23-September-2011 St. David's Hall, Cardiff, Wales
South Wales Echo
With a reputation for unpredictability that precedes him like the proverbial elephant in the room, you’re never quite sure what sides of the enigmatic but glacial Northern Irish musical legend you’re about to encounter in the live arena.
Van the Man had already got tongues wagging by charging a £100 top ticket price for his Cardiff show, seemingly unfathomable in an area mired firmly in recession.
As a result there were a fair few gaps in the auditorium, although it has to be said the most expensive seats were full of Morrison aficionados urging on their hero.
Dressed in trademark hat and shades, the iconic tunesmith didn’t utter a single word to the audience throughout the show.
But then I guess with songs as great as his, he can let the music do the talking.
And what a set he delivered.
Opening with a lithe, freeform version of Moondance, the ‘70s classic set the standard for all that was to come.
Stood behind a mic stand which bore his only concession to rock ‘n’ roll ego – the gold letters V and M – he took us and his hugely-skilled seven-piece band on an exhaustive 100-minute run through his glittering back catalogue.
Van’s players orchestrated his sublime work with the verve and interpretative skills of a jazz outfit as the maestro changed the direction of songs with a mere flick of his hand, while his band played on their nerves and their talent to mine a rich groove at their master’s request.
It was an unforgettable evening choc full of his greatest compositions. Brown Eyed Girl, Real Real Gone, Have I Told You Lately That I Love You, In The Garden, Ballerina and an especially sumptuous Little Village all wore the rosy glow of the warmest of hypnotic songwriting – a delicious collision of stunning soul, jazz, roots and blues.
A blistering Gloria brought proceedings spinning to a spellbinding close as we were left dazed and beautifully bruised by the experience.
So the iceman cometh and frankly he melted our hearts.
-Dave Owens
Setlist (Thanks To Mike S.)
Moondance
Higher than the World
Song of Home
Fair Play/Take It Where You Find It
Real Real Gone
All in The Game/You Get Your Assignment/No Plan B/No Safety Net/This is It (new material)
Talk is Cheap
Crazy Love
Little Village
In the Garden
St James Infirmary
Brown Eyed Girl
Have I Told you Lately
Ballerina
Help Me/Wanna Rock That Boat/Too Late To Stop Now
Gloria
South Wales Echo
With a reputation for unpredictability that precedes him like the proverbial elephant in the room, you’re never quite sure what sides of the enigmatic but glacial Northern Irish musical legend you’re about to encounter in the live arena.
Van the Man had already got tongues wagging by charging a £100 top ticket price for his Cardiff show, seemingly unfathomable in an area mired firmly in recession.
As a result there were a fair few gaps in the auditorium, although it has to be said the most expensive seats were full of Morrison aficionados urging on their hero.
Dressed in trademark hat and shades, the iconic tunesmith didn’t utter a single word to the audience throughout the show.
But then I guess with songs as great as his, he can let the music do the talking.
And what a set he delivered.
Opening with a lithe, freeform version of Moondance, the ‘70s classic set the standard for all that was to come.
Stood behind a mic stand which bore his only concession to rock ‘n’ roll ego – the gold letters V and M – he took us and his hugely-skilled seven-piece band on an exhaustive 100-minute run through his glittering back catalogue.
Van’s players orchestrated his sublime work with the verve and interpretative skills of a jazz outfit as the maestro changed the direction of songs with a mere flick of his hand, while his band played on their nerves and their talent to mine a rich groove at their master’s request.
It was an unforgettable evening choc full of his greatest compositions. Brown Eyed Girl, Real Real Gone, Have I Told You Lately That I Love You, In The Garden, Ballerina and an especially sumptuous Little Village all wore the rosy glow of the warmest of hypnotic songwriting – a delicious collision of stunning soul, jazz, roots and blues.
A blistering Gloria brought proceedings spinning to a spellbinding close as we were left dazed and beautifully bruised by the experience.
So the iceman cometh and frankly he melted our hearts.
-Dave Owens
Van Morrison made a no frills enterance at 7.45 prompt,strapped on his sax and from the start, left the audience in no doubt as to who was running the show.
He directed his technically perfect seven-piece band with no more than a hand-movement, and from the first riveting notes of Moondance, to his finale,Gloria, when he made a James Brown, prompt exit with no encore we knew we were in the presence of a master.
What had come between those two songs two songs was something else. Indulging himself and his band and turning St David's Hall into an intimate jazz club, the set-list was nothing short of impressive.Hhe included Song of Home, Real Real Gone, Plan B, and of couse the classics, Crazy Love, Brown Eyed Girl and Have I Told You Lately The spiritual In the Garden was amazingly good, with Van just breathing into the microphone for over a minute whilst the band played on. An impromtu rant at Twitter and Facebook provided a tinmely extra verse to Talk is Cheap.
At 65, this is a man firmly at the top of his game, the concert was nothing less than extraordinary.
-Steven Healy
Ivo sent in this review
Something extraordinary happened in Cardiff yesterday after the ‘Finsbury Park band’ had taken the stage in front of a by far not sold out St. David’s Hall crowd, played a rather mediocre Moondance, and kicked off Higher Than The World (yes, Higher Than The World). Pure bliss filled the air, and that resulted some 50 minutes of musicianship of the absolute highest level, after which some 40 minutes of ‘just’ great music followed.
I’ve seen Van a couple of times over the past few years, and this was by far – and I mean by far – the best concert I’ve seen. Jay Berliner was back in town, and Van was clearly pleased with the way he played (Jeff Lardner and Paul Moran still got their fair share of comments along the way though).
Overall the band was very tight. It felt a bit like the jazz band Van had back in ’95, but this one is so together (a real band!) that it can take a song in any direction with the slightest of hand signals by Van. Ever heard Talk Is Cheap being whispered, with an extra verse about Facebook and Twitter? It happened yesterday. Ever heard Van just breathe for a minute, and nothing else, during In The Garden, while the band played on? It happened yesterday. And when Van says himself that it is too good to stop during Help Me, you know someone is having fun.
The absolute highlight of the evening, in my book, was You Know What They’re Writing About. Over six minutes of Van caressing, shouting, taking apart the (new?) sentences ‘It’s an assignment – There’s no plan B! No plan B!! No safety net!’, raising the level of intensity as he took them apart in very different ways, before moving to the regular ‘Meet me down by the river’ sequence.
This was a concert that demands to be heard. It was that freaking good! And … a very, very big hand for the band too. It’s the best Van has had in many a year.
-Ivo D
Setlist (Thanks To Mike S.)
Moondance
Higher than the World
Song of Home
Fair Play/Take It Where You Find It
Real Real Gone
All in The Game/You Get Your Assignment/No Plan B/No Safety Net/This is It (new material)
Talk is Cheap
Crazy Love
Little Village
In the Garden
St James Infirmary
Brown Eyed Girl
Have I Told you Lately
Ballerina
Help Me/Wanna Rock That Boat/Too Late To Stop Now
Gloria