Hammond organ skills; and Brian Kennedy's
vocals complimented the grizzled voice of Morrison, both in studio and
live performances.
Taking this concept of association a stage further, the 1990s
saw an upsurge in Morrison's collaborations with other artists, a trend
that has continued into the new millennium.
These include:
- with blues
legend John Lee Hooker on Hooker's 1997
album, Don't Look Back
- The title track from this album would go on to win a Grammy
Award for Best Pop
Collaboration with Vocals in 1998.
- This was not the first time the two had worked
together; Morrison appeared on Hooker's albums Never Get Out
of These Blues Alive in 1972, Born In Mississippi,
Raised Up In Tennessee in 1973 and Chill Out
in 1995.
- with singer Tom Jones on the 1999 album Reload
- with Mark Knopfler on his 2000
album Sailing to Philadelphia
- with musical legend Ray Charles on his 2004 album Genius
Loves Company
- with British jazz singer George
Melly on his 2006 album The Ultimate Melly
2000s
Van Morrison continued to record and tour in the 2000s,
performing two or three times a week. Playing fewer of his well-known
songs in concert than almost any other artist from his era, Morrison
refuses to be relegated into a nostalgia act.
Contrary to the days when he felt at the mercy of the music
industry, he now has his own independent label (Exile Productions) and
has full production control of each album he records; which he then
delivers as a finished product to the recording label that he chooses,
for marketing and distributing.
In July 2001, Morrison received an honorary
doctorate in music
from Queen's University in his
hometown of Belfast.
Nine years earlier, in 1992, he had received an honorary
doctorate in literature from the University
of Ulster–at the time being the only other university in his native Northern
Ireland.
In 2000, Morrison released a collaboration with Linda
Gail Lewis (Jerry Lee Lewis's sister), You
Win Again. Another side project, this time
focusing on R&B and country-and-western standards, Lewis proved
to be an excellent duet partner, and the project set the stage for
Morrison's next album, Choppin' Wood. By the end of
2000 when the album was essentially finished, Lewis and Morrison had a
falling out.
The cover of the May 2005 edition of Wavelength, a magazine dedicated
to Van Morrison
As a result, Morrison went back and re-recorded and/or remixed
most of the tracks, removing Lewis's contributions in the process. A
few songs were removed from the final running order and new ones were
added in. The result was released in 2002 as Down
the Road. Clinton Heylin contends that the
original version, Choppin' Wood, would have been a
true return to form. It is doubtful if that notion will ever be put to
the test because the original recordings have yet to circulate,
privately or publicly.
"In recognition of his unique position as one of the most
important songwriters of the past century," Van Morrison was inducted
into the Songwriters Hall of Fame,
at an awards ceremony in New York City in June 2003. Ray
Charles presented the award, following a performance in which the pair
performed Morrison's "Crazy Love", from the album, Moondance.
Morrison's admiration for Charles was evident in the award ceremony and
he later wrote an article published in Rolling Stone Magazine in 2004,
describing Ray Charles' influence on music and on him personally.
In the same year, Morrison released What's
Wrong with This Picture? on the legendary jazz
record label, Blue Note Records. The album would
later receive a Grammy nomination for Best
Contemporary Blues Album.
In 2004, his song, "Bright Side of the Road", from his 1979
album Into the Music was featured in the UNESCO
advertisements for World Press Freedom Day. In
October 2004 Van Morrison was honored as a BMI ICON at the annual London Awards for
his "enduring influence on generations of music makers."
Morrison still remains popular with the public: his album, Magic Time,
debuted at #25 on the US Billboard 200 charts upon release in
May 2005, some forty years after first entering the public's eye as the
frontman of Them. Rolling Stone Magazine listed
it as #17 on their list of The Top 50 Records of 2005.
Later in the year, Morrison also donated a previously
unreleased studio track to a charity album, Hurricane
Relief: Come Together Now, which raised money
for relief efforts intended for Gulf Coast victims devastated by
hurricanes, Katrina and Rita.
The song, "Blue & Green", was composed by Morrison and featured
the late Foggy Lyttle on guitar.
Van appeared in The Hebridean Celtic Festival
in Stornoway Outer
Hebrides in the summer of 2005, where he was a headline act at the
growing international Celtic
music
festival.
He released an album with a country music theme, entitled Pay
the Devil, on March 7, 2006. On the day of its release, Van Morrison
Day was declared in Nashville by the Mayor, and Morrison
appeared for the very first time at the historic Ryman
Auditorium that evening to a sold-out crowd. The entire Ryman was sold
out twelve minutes after the tickets went on sale.
Pay the Devil debuted at #26 on The Billboard
200 and peaked at #7 on Top Country Albums. The
country album was listed at #10 on Amazon Best of 2006 Editor's Picks
in Country in December 2006.
In August 2006, Van and his longtime girlfriend, Michelle
Rocca (who was Miss Ireland 1980) were reported to be the parents of a
seven-month-old daughter, Aibhe Rocca Morrison. Aibhe was born in Dublin, Ireland.
Barry Egan published an article in the Sunday
Independent, on August 20, 2006, revealing that the pregnancy had been
kept a secret by Michelle by her wearing baggy clothes and seldom
leaving the house.
Morrison, a notoriously private person, had begun a close and initially
highly publicised relationship with Rocca in 1993. In recent years,
they have seldom been seen in public together, although they are
reportedly sharing a home in Killiney in South
Dublin, Ireland.
On September 15, 2006, Morrison was the
headline act on the first night of the Austin City Limits
Music Festival. Rolling Stone Magazine reviewed
this performance as one of the top ten shows of the 2006 festival.
In November 2006, a limited edition album, Live at Austin
City Limits Festival,
was issued which is sold only at Van Morrison concerts and at the
official website.
In October 2006, Live at Montreux 1980/1974
was the first ever commercial DVD released by Morrison, though the Pay
The Devil CD was rereleased in the summer of 2006 with a DVD containing
tracks from the Ryman.This
two DVD set illustrates how his songwriting evolved over this period,
and includes some of his best known tracks: "Moondance", " Street
Choir", "Tupelo Honey", and "Ballerina". Pee
Wee Ellis, Mark
Isham, and David Hayes are among some of the well-known musicians
featured in the 1980 show; the 1974 show has a line-up that features Pete
Wingfield, Dallas Taylor and Jerome Rimson.
In November 2006, CNN published their list of The
All-Time 100 Albums.
Two of Van Morrison's albums, 1968's Astral Weeks
and 1970's Moondance, were on the list.
Van Morrison was honoured at the Second Annual Oscar
Wilde: Honouring Irish Writing in Film Pre-Academy Awards
Party, in Los
Angeles, California,
on February
22, 2007 for
his contribution to over fifty films. He was presented with the award
by Al
Pacino.
Van
Morrison at the Movies - Soundtrack Hits, a new
nineteen song album, was released by Morrison's latest record label,
Manhattan EMI,
on February
12, 2007, to
coincide with this event.
He appeared at the New Orleans
Jazz & Heritage Festival on the first evening on April 27, 2007 as the headline
act where his longtime collaborator and friend, Dr. John
joined him for one set on stage.Morrison
also drew the largest crowd ever (35,000) on July 4, 2007 at the Ottawa Canada Bluesfest.
On May
08, 2007 Van
Morrison was named Best International Male Singer of 2007 by the first ever
International Awards at famed jazz club Ronnie
Scotts in London
England.
A new 2CD compilation album The Best of Van
Morrison Volume 3 was released on June 11, 2007 in the UK and on June 19 in the US by Manhattan EMI.
It contains 31 tracks, some of which were previously unreleased. The
tracks were personally selected by Morrison to represent the best of
his work from 1993s album Too Long in Exile to the
song "Stranded" from the 2005 album Magic Time.
Influence
Morrison's influence can readily be seen in the music of many
major artists, including U2
(much of The Unforgettable Fire),
Bruce Springsteen ("Spirit in the
Night", "4th of July (Sandy)", "Backstreets"), John
Mellencamp ("A Little Night Dancin'", a cover of Morrison's "Wild
Night"), Jim Morrison, Joan
Armatrading, Rickie Lee Jones, Rod
Stewart, Tom Petty, Patti
Smith (her poetic-proto-punk "Gloria" most explicitly), Elvis
Costello (who later toured with Morrison), Graham
Parker, Daryl Hall, Thin
Lizzy, Bob
Seger ("I know Springsteen was very much affected
by Van Morrison, and so was I." - interview in Creem),
Dexys Midnight Runners,
Jimi
Hendrix ("Gloria"), Jeff Buckley ("The Way Young Lovers
Do", "Sweet Thing"), numerous others, including Counting
Crows (the "sha-la-la" sequence in Mr Jones, is a
tribute to Morrison) and the The Wallflowers with "Into The
Mystic". Ray Lamontagne,
James Morrison,
and Paolo
Nutini
are several of the younger artists influenced by Morrison.
Morrison expressed some grudges in the 1980s, regarding his
pervasive influence on some of the artists, admitting that he was
"flattered by the compliment" but "felt ripped off, in an academic
context, because there are just people who don't know."
On his 1986 album, No Guru, No Method, No Teacher,
he included the song, "A Town Called Paradise", which begins with the
words: "Copycats ripped off my words/ Copycats ripped off my songs/
Copycats ripped off my melody", but then goes on to say: "It doesn't
matter what they say/ It doesn't matter what they do."
Overall, Morrison has typically been supportive of other
artists and has often shared the stage with them during his concerts.
On the live album, A Night in San Francisco, he had
as his special guests, among others, his childhood idols, Jimmy
Witherspoon, John Lee Hooker and Junior
Wells. Although he often expresses his displeasure (in interviews and
songs) with the music industry and the media in
general, he has been instrumental in promoting the careers of many
other musicians and singers, such as Brian Kennedy
and James Hunter.
In an interview with Jazziz, he was generous with his praise of artists
that have covered his work, and the many artists that have influenced
him.
Awards and Recognition
Grammy Awards:
-
- Best Pop
Collaboration with Vocals, 1996, "Have I Told You Lately" (with The
Chieftains)
- Best Pop
Collaboration with Vocals, 1998, "Don't Look Back" (with John
Lee Hooker)
- Hall of Fame, 1999, Astral
Weeks
- Hall of Fame, 1999, Moondance
- Hall of Fame, 1999, "Gloria"
- Hall of Fame, 2007, "Brown
Eyed Girl"
Other recognition:
-
- Inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame, 1993
- BRIT Award - Outstanding contribution to
Music, 1994
- OBE award, 1996
- First Musician inducted into the Irish Music Hall of Fame,
1999
- Inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame,
2003
- Ronnie Scotts Club Best International
Male Singer of 2007
First Inaugural Awards
Discography
Albums
- Blowin' Your Mind!
(1967) #182 US
- Astral Weeks (1968) Did
Not Chart
- Moondance (1970) #29 US
- His Band and the
Street Choir (1970) #32 US
- Tupelo Honey (1971) #27 US
- Saint Dominic's Preview
(1972) #15 US
- Hard Nose the Highway
(1973) #27 US
- It's Too Late to Stop Now
(1974) #53 US
- Veedon Fleece (1974) #53 US
- A Period of Transition
(1977) #43 US
- Wavelength
(1978) #28 US
- Into the Music
(1979) #43
US, #12 UK
- Common One (1980) #73 US
- Beautiful Vision
(1982) #44
US, #31 UK
- Inarticulate Speech
of the Heart (1983) #116 US, #14 UK
- Live at the Grand Opera House, Belfast (1984)
- A Sense of Wonder
(1985) #61
US, #25UK
- No Guru, No Method,
No Teacher (1986) #70 US, #27 UK
- Poetic Champions Compose
(1987) #90
US, #22 UK
- Irish Heartbeat
(1988); with The
Chieftans #102 US, #18 UK
- Avalon Sunset (1989) #91 US, #13 UK
- Enlightenment
(1990) #62
US, #5 UK
- Hymns to the Silence
(1991) #99
US, #5 UK
- Too Long in Exile
(1993) #29
US, #4Uk
- A Night in San Francisco
(1994) #125
US, #8 UK
- Days Like This
(1995) #33
US, #5 UK
- How Long Has This
Been Going On (1996) with (Georgie
Fame) #55 US, #1 Top Jazz Albums
- Tell Me
Something: The Songs of Mose Allison (1996) #1 Top Jazz
Albums
- The Healing Game
(1997) #32 US
- Back on Top (1999) #28 US
- The
Skiffle Sessions - Live In Belfast 1998 (2000); with (Lonnie
Donegan and Chris Barber) #14 UK
- You Win Again
(with Linda Gail Lewis) (2000) #161 US, #34 UK
- Down the Road (2002) #25 US, #6 UK
- What's
Wrong with This Picture? (2003) #32 US
- Magic Time (2005) #25 US, #4 UK
- Pay the Devil (2006) #26 US
Compilations
- The Best of Van Morrison
(1990) #41
US, #4 UK
- The Best of Van
Morrison Volume Two (1993) #176 US
- The Philosopher's
Stone (1998)
- Van
Morrison at the Movies - Soundtrack Hits (2007) #35 US, #17 UK
- The Best of Van
Morrison Volume 3 (2007) #23 UK
Limited Editions
- Live at Austin City Limits Festival (2006)
DVDs
- Live at Montreux 1980/1974 (2006)
Selected Singles
In UK and US and Charting when known
- "Brown Eyed Girl" (1967) #10 US
- "Ro Ro Rosey" (1967)
- "Come Running" (1970) #39 US
- "Domino" (1970) #9 US
- "Blue Money" (1971) #23 US
- "Call Me Up In Dreamland" (1971) #95 US
- "Wild
Night" (1971)
#28 US
- "Tupelo Honey" (1971) #47 US
- "Like a Cannonball" (1972)
- "Jackie
Wilson Said (I'm In Heaven When You Smile)" (1972) #61 US
- "Redwood Tree" (1972) #98 US
- "Gypsy" (1973)
- "Warm
Love" (1973)
- "Green" (1973)
- "Ain't Nothing You Can Do" (1974]])
- "Bulbs" (1974)
- "Moondance" (1977) #92 US
- "Wavelength" (1978) #42 US
- "Kingdom Hall" (1979)
- "Full Force Gale" (1979)
- "Bright Side of the Road" (1979) #63 UK
- "Cleaning Windows" (1982)
- "Cry For Home" (1983) #98 UK
- "Celtic Swing" (1983)
- "Dweller on the Threshold" (1984)
- "A Sense of Wonder" (1984)
- "Tore Down à la Rimbaud" (1985) #19 US
Mainstream Rock Tracks
- "Ivory Tower" (1986) #21 US Mainstream Rock Tracks
- "Got To Go Back" (1986)
- "Did Ye Get Healed? (1987)
- "Someone Like
You" (1987)
#28 US
- "Queen Of The Slipstream" (1988)
- "Have I Told You Lately" (1989) #12 US Adult
Contemporary, #74 UK
- "I'll Tell Me Ma" (1988)
- "Whenever God Shines His Light" (with Cliff
Richard) (1989)
#20 UK
- "Coney Island/Have I Told You Lately" (1990) #76 UK
- "Real Real Gone" (1990) #18 US
Mainstream Rock Tracks, #79 UK
- "In The Days Before Rock 'N' Roll" (1990) #94 UK
- "Gloria" (