Friday, March 28, 2008

27-Mar-08 Manchester Concert Review

Manchester Evening News:
PERHAPS somewhere, lurking underneath that glowering fedora or hidden behind those dark glasses, there is a secret side to Van Morrison. A hidden inner chirpiness or happy-go-lucky bonhomie that he disguises to the world with those moody stares and gruff barks.

Then again, perhaps not. No chance of a smile sneaking onto his lips at this outing, that’s for sure, as he glares out across the crowded Bridgwater Hall, face half in shadow.

Funny then, that a man so notorious across the music industry for his grumpiness should be producing such increasingly feel-good musical offerings. Uplifting, even, in the case of the Irish legend’s newest work Keep It Simple, which proves something of a revelation live.

Certainly, he appears at his happiest when performing numbers from this latest album, with recent radio hit That’s Entrainment positively hopping and skipping along. Proving that while his face might not be smiling, his music certainly can.

Bathed in the warm glow of a summery stage light, surrounded by the cocoon of his excellent live band, he brings a lazy, jazzy, feel to his new songs that just seems to wash over you.

It’s in those moments, lost in his new work, that the real “best of” Van Morrison shines through, funnily enough. Rather than through his old hits which are performed somewhat straight and to the point.

Blessings

Perhaps we should count our blessings that he performed some of his greatest hits at all – and there were a decent enough number here – given his reported lack of enthusiasm for wheeling out back catalogue material.

And, however quickly he likes to whiz through them, there’s no arguing with the fact that they remain great songs. With Have I Told You Lately getting a slightly more upbeat treatment here than usual, while Bright Side of the Road receives a twangy
country-style twist.

Enough material from the good old days to keep the crowds happy, or – in this case – positively ecstatic. And, to prove his new work has touches of that old brilliance. Although, still, nothing comes close to topping the sexy sax solo of Moondance,
given a gratefully-received airing here.

Proving, ultimately, that however happy the new music makes Van, his fans still prefer the golden oldies with classic 1960s rock number Gloria providing a refreshingly rousing end to the night. Sending the crowds dancing out in the street.

Let’s hope Van the Man got as much of a kick out of it as we did.

Van Morrison plays the Bridgewater Hall in Manchester again tonight. £30 - £45. Call 0161 907 9000.
-Helen Tither

Chris sent in this review:

Last night was my 3rd time of seeing Van live in Manchester. The Bridgewater Hall is the perfect venue as it offers crystal clear sound and it's pretty much impossible to find a bad seat. In recent interviews Van has stated that too many people are obsessed with the past, and whilst he did deliver a few classics for the casual fans, most of the show was based around the 00's output, particularly the new album 'Keep it Simple'.

The new songs are actually more suited to the live experience, a certain freshness is invoked that is lacking in the by the book delivery of Brown Eyed Girl and Gloria. The band is the best I've seen (bear in mind I've only been going for the last two years) and with Van strumming his ukulele, they were really jamming last night. The best song however was not one of the new ones but the double whammy of 'Tupelo Honey' leading into 'Why must I always Explain', it's no coincidence that this was the only song where Van picked up his guitar, I wish he would play it more. Van finished before his encore of Gloria with 'Behind the Ritual' which was a little disappointing due to the absence of his 'blah blah blah's' and he didn't really seem to get into it, but on the whole it was another great night with the master.
-Chris

Setlist:
This Love of Mine
Magic Time
Have I Told You Lately
School of Hard Knocks
Keep It Simple
That's Entrainment
End of Land
Song of Home
Bright Side of the Road
Moondance
Stranded
Tupelo Honey>Why Must I Always Explain
Lover Come Back
Soul
Real Real Gone
Precious Time
Help Me
Brown Eyed Girl
Behind the Ritual
Gloria

Big Hand For The Band!
John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Monday, March 24, 2008

Keep It Simple Enters U.K. Charts At No. 10

Billboard:
There was a No. 6 start for Bryan Adams' "11" (Polydor/Universal), and top 10 debuts for two more Universal-signed veterans: Mike Oldfield with "Music of the Spheres" at No. 9 and Van Morrison with "Keep It Simple" (Exile/Polydor) at No. 10.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

22-Mar-08 Bristol Concert Review

Long time fan, Pat checks in with his review:

I think this is the biggest band i have ever seen playing with Van. I think there were twelve of them on the stage including Van and they sound great. I think Bobby Ruggerio is the musical director now and must run the band through their paces when Van is busy in the afternoons with his lawyers. Whatever you say about Van though he doesn't skimp on his musicians. It must cost a fortune to keep this lot on the road.I did bring a notebook to write down the set list but when i looked at it on the way home i couldn't read my own writing. It was just a lot of drunken scribble. Sorry if i have forgotten some songs. I think the first song they did was This Love Of Mine. Sarah featured on steel guitar and i know some of the fans don't like her sound but i think she is great. Real Real Gone was next i think followed by Stranded which featured some fabulous piano playing. Then there was a great version of Wild Night followed by Tupelo Honey and Why Must I Always Explain.WHAT A BAND! i wrote in my notes so i must have enjoyed that one. School Of Hard Knocks followed which is one of my least favourite songs off the new album. Then Entrainment which i really like with Van on ukulele. Keep It Simple was next and sounded superb, it is a great song.End Of The Land had some great guitar from John Platania. Song Of Home isn't one of my favourites. Bright Side Of The road followed with Sarah featured on the banjo. Jackie Wilson Says followed but i have heard it often enough thank you. Georgia On My Mind was great with some supurb keyboard playing.

Then it was Moondance so i nipped to the gents and went for a quick ciggie out in the street.When i got back the security wouldn't let me in till the end of the next song which i think was Who Can I Turn To. Lover Come Back was great as was Soul which Van played some great saxophone on. Then it was Brown Eyed Girl which took me right back to 79 when i first saw Van at this venue. The next song was the one i had been waiting for,Behind The Ritual which is brilliant and the audience loved it although i think most of them wouldn't be familiar with it. I bet Keep It Simple will sell a few copies in the Bristol area this week. The proceedings were brought to a close with Gloria which was great. What a great night it was. Thanks Van!


Evening Post:
Van Morrison: Colston Hall"Good evening, I'm Van Morrison. It's great to be back in Bristol, thanks for your support. Any requests?"

Only joking. As anyone who's ever seen Van the Man on stage will know, he gives the impression that he'd rather be having root canal surgery than be entertaining the legions of fans who have paid vast sums to watch him, and this sold-out show was no different.

He may only have Lou Reed as competition in the race to be rock's grumpiest man, but it's easy to forgive him when he dips into one of music's finest back catalogues.

Although he doesn't make great records any more, new album Keep It Simple has some good stuff on it and it worked well live; with the title track and Lover Come Back the pick of the bunch.

And of course there was also lots of old stuff, with Bright Side Of The Road benefiting from the unexpected addition of banjo, and excellent versions of Jackie Wilson Said, Moondance and, best of all, Tupelo Honey. Songs old and new were delivered in a voice that's as powerful and soulful as ever, although Van seems to often eschew words altogether in favour of a combination of scat jazz and mumbling.

They finished with the harmonica-driven Gloria, a song that managed the rare feat of being uplifting and downright menacing at the same time.

There's also a wonderful, subtle touch of theatre in a Van Morrison show; the little nods and gestures to members of his note-perfect 10-piece band - with the star being Sarah Jory, whose pedal steel guitar was outstanding and who elevated handclaps to an artform - the man who runs on to move Van's glass of water a few inches, the fact that I think Van looked at his watch at one point (surely not?).

Although Van gave the impression that he'd rather be somewhere else, he was in a minority of one.

8/10

-PAUL DALLISON

Setlist:
This Love of Mine
Real, Real Gone
Stranded
Wild Night
Tupelo Honey/Why Must I Always Explain
School of Hard Knocks
That’s Entrainment
Keep It Simple
End of the Land
Song of Home
Bright Side of the Road
Jackie Wilson Said
Georgia
Moondance
Who Can I Turn To
Lover Come Back
Brown Eyed Girl
Behind the Ritual
Gloria

Big Hand For The Band!
John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Saturday, March 22, 2008

21-Mar-08 Oxford Concert Review

Here is Josh's review:

Van came out PROMPT at 8:00 as the ticket reminded us he would. Going to a Van concert these days with all these rules and regs, I feel as if we are going through airport security - albeit we were allowed to bring through water through, which is quite ground breaking when you think about it. *Note to self: wine in a water bottle. Once in the seat you get a meat head constantly looking around for anyone who may have snuck in a biscuit - I do wonder how aggressive they could get to try and steal your biscuits.

At the Camden Round House last year, he just seemed bored with his material. Magic Time Press Launch in London was the last time I heard all new material.

Van was joking with his band throughout, but perhaps that was just nervous laughter on their part as Van would stare directly over them during a solo - I'm sure there are more comfortable situations to play in. It's a pleasure just watching Van conduct his band, so tight.

"Time to bring the comedy to the front" and in he went to All work and No play. St. James Infirmary is brilliant and I have to say becomes stronger as Van gets older. At 22, it is a real disappointment to think that there are not really any younger musicians who will come close to Van in following his musical talents - maybe Glen Hasard is a worthy hope?

New album began with School of Hard Knocks which I think really comes to life live. On How Can a Poor Boy, he brought the band down to whisper and spoke the lyrics - which is always a highlight for me, "when you don't believe a single thing is true?"

Entrainment, Keep it simple, Soul and Lover Come Back are some of the better tracks for me on the album and reaffirm why I listen to him non-stop. I noticed that hand clapping you fellas keep talking about being used in Entrainment and it literally took over the track at one point. She has real energy for the band. Yet I can't help but find it funny that the track is a bit like "oh look Van learnt a new big word".

End of the Land, Song of Home, No Thing all sort of just role into one and at that point I'm really just hoping he does the new classic.

I Can't Stop Loving You was an unexpected one and was sung well with Van pressing a few keys on the piano before wandering over in perfect timing to grab the mic and belt out the last chorus - amazing.

Next came Behind the Ritual which was absolutely brilliant. Sarah got the whole audience clapping in time, then Van brought it down which the audience followed and the claps silenced slowly with Van making it become so intimate and as he grabbed the mic off the stand, you felt as if this was really going to be one of those moments everyone talks about - not to be! Massive feedback on his mic! Van said 'Big hand for the band' and walked off stage. The moment had gone. If he had just said "Ahh for fuck's sake" maybe it could have been forgiven but it was a real shame - just demonstrates how precious and fragile those moments are for the man. I'll have to go again now.

For an encore he came back to sing Brown Eyed Girl with that black wireless mic he should have had on Behind The Ritual.
-Josh W

Times Online:
Sally from Oxford would like it on record that the Van Morrison tickets she bought for herself and a friend were “a f***ing waste of money”. Forty minutes into the veteran singer's show, both are headed for the exit, alongside several other disgruntled punters. In the foyer, a well-dressed woman in her sixties is berating her son for even bringing her. He, reasonably, is shifting the blame to the chap on stage in a charcoal grey suit and matching fedora, who has so far failed to play any old songs.

Most of the audience stay the course and, occasionally, politely applaud, but the atmosphere inside the New Theatre suggests a sombre recital rather than a pop concert. Or at its worst, a wake. Which isn't entirely fair.

Admittedly, the start of the show is at best banal, with a newly slimmed-down Morrison leading a ten-piece band through early Noughties numbers performed in the style of a Las Vegas lounge act. Magic Time features cheesy Hammond organ and meandering jazz, while All Work and No Play is an easy-listening homage to Morrison's old friend Georgie Fame.

Then comes a lengthy run of songs from the 62-year-old Irish legend's current album, Keep It Simple. On record, they are tasteful blues tracks in the style of his 1970s classic Moondance, but so simplistically arranged that they feel unfinished. Live, they are a revelation. School of Hard Knocks, How Can a Poor Boy and the album's title track all hark back to Morrison's heyday and are sung in the warm, velvety croon that first made him famous. That's Entrainment, on which he switches from alto sax to ukulele, saunters so close to classic Van the Man that you would swear it was an early 1970s demo that he had recently discovered in a bottom drawer and finally got round to recording.

The Oxford crowd, however, have clearly come to hear hits and, one hour in, they are finally rewarded with Bright Side of the Road. Or perhaps rewarded is the wrong word. The banjo-led rendition is blighted by Morrison's mumbled vocals, which extinguish any trace of the original's joyful jauntiness.

A cover of Ray Charles's I Can't Stop Loving You is dreadfully dull and even closing the set with Brown Eyed Girl can't save Morrison from the fangs of angry fans. As the crowd spill into the street, there isn't a smile to be seen.

Van Morrison plays the Cheltenham Jazz Festival on April 30
-Lisa Verrico

Setlist:
The love of mine
Magic time
All work No Play
St. James Infirmary
School of Hard Knocks
How Can a Poor Boy
Entrainment
Keep it simple
Don't go to Nightclubs
Lover come back
End of Land
No thing
Song of Home
Soul
Bright side of the road
Moondance
Precious Time
I Can't Stop loving you
Behind the Ritual
Brown Eyed Girl

Big Hand For The Band!
John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Listen To BBC Radio Interview With Van

Van has begun promoting the new album, Keep It Simple.

In the interview, Van discusses the new songs and performs some of them as well.

He was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's Paul Jones show. Click Listen Again to hear the hour long interview.

Monday, March 17, 2008

BBC Radio Ulster: Astral Weeks Revisited

Listen to the BBC Radio Ulster special to mark the 40th Anniversary of Astral Weeks here. (In the second hour, listen to great all time Van covers!)

Stuart Bailie hosts, Astral Weeks, Wondrous Days:

On Saturday night I watched Duke Special with 23 members of the Inishowen Gospel Choir, with harp and keyboards, xylophone and sundry folk blowing notes across bottlenecks, jug-band style. The song in question was Ballerina by Van Morrison and the aim was to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the album Astral Weeks.

As hoped, the Duke was in imperial form. He located the pain in the song, letting us know that the dancer can barely deliver the gig. But he also found the deliverance, the idea that great art can rise above commonplace problems. A pivotal lyric, "the show must go on", becomes the theme for the evening, as short-term difficulties are fixed and a genuine sense of wonder is despatched from the stage.

Eight different acts have accepted the challenge of taking a track from the Morrison classic. Brian Houston had opened with ˜Astral Weeks itself, inviting us into the slipstream, between the viaducts of your dreams. Cara Robinson had teased out the soul-jazz dimension of Beside You'™ while Brendan and Declan from The 4 Of Us were wowing over Sweet Thing'™.

At very short notice, Matt McGinn walked in and played Cyprus Avenue'™. We were transfixed by the vision, with the leaves falling one by one and the girl radiant with the rainbow ribbons in her hair. Between songs I was sketching out the history of the record, celebrating the references to Belfast and the amazing cultural confidence that had led a 23 year old artist to write this colossal work.

The Winding Stair seemed at ease with ˜The Way Young Lovers Do™, and those odd time signatures were smartly accomplished. Perhaps the most daunting gig of the night was ˜Madame George, that whirling homage to a figure that plays dominoes in drag. It was Ursula Burns who had accepted the mission and she sat with her harp and realised that child-like vision. Perfect. Finally, it was time for Tom McShane and the fragile adieu of ˜Slim Slow Slider'™.

˜Astral Weeks Revisited™ was a collaboration between the Out To Lunch festival and the Oh Yeah project. There's a gallery of images by Phil O' Kane here. It was an education to hear the different acts responding to the music in their individual ways. It was a pleasure to see the audience so lit up by the idea. And if you don'™t own Astral Weeks by now, you really ought to catch up.

Thanks to Simon for pointing this show out - get well soon - we all send our best to you!

Sunday, March 16, 2008

15-Mar-08 New York Concert Review

NY Times:
“Entrainment” is not an everyday word, but it’s a term used in various fields of science. It can describe the phenomenon of one organism rhythmically and internally adjusting itself to another. It’s when life-pulses coordinate.

Fireflies lighting up in synchronization has been described as entrainment. Jazz musicians locking in together is, in its way, entrainment. On Saturday at the United Palace Theater in Washington Heights, Van Morrison used the word about 20 times in a new song. The 11-piece band cycled through three chords, and he sang entirely about love, or entirely about music: hold the words up to the light, and they could go either way.

You when the sun goes down
You in the evening, in the morning when the sun comes round
You with your ballerina dance
Well you put me back in a trance

“That’s entrainment,” he sang in the chorus, six times in a row. Then:

You make me holler, make me holler when you come around
Oh want you to shake your money maker, want you to shake ’em on down
Shake your money maker, shake your money maker, shake ’em on down.

And again: “that’s entrainment, that’s entrainment, that’s entrainment, that’s entrainment, that’s entrainment, that’s entrainment.”

The song, “That’s Entrainment,” is on Mr. Morrison’s new album, “Keep It Simple” (Lost Highway), to be released April 1. Like a lot of the record — and a lot of Saturday’s 90-minute show, which centered heavily on new songs — it’s both nothing special and extraordinarily wise. It’s an album about calming down after a life of rigmarole. On Saturday Mr. Morrison played a ukulele with it, brushing out simple chords. It felt like an instant song, though one that had magically acquired a richly detailed, beautifully practiced accompaniment.

The feeling of the new songs was somewhere between Western swing and rhythm and blues. The band, a weird compound, included pedal-steel guitar, fiddle, trumpet, Hammond organ, piano, a British drummer (Neal Wilkinson) with a perfected Los Angeles studio-session slow groove, and backup vocalists with an archaic, Jordanaires style of ooh-wee-oohing. Mr. Morrison, oblique behind sunglasses and in a dark suit, saying nearly nothing, cued the band throughout. He tugged it and pushed it with abrupt, shooting-hand gestures, working it like a kite. They looked tense, and he looked imperious. It was consummate, exemplary bandleading.

He halted solos or ordered new ones, shut down songs before they outstayed their welcome, made downbeats stronger and quieted the band for little repetitive vocal solos. In his version of “St. James Infirmary” he sang long melismatic stretches on the word “James.” In “Behind the Ritual,” another new song, he sketched out a vision of youthful excess: “Boogie-woogie child in the alley/Drinking that wine, making time, talking out of my mind” — and then stilled the band to a whisper for one of his solos. He sang, “Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah voo-a, voo-a, voo-a, voo-a.”

The moral of that song — the chant that ended up in your head — was up a level from the subject of wine and alleys: it is “behind the ritual/You find the spiritual.” Other new and recent songs dwelled directly on leaving old excesses behind — “don’t need juice to unwind,” “stop drinking that wine, sonny boy” — but they weren’t necessarily moral or health warnings. They suggested that drinking and staying out late was just more ritual, more stuff invented to obscure what matters in the end.
-BEN RATLIFF

Here is Elyssa's review:
Yesterday evening, I headed up to the United Palace Theater in Washington Heights to see the Van Morrison concert.

I hadn't been to Washington Heights for awhile. It is still primarily a Latino neighborhood, but some other ethnic groups have filtered in over the years. Last night, there was an influx of white Baby Boomers and the next generation of Van fans like myself. The theater was spacious and ornate. My $90+ ticket was in the second to last row in the balcony. These concerts are not cheap!

I was sort of miffed at all the concert-goers who don't understand that Van always starts on time. There is a reason the ticket said "7:30pm SHARP!", but I guess some didn't take this seriously. He started at 7:40 and for the next half and hour, the punctual fans had to deal with the late fans coming in, trying to find their seats in the dark. It was quite disruptive and annoying!

Van played almost all new material and his voice sounded great and his 9 piece band was tight. I liked the new songs and will buy the new CD Keep It Simple when it comes out. He only played two older songs, one of which is somewhat obscure and possibly not recognizable to those fans who came to hear "the oldies". I have to admit I was hoping for a few more songs from the 1970s Van catalog, but I respect him for being progressive.

I think everyone was disappointed when he finished the show at the 88 minute mark. If he would have played just one more song, I think the fans would have been happier. As I overhead one fellow concert-goer say to his friend on the way out, "What do you expect? He is 62 years old and played a very strong concert. He's tired and wanted to call it a night." I have to agree that the 88 minutes of performance was solid and he performed with more gusto than I had seen in past concerts. He also played guitar, ukulele, saxophone and harmonica. He did some scat singing and some dancing and clapping--very unusual for the typically reserved Van.

Today, I went to the official website (see highlighted link above) and listened to an interview with him from the Today Programme. After hearing him speak, I respect his desire to be a "working musician" rather than a celebrity subjected to speculations (or as he says "propaganda") about his personality and private life. He also said that he didn't understand the music industry's obsession with the past when he wants to be creating and performing new songs, which is exactly what he did last night.

If you've gotten this far in my post and wonder why I love Van so much, I suggest you check out the CD Van Morrison at the Movies. It's a compilation of some of his better-known songs that have been featured in films that you have probably seen. Hopefully, you will experience the magic in the music that has turned me into a die-hard fan. I feel grateful that I had the good fortune to go see him last night. And to be reminded to "keep it simple"; these are words to live by...

Glide Magazine:
No matter how much success a musician has found or how many sold out shows that person has played over the years, he or she should never forget what got them to the top of the mountain: the fans. The hard-working, 9 am – 5 pm fans who pay good money to attend shows, buy merchandise and, at least before the digital revolution, buy albums.

On Saturday night, my wife and I trekked up to the United Palace Theater in New York City to see Van Morrison, an icon and legend in the music world. The man has put out enough albums to fill a CD rack and has played the best venues around the world for the last 30 years. He knows what he is and the fans know too. He’s a musical genius. A guy with a voice so smooth and silky, it can hypnotize you. He’s funky and jazzy and has one of the most distinct voices in all of music. He is almost mystical. But he’s also clueless.

Fans, including my wife and I, shelled out anywhere from $80 to $350 for tickets and fees to see Morrison perform for a mere 92 minutes on Saturday night. The set was mind-blowing. A fusion of jazz, funk and rock with just enough lullaby to melt you into your seat, Morrison crafted a setlist of mostly newer material and selections from his forth-coming album filled with life and eclectic punch. It was a wonderful set of music. But it wasn’t enough. With a ticket time of 7:30 SHARP (The word SHARP actually appeared on the ticket), Morrison was off the stage and probably on his way to a nice steak dinner before most New York City concerts even get started. It was 9:02 pm and he was already giving a half-hearted bow to the crowd. Read on to find out why Luke thinks Van isn’t the Man…

Now granted, the formula of Set I > 30 minute break > Set II is probably more of a Jamband standard than something that should be considered usual procedure. Van Morrison isn’t going to come out and play a Phish-like marathon or wail into the wee hours like Umphrey’s McGee might. But he certainly could play over two hours the way Eric Clapton, Stevie Wonder or the Police did on their tours last year. Phil Lesh is nearly four years older than Morrison and can play all night. So clearly, it’s not an age thing. It’s an attitude thing. And it seems to cause problems for Morrison away from the stage too.

Morrison, who was reportedly kicked out of an Austin, Texas hotel for a run-in with staff during his SXSW appearance last week, could have given his New York City fans, who showed up on time and lined up in around the block on a cold winter’s night, a chance to enter and get seated before stepping on stage to start the show.

But he didn’t. He got up there when he felt like it and got off stage when he felt like it and paid no mind to the fans. He couldn’t even be bothered with an encore despite the fact that his next scheduled concert date is March 21. This wasn’t a guy giving his road crew a break with a 15-minute head start. This was a guy so impressed with his own accomplishments, he forget how he reached them in the first place. When the house lights came on and the stunned crowd began slipping on warm coats and heading out into the frigid night, a woman behind me said out loud to no one in particular, “No encore? Something must be wrong.” She hit the nail right on the head.
-Luke Sacks

All About Jazz:
The air was cool and the streets were filled with middle-aged transplanted white folks from the suburbs, all making there way to the upper reaches of Manhattan island--175th Street and Broadway, to be precise--the area known as Morningside Heights. The occasion for this excursion was a much anticipated and somewhat rare performance by the iconoclastic singer/songwriter Van Morrison at the magnificent United Palace theater.

The real story of this evening of entertainment was the venue itself, originally built in 1930 as one of three Loews Wonder Theaters designed specifically for vaudeville and theatrical acts. The AIA guide describes its design as “Cambodian Neo-Classical,” and New York Times writer David Dunlap calls it an “Oriental palace of Jewels.” This 3600-seat landmark edifice was the inspiration of famed theater architect Thomas Lamb, whose architectural credits include the original Madison Square Garden on 26th Street and Madison Avenue as well as the famous Ziegfeld theater on 54th and Sixth Avenue. The Palace, as it should be rightfully called, was restored to its original, magnificently excessive opulence in 1969 by the current owners--and what an eyeful to behold. The acoustics, moreover, were exceptionally good all the way to the balcony, where the ornamentation included everything from the Bodhisattva to Joan of Arc.

It was Van Morrison who seemed to come up short of expectations.

The seasoned crowd had come to honor and enjoy the veteran Irish crooner and partake in a little nostalgia but unfortunately were likely disappointed. Garbed in a gray double- breasted suit and with his now trademark fedora and dark glasses, the man they call Van was joined by a 12-piece orchestra that included a drummer, a percussionist, two guitarists, a violinist, an electric bassist, a Hammond organist, a keyboard player, and two back-up singers--one who doubled on trumpet and the other a pedal steel player tripling on dobro and guitar.

Throughout the evening Morrison sang and played saxophone, ukulele and some harmonica. His voice was in fine form and his backing musicians were all accomplished but never allowed to stray from the precise program. The leader's penchant for control was apparent in the relative absence of spontaneity from these capable but harnessed musicians. He never introduced any of them to the audience, plowing through one song after another in a way that left one feeling he had better things to do later on that evening. His apparent control problem manifested itself even in an unbending insistence on starting the show at the precisely appointed time of 7:30 pm. The near impossible task of all 3600 patrons finding parking spaces in this vehicle-unfriendly location and then making opening curtain meant that many in the audience were finding their way to their seats through much of the first half of the show, to the distraction of those of us who were already seated.

When all is said and done we came to hear the man sing and inspire us with jazz-influenced, soulful renderings of his memorable songs. The music he did play was apparently from his upcoming new release Keep it Simple and leaned heavily on traditions that spanned country, blues, Dixieland, rock and roll, gospel, Celtic and a touch of jazz.

Even though an artist is always changing and should not be expected to remain frozen in time rehashing old gems just for old times' sake, an audience deserves some acknowledgment from the artists they have loyally supported over the years. With musicians it usually comes in the form of playing some classics for those who have a special connection with the artist and a particular song. As a long-time fan with several albums I was unable to identify any of the music that he did perform with the exception of his finale, which included a quick-tempo version of his famous “Gloria.”

In speaking with some of the patrons afterwards, it became clear that I was not the only one unfamiliar with the music he played. In fact, most people I talked to found the performance less than thrilling if not a downright disappointment. This is not to say he didn't sing masterfully, which he did, but there was something severely lacking on this evening. In fact, the lack of spontaneity and disconnect with his fans bordered on indifference. It seemed that in an effort to “Keep it Simple” Morrison had gone to the extreme of keeping it uninspired. The crowd came to hear the man they had grown up with, and while they got a journeyman's performance, they ended up giving more than they got. With ticket prices going for double face value, the whole experience left a number of formerly supportive fans feeling totally taken.

Small wonder that the best part of the evening was the discovery of a hidden gem of a palace, the awesome United Palace. Undoubtedly, other performers will find this venue the perfect setting for making it a musical evening to remember. It just too bad Van Morrison wasn't one of them.
-Ralph A. Miriello

Setlist:
This Love of Mine
Magic Time
Little Village
St. James
Stop Drinking
Vanlose Stairway
School of Hard Knocks
Poor Boy
Keep It Simple
Song of Home
No Thing
Entrainment
Nightclubs
Soul
End of the Land
Lover Come Back
Behind the Ritual
Help Me
Gloria/Shot of Rhythm and Blues

Big Hand For The Band!

John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, John Allair, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

14-Mar-08 Boston Concert Review

Boston Globe:
You can depend on Van Morrison. He shows up exactly when your ticket says he will, and there's no need to worry about keeping the baby sitter late. Morrison punches through his 90-minute set as if he has a train to catch. Made famous for his mystical musical journeys, in concert he tends to, as the title of his upcoming record is named, "Keep It Simple." He cares certainly, gripping the microphone and belting out his white-man soul with conviction. But he's become more about consistency than conducting a spiritual self-exam onstage. At 62, hidden by his trademark fedora and sunglasses, Morrison embraces midtempo blues and jazzy shuffles. He's far more Mose Allison than "Into the Mystic."

The fans don't seem to mind. Like Dylan diehards, they accept and embrace their hero's path. Morrison doesn't chat between songs and he doesn't take requests. Even if you're paying several hundred dollars to see him, he's not about to play most of his best known records. Friday night, at the Citi Wang Theatre, Morrison's set included more than half of the adult-oriented R & B on "Keep It Simple," a mediocre album that won't be out for two weeks.

Should we praise such fan loyalty? Should Morrison be lauded for refusing to rest on his catalog? That depends. Fact is, the singer's best moments during Friday night's concert came during the less familiar. "Behind the Ritual" is a mantra of a song that happens to be the best recording on his upcoming album. It built slowly and steadily until his 11-person band hit a groove, and Morrison, inspired into a series of scats, slowly marched off the stage. Morrison's cover of "Stop Drinking" was made gritty by the band's dueling guitarists. Older nuggets such as "Vanlose Stairway" and "Magic Time" were strong as well, and Morrison seemed to dig into his newer, midtempo songs, giving "School of Hard Knocks" and "Soul" tougher readings than on the record.

But he sleep-sang through "Bright Side of the Road" and turned "Moondance," easily the best known song of the set, into a loungey band jam. The hard breaks on record were turned softer than baked brie. Morrison didn't bother singing the second verse, letting his band members take a vocal turn.

That would have been easier to take if Morrison showed he couldn't hit the high notes. But he can. This was a choice, as were the sometimes cheesy arrangements that held back his band, which periodically showed it could pull off country, jazz, and even something approximating garage rock on a few encore verses of "Gloria."

Listening to Morrison sing, watching the smiles as they spread throughout the house, you almost felt guilty to be secretly wishing the singer would put down his sax, grip that microphone, and trot out "Brown Eyed Girl."
-Geoff Edgers

Boston Herald:
At 62, Van Morrison is more than Van the Man. He’s Van the Old Man.

Sometime in the mid ’70s, Morrison struck out from youthful rock ’n’ roll toward adult jazz, blues, r & b and mellow, mystic Caledonia soul. Last night’s packed Citi Wang Theater gig reconfirmed that he’s happy with his course.

Never one for music industry conventions, Morrison spent most of the night playing songs from his yet-to-be-released album, “Keep It Simple.” Sure, it was two weeks before the album is set to hit stores. But nobody cared.

Morrison ran through more than half a dozen new tunes, including “Lover Come Back,” “School of Hard Knocks,” “How Can a Poor Boy” and the too-true “Don’t Go to Nightclubs Anymore.” Mostly they settled into the simmering super club jazz and long-form r & b jams his audience now has come to associate with Morrison.

With Van’s band, it’s the performances, not the songs that matter. The 12-piece volleyed around a tremendous set of licks.

While everyone, including maestro Morrison himself on vocals, sax, harmonica and ukulele, was top notch, steel guitarist Sarah Jory stood out. On Morrison’s big, brassy warhorse “Moondance,” she slid into a succulent solo that turned the old melody inside out.

For a show this good and this adult, it’s a shame Morrison stayed locked in his typically aloof stage presence. OK, so he’s an icon, artist and perfectionist. But, for tickets that ran from $50 to $300, a smile or a “thank you, thank you very much” or some acknowledgement that yourg fans came to see you would be nice.

But that’s Van. If fans are committed enough to come to show after show knowing they’re not going to hear any of his classic tunes other than “Moondance” and few bars of “Gloria,” they’re committed to enduring his dour disposition.

Morrison did almost perk up on the night’s one near-transcendent performance, “Behind the Ritual.” A new song with a very old soul, this long, slow-burning Celtic funk hymn recalled some of Morrison’s best -“Listen to the Lion,” “Saint Dominic’s Preview” and even “Cyprus Avenue.” At 62, when you can still pull out near miracles at the end of the show, your fans are bound to stick with you. Even if it costs them an occasional average tune and $300.
-Jed Gottlieb

Setlist:
This Love of Mine
Magic Time
Don't Worry About a Thing
Bright Side
Moondance
Vanlose Stairway
Stop Drinking
In the Afternoon
School of Hard Knocks
End of the Land
Entrainment
Keep It Simple
Don't Go to Nightclubs Anymore
Soul
Song of Home
No Thing
Lover Come Back
Poor Boy
Behind the Ritual
Help Me
Gloria/Shot of Rhythm and Blues

Big Hand For The Band!

John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, John Allair, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Friday, March 14, 2008

13-Mar-08 Nashville Concert Review

The Tennessean:
“Behind the ritual, you’ll find the spiritual,” Van Morrison sang to close his set at the Ryman on Wednesday, and that pretty much summed up his steady-rolling, 90-minute show. Just as he did at his last stop at the Mother Church, he didn’t run through a litany of his classic tracks but gave his audience a strong dose of where his soul is at now.

A good many of the numbers were from his forthcoming album, Keep It Simple, due on Lost Highway April 1. Backed by an 11-piece rhythm section, including banjo, fiddle, dobro and steel guitar, Morrison ran through country chestnuts like “I Can’t Stop Loving You” and blues staples like Sonny Boy Williamson’s vamping harp workout “Help Me.”

Singing in a horn-like burr--and scatting and swinging through much of his set--Morrison dusted off his alto saxophone for a handful of numbers and even played some “Into the Mystic” style riffs on ukulele. He might not have given his fans what they wanted in terms of back catalog, but he and his band steadily rock body and soul. And from Into the Music’s “Bright Side of the Road” to the encore-closing “Gloria,” he at least gave the faithful a taste of his signature honey.


Mike S. sends in his review:
I'm watching as the firetrucks attempt hopelessly to put out a five
alarm blaze in the aftermath of what could only be called a
smoldering gig at the storied Ryman and if this Nashville crowd is any
example, the new release goes Platinum. Amazing to watch a crowd that
may have come expecting some country and only got Playhouse, to be on
its feet for an entirely new and likely not heard new release. Van
played it in its entirety along with a few from the previous setlist
but no one seemed in the least disappointed and were thunderous in
their acceptance particularly on Entrainment, Ritual, Poor Boy... And
Van was rockin and scattin and completely into the gig... This was one
of those shows I wish I had everyone I knew in the auditorium and
hopefully we'll see it repeated in Boston and NY
Also amazing to see Van introducing an entire new 11 song album
seemingly flawlessly---a tribute to his genius.

Hollywood Reporter:
Van Morrison's new album "Keep It Simple," just released Tuesday, hinges on various roots music forms -- blues, folk, country and the occasional gospel -- and if you're going to limit your U.S. tour to three public shows and a South by Southwest showcase, then Nashville's historic Ryman Auditorium is a strong symbolic location to underscore the premise.

Two years ago, touring behind his country album "Pay the Devil," Morrison gave a stellar, emotional performance at the Wiltern in Los Angeles, but on this evening, the emotions were much more subtle -- unfortunately, so nuanced that much of the night turned into a mellow, mildly satisfying affair.

Dressed in his typical black suit, black hat and sunglasses, Morrison led the band through a 90-minute rendition that set aside, with one exception, the most familiar elements of his catalog, devoting at least half of the performance to "Simple." He fueled every song with his trademark ad-libs: throaty slurred phrases, scat vamps and compulsively repeated words.

It worked at times, particularly when several songs faded to low volume and he punctuated the air with staccato shouts. But mostly, the lines felt like filler, less inspired than required.

The band fared much better, each player weaving lyrical solos on top of his or her predecessor's work with taste and fluidity. Their pass-around solos, tossed out by Morrison with small, undramatic gestures, were somewhat reminiscent of Bob Wills' Western swing shows, a particularly interesting comparison given an unexpected twist in the staging for the program.

Morrison called out the crew early to move the drums from the back of the stage to a more intimate location; Ryman legend has it that in Wills' 1944 debut on the Opry, which did not allow drums, he convinced management to allow drummer Monte Mountjoy to play behind a curtain, only to pull the kit onstage at the last minute.

Rather appropriately, Morrison's one truly inspired section came when he played tribute to the Opry, belting a unique version of late member Don Gibson's "I Can't Stop Loving You." His roller-coaster vocal slides and a shuddering fiddle solo brought deserved applause.

He picked up an even bigger response by closing the night with "Gloria." It was hardly a transcendent version, but garage rock at least stayed with the theme: It doesn't get much simpler than that.
-Tom Roland


Big Hand For The Band!

John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, John Allair, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Thursday, March 13, 2008

12-Mar-08 Austin SXSW Concert Review

Dallas Morning News:
AUSTIN – South by Southwest usually focuses on young buzz bands eager to make their mark. But this year, the opening-night buzz belonged to a cranky geezer who made his mark 44 years ago: Van Morrison.The 62-year-old legend drew an overflow crowd Wednesday night to La Zona Rosa, where he played a set that was puzzling at times, transcendent at others, but never predictable. In other words, it was classic Van the Man.

Van Morrison blew on the sax, but hardly blew away the crowd, at Austin's La Zona Rosa.

He strode onstage wearing a fedora, sunglasses and a hard-core poker face. After a few minutes, he finally acknowledged the audience.

"If someone will turn off that mobile phone, we'll get started," he huffed.

Uh-oh. When the Irish Cowboy turns surly, things can get ugly.

But alas, they never did. Mr. Morrison dove headfirst into the music, immersing himself in the songs, the lyrics and his trademark flights of scat singing. The word "C'mon" turned into a 20-syllable jazz poem. "Bluh bluh" became a 30-second gospel epiphany.

By the end of the hourlong set, he was moaning the blues in a deep voice like the second coming of Howlin' Wolf.

Backed by a tight 11-piece band, he spent most of the show previewing songs from Keep It Simple, his 33rd studio CD, which is due out next month. In "No Thing" and "End of the Land," he brokered a smooth marriage of twang and soul à la Ray Charles' Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music.

He played sax. He played ukulele. But he didn't play a single hit – not even "Moondance," his usual concession to his glory days.

The no-hits approach didn't exactly thrill the audience, which was heavy on music-biz types seeing him for the first time. Instead of cheering after band members soloed – as fans did in December at Dallas' Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center – the audience stood quietly, apparently saving their applause for "Brown-Eyed Girl."

But "Girl" was a no-show, reminding you that Van Morrison isn't a crowd-pleaser – even when the crowd's filled with music-biz VIPs
-THOR CHRISTENSEN

Philly.com:
One of the bonuses of getting to Austin a day before the music festival got completely berserk was getting to see Van Morrison on Tuesday at the Austin Music Hall. It was a non-SXSW gig for Morrison - meaning real people had to pay real money for tickets, rather than flash a badge - who plays an official festival show tonight at La Zona Rosa. And for the Irishman who loves to play hard-to-get, the Texas dates are two of only four dates he's scheduled to do in the United States in support of Keep It Simple, his album out April 1.

Like Keep It Simple, the Music Hall show was typical of the latter-day Van the Man. It's rich, warm and soulful, with impeccable musicianship from a 10-piece band that featured the tootling saxophone and occasional mandolin-playing from its 62-year-old, fedora-wearing front man - and was a bit sleepy.

Morrison's music is so deeply relaxed these days, as it digs into American vernacular forms, that it can be more than a little lulling. Even though the 90-minute show went off at 7 p.m. sharp, the dude next to me was nodding off during "I Don't Go to Nightclubs Anymore," the blues-ballad credo of an aging music lover who sounds as though he'd rather stay home and listen to his Ray Charles records than come out and play. Morrison is still a master at commanding a groove, however, and his voice remains full of feeling even though he doesn't have the range he used to.

He loves to rumble and growl, and placated a crowd eager for old hits with an extended "Moondance," and a perky, Dixieland-flavored "Bright Side of the Road," for which he slipped into a Louis Armstrong imitation, which he also employed on a down-and-out "St. James Infirmary" that I'd love to hear again.
-Dan DeLuca

Austin360:
There was a moment there, when Van Morrison swung into “Don’t Go To Nightclubs Anymore,” a song from his forthcoming album, “Keep It Simple,” when a flicker of ironic disbelief might have ignited behind the singer’s gold-tinted aviator glasses.

After all, just the night before he had played around the corner at the Austin Music Hall, singing for the swells who could spring for tickets that started at a hundred-bucks-and-change. Now here he was, back playing in a former transmission repair shop — La Zona Rosa in its current incarnation — for any snot-nosed punk with a SXSW badge or wristband.

Perhaps he was chagrined by his sudden change in fortune. We snot-nosed punks, however, thoroughly enjoyed the rare chance to savor one of Ireland’s greatest and most enduring exports up close and personal.

Morrison and his 11-piece band mostly confined themselves to tracks off the new album, ranging from the tough, street-gritty old-school R&B of “How Can A Poor Boy” to the more rural, ethereal, Tupelo Honey-esque entreaties of “Keep It Simple” and “Song of Home” and the canny, seemingly effortless pop of “That’s Entrainment.” He also tipped his hat to a native Texan with his affecting rendition of Johnny Bush’s whiskey-soaked anthem, “There Stands the Glass.”

Striking a James Cagney pose in a fedora and tailored gray suit, Morrison moved between saxophone and (who’d of thunk?) ukulele as he and his spit-shine band moved between older material such as “Magic Time” and “This Love of Mine” and a lovely new set-closer, “Behind the Ritual.”

For this listener, whose most recent glimpse of Van Morrison was via a distant video screen far across a field at the Austin City Limits festival the year before last, his La Zona Rosa set was an anomalous episode to savor.
-John T. Davis

NME:
Taking to the stage a few minutes before his scheduled time of 7pm this evening (March 12), Van The Man wore his trademark hat and sunglasses, walking onstage with his saxophone around his neck.

The room, which minutes earlier had seemed like any oversized dive bar, was suddenly transformed into a jazz club, as his opened with ‘This Love Of Mine’, joined by 11 musicians.

After renditions of ‘Magic Time’ and ‘There Stands The Glass’, the Belfast native treated the reverential audience to brand new material from his forthcoming album, pausing to reprimand an audience member whose mobile phone rang as he spoke.

‘We’d like to do the next album. If someone turns off that mobile phone we can start it’ the notoriously difficult singer said curtly.

Morrison had the bars in the venue closed for the duration of his set, while cameras, voice recorders, and any recording or filming device were prohibited throughout his set.

In addition to previewing much of his new LP, Morrison thrilled the crowd with a hit-laden set including performances of ‘Song Of Home’, ‘That’s Entrainment’ and ‘End Of The Land’.


NY Times:
Van Morrison, perpetual outsider, was right at home in Texas, where honky-tonk mingles with blues, R&B and country the way he does. In his club show at La Zona Rosa–a big, packed dance floor–he looked as grumpy as he usually does, but he plunged into his music. Like Bob Dylan, Mr. Morrison tours steadily and changes from night to night; sometimes he’s inspired, sometimes he’s not. But maybe he had something to prove at South By Southwest, playing for an audience that mixed fans and the curious.
He wasn’t looking back. He has a new album, “Keep It Simple,” with songs full of philosophy, regrets, complaints and confessions, and those were the songs he played: no safe oldies. The new songs keep his usual mixture of soul and country, with a little more electric blues guitar than he has been allowing lately. That added bite was redoubled in his voice: he attacked each line, jumping ahead, repeating words in a rush of syllables, scat-singing, even yodeling. He gets more expression from his timing than his tone, and he never just cruised; he pounced on every phrase, sly and wayward, playful and demanding.
As on the album, the finale, “Behind the Ritual,” was a drinking song from a man who doesn’t want to be a drunk, who used to be “talking all out of my mind,” any more. But the song longs for the old intoxication; he misses “drinking that sweet wine,” and the song had a gospelly buildup as he sang about getting “so high in the days gone by.” A drinking song, perfect for a Texas honky-tonk.
-Jon Pareles

Setlist:
1. This Love Of Mine
2. Instrumental
3. Playhouse
4. Magic Time
5. Moondance
6. I Can't Stop Loving You
7. How Can A Poor Boy?
8. That's Entrainment
9. Keep It Simple
10. School Of Hard Knocks
11. No Thing
12. Song Of Home
13. Soul
14. Don't Go To Nightclubs Anymore/Shake Your Moneymaker
15. End Of The Land
16. Bright Side Of The Road
17. Saint James Infirmary
18. Behind The Ritual


Big Hand For The Band!

John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, John Allair, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

11-Mar-08 Austin Concert Review

Austin Chronicle
The sun still shone when Van Morrison took the stage for his unofficial SXSW kick off, but the main thing worrying the capacity crowd at the newly revamped Austin Music Hall was whether the master would "Moondance." Never mind that Van the Man has a perfectly good new album coming out on April 1, Keep It Simple, fools continue to come out of the woodwork expecting an epic, Springsteen-flavored oldies-but-goodies marathon. Meanwhile, the core of the show drew from the new disc. Backed by a full band featuring members of the original Caledonia Soul Orchestra, Morrison killed on bluesy new songs including "School of Hard Knocks," "Don't Go to Nightclubs Anymore," which had the folks down front dancing in their seats, and the titular "Keep It Simple," both a wise koan and a musical philosophy. Given that balcony tickets started at $95, even a short encore would have been a nice gesture after a barely-90-minute set. But Morrison did play "Moondance," albeit padded by band intros, a haunting version of "St. James Infirmary Blues," and left nobody wanting for his spiritualized scatting. Morrison remains in great voice, and after 40 years of rocking, he's earned the right to play it cool.
-DAN OKO

Variety
Without breaking new ground on his new album, much of which filled Tuesday’s show at the recently renovated Austin Music Hall, Van Morrison has returned to mixing up blues, jazz and country in single songs, producing a mellow yet grounded amalgam. It’s mumbled and full of regret and memories, as likely to have a line - lyrical or melodic - lifted from Duke Ellington or George Jones. New album, “Keep it Simple” on Lost Highway, is not about to shake up the world, but it works in concert as the mortar between recent efforts that were strictly jazz or blues, and Morrison is displaying considerable command of the material vocally.
Seventeen-song concert features only two of Morrison’s best-known tunes: “Moondance,” which provides room for a half-dozen soloists, and “Bright Side of the Road.” Two standards were in the set, an emotionally pure “St. James Infirmary” with blissful trumpet-alto sax duet between Crawford Bell and Morrison, and the Ray Charles smash “I Can’t Stop Loving You.”

Charles’ spirit has loomed heavy over Morrison’s work over the last several albums and it appears Morrison is intent on discarding anything that does not work in this mold. Morrison, like Charles in the 1960s, has strived to reconcile, or at least create a central meeting ground, for blues and country music. The meeting place here is relatively languid , which suits the musicians well; in recent years, he has ostensibly had two bands onstage - one full of horns, the other out of Nashville - and only on a handful of tunes did they work together. There is a dominant color though: Bluesy solos were abundant Tuesday evening.

New album features all Morrison originals, highlighted by the few that tap in the late ‘60s, early ‘70s rock firmament. “Behind the Ritual” intersects his “Into the Mystic” and “Drinking Wine Spo-Dee-o-Dee”; “That’s Entrainment,” the term refers to the effect of rhythm on the mind, is a throwback to his ambling word journeys. “Don’t Go To Nightclubs Anymore” references not seeing his buddy Mose Allison, although the song is through-and-through Allison style.

“School of Hard Knocks” and “How Can a Poor Boy” more strictly adhere to a blues formula; “No Thing” brings in a honky-tonk element. Remarkably, the band and leader appear quite comfortable with all of it.

One of just four U.S. dates before a tour of Europe, Morrison performs Saturday at New York's United Palace.
-PHIL GALLO

austin360
Van Morrison took the Austin Music Hall stage, as promised, at the stroke of 7 p.m. Tuesday. Exactly 90 minutes later, he dropped the words “big hand for the band!” into the rambling wrap-up of a song that few listeners seemed to know. About three minutes later, stagehands were clearing instruments, the hall’s harsh fluorescent tubes were on (the place is obviously a work in progress, if acoustics under the balcony are any sign) and listeners were bemusedly filing out. Most may have been Of A Certain Age, but they were clearly willing to risk a 9 p.m. bedtime in exchange for an encore — in fact, many looked annoyed at being sent home so early.

But the show wasn’t as lazy as the perfunctory running time might suggest. True, it slogged down here and there, but Van the Man earned his keep — sometimes gaining artistic cred perversely by not giving the crowd what it obviously wanted: Only two songs in the set list could remotely be called hits. Of those, “Bright Side of the Road” was nearly unrecognizable, countrified with banjo and tambourine; “Moondance,” the early crowd-pleaser, featured a nicely playful lead vocal but also, weirdly, was the tune on which Morrison chose to dish out introductions and perfunctory solos to most of his dozen or so bandmates.

The rest of the evening leaned heavily on tracks from “Keep it Simple,” the songwriter’s forthcoming album, and if the tunes weren’t classic they at least let Morrison prove he’s no slave to the nostalgia circuit. He’ll play the songs he wants, thank you, showing off his capable handling of the alto sax and scatting enough to make the least interesting lyrics worth hearing. The night’s highlight was an oddball: the group’s eerie, New Orleans-inflected take on “St. James Infirmary,” a song nobody paid to hear but all were lucky to get.
-John DeFore

Setlist:
This Love of Mine
Can You Dig It
Playhouse
Magic Time
Moondance
I Can’t Stop Loving You
How Can Poor Boy
That’s Entrainment
Keep It Simple
School of Hard Knocks
No Thing
Professional Jealousy
Don’t Go to Nightclubs Anymore
End of the Land
Bright Side of the Road
St. James Infirmary
Behind the Ritual


Big Hand For The Band!

John Platania, Mick Green, Sarah Jory, Paul Moore, Neal Wilkinson, Bobby Ruggiero, Paul Moran, John Allair, Tony Fitzgibbon, Crawford Bell, Karen Hamill

Sunday, March 02, 2008

01-Mar-08 Frankfurt Concert Review

Here's Petra review of show:
Not many changes of the set list – but Van cuts it short, only 18 songs tonight – maybe he’s got to catch an early flight home ? But nevertheless it’s a beautiful concert for some reason:

He sings ‘In The Afternoon’ instead of ICSLY, a wonderful subdued version. This definitely makes my night – how long have I been waiting to hear this one live on stage ???

Van is in uncharacteristically chatty mood in Francfort tonight – he approaches the audience and talks a lot, tells even stories (Van !!! Stories !!!). For example, he explains how he played gigs in Francfort, ‘in 1962, before most people here were born …’ When someone in the audiences shouts out loudly and repeatedly a request for some old song, he says ‘That was some other me …’

And even when he criticizes what he thinks are failures of his musicians he is still in good mood and jokes to Tony on the fiddle: ‘Do the picking thing!’ A little later ‘He’s got it!’

John Platania plays a stunning guitar solo on ‘Nightclub’, Van great sax on ‘Soul’.

So, another superb concert to remember. And besides the music, we will keep it in mind particularly because of Van being so communicative …

Wiesbadener Kurier: Van served an elegant mix of new songs and old hits. Soul ballads and hip Rhythm'n'Blues, thanks to a lively backing band.

Set list:

1. This Love Of Mine
2. Magic Time
3. Playhouse
4. (Shot Of) Rhythm ‘n’ Blues
5. In The Afternoon > Ancient Highway >Raincheck > Mystic Church
6. Stop Drinking
7. Moondance
8. How Can A Poor Boy
9. That’s Entrainment
10. Keep It Simple
11. No Thing
12. School Of Hard Knocks
13. Don’t Go To Nightclubs Anymore
14. Lover Come Back
15. End Of The Land
16. Soul
17. Song Of Home
18. Behind The Ritual

Big hand for the band!

Steel guitar, slide guitar – Sarah Jory
Electric, acoustic guitars – John Platania, Mick Green
Bass – Paul Moore
Keyboards – Paul Moran
Fiddle – Tony Fitzgibbon
Percussion – Bobby Ruggiero
Drums – Neal Wilkinson
Trumpet – Crawford Bell
Background vocals – Katie Kissoon, Karen Hamill
Sax, harp, ukulele – Van

[Image via Wiesbadener Kurier]

Saturday, March 01, 2008

29-Feb-08 Cologne Concert Review

Here is Petra's take on the show:
Just one bad thing to be mentioned: The Palladium is an unseated hall. While it is a challenge yet bearable to stand for hours and hours – particularly if you are not that young anymore – I definitely loathe being stuck in a crowd of insensitive people holding plastic beer cups, shouting, whistling and having to fight for a little space and view.

But actually this was annoying during Shirley Grimes’ support act only – once Van is on stage all pain recedes to the darkness ...

Good to see John Platania and Katie Kissoon to be back to Van’s band. And it soon becomes obvious that this is going to be a good evening. What a pleasure to sense, watch and hear how this band enjoys playing together! And – big surprise – so does Van tonight !

Van doesn’t talk much to the audience in Cologne (just compare to the Francfort review !) but he smiles a lot, jokes with the band, and although he is sitting on a chair throughout a part of the show he appears to be in good mood, voice and condition.

The starter ‘This Love Of Mine’ with Van playing sax is followed by some well-known titles before he introduces his band members during ‘Moondance’ giving each of them the opportunity to lay down a beautiful solo. Sad to say he does not mention the excellent background singers, the same occurs the next evening in Francfort.

It’s now we get to hear the new album – all 11 Van-penned songs never heard before !!!
They are undoubtedly great, with Van playing sax and harp on just a few of them. Van wanted to ‘Keep It Simple’ as the album title suggests – maybe this is part of it ?

‘Don’t Go To Nightclubs Anymore’ is a superb blues, ‘Song Of Home’ sounds very Irish, ‘School Of Hard Knocks’ is another classical Morrison complaint about the bad world. ‘That’s Entrainment’ and ‘Behind The Ritual’ might become my personal favourites of the new album.

‘Bright Side Of the Road’ brings us back to familiar ground. Van does a lot of vocal tricks on several songs making everybody smile. Then he turns his back to the audience for such a long time the band members start laughing, slightly embarrassed as it seems ... Funny to see Van play ukulele on ‘Keep It Simple’ and ‘Behind The Ritual’.

‘Bring me my nightshirt’ - ‘Help Me’ is an appropriate closer for a fine evening. Surprise – no crowd pleasing Glorias and brown eyed girls around – who cares ? Van seems to be content with his audience tonight, even says ‘Dankeschoen’. And we were in fact grateful for a good concert.

Another surprise to me was the – for a Van concert - unusual young audience in both places, many of them around 20. It was a pleasure to watch how they visibly enjoyed the music – some of them with their eyes closed, enraptured expression on their faces. Who would have thought that Van is going to attract another generation with his music? Maybe last year’s Best Of releases are the reason? Or the Movies album, the re-released old cd’s? You can only guess but it’s great anyway!

Sometimes Van sings ‘It’s just a job, you know, it’s not sweet Lorraine ...’ But who believes after a show like tonight? ‘Magic Time’ would be the right title ...

You folks out there in the United States, UK, Spain and wherever Van tours next may look forward to great shows if it’s going to be like here tonight ...

Here's Uwe's review:
It was a rainy day in good old Cologne, but inside the old factory building the sun was shining....

Van was in a very good singing and playing mood and the band followed the instructions of the master well.

Van was very relaxed (sometimes performing sitting on a chair) and was joking throughout the concert with the members of the band.

But as well he was arranging the band (f.i. when he wanted the drummer to use brushes instead of drum-sticks or when he wanted the string-player (excuse me that I don't know his name at he moment) to play the violin instead of the mandolin to get the correct sound....) and "forced" them to give their best, just as he did !!!

So it was a great evening and my wife and me were glad to be there.

All the best
-Uwe

Setlist:
1. This Love Of Mine
2. Magic Time
3. Playhouse
4. (Shot Of) Rhythm ‘n’ Blues
5. Stop Drinking
6. I Can’t Stop Loving You
7. Moondance
8. How Can A Poor Boy
9. School Of Hard Knocks
10. That’s Entrainment
11. Keep It Simple
12. Don’t Go To Nightclubs Anymore
13. Lover Come Back
14. Soul
15. End Of the Land
16. Song Of Home
17. No Thing
18. Bright Side Of The Road
19. Precious Time
20. Behind The Ritual
21. Help Me

Big hand for the band!

Steel guitar, slide guitar – Sarah Jory
Electric, acoustic guitars – John Platania, Mick Green
Bass – Paul Moore
Keyboards – Paul Moran
Fiddle – Tony Fitzgibbon
Percussion – Bobby Ruggiero
Drums – Neal Wilkinson
Trumpet – Crawford Bell
Background vocals – Katie Kissoon, Karen Hamill
Sax, harp, ukulele – Van