Monday, August 31, 2015

Paste Magazine


Van Morrison: Between the Heart and the Throat




From a conversation between the psychologist R.D. Laing and Van Morrison in 1973:
LAING: All the times that I’ve listened to your voice, you seem to sing somewhere between your throat and your heart. Sometimes it’s right in your heart, sometimes it’s more up in your throat. When you do that now, is that the zone that you want to both come from and resonate in other people, the heart…
MORRISON: Eventually it’ll get into the heart. That’s what the eventual goal is—Exactly.

Van Morrison’s voice interests me because it seems inexplicable, misaligned somehow from his body and even his experience. The gift of the golden throat may have been given to the recipient most constitutionally unsuited for it. Biographies of Morrison are rough going if you’re a fan: very few people have anything nice to say about him. Recurrent adjectives used to describe him include distant, uncommunicative, arrogant, sullen, angry, grumpy, drunken, unpredictable, cutting, brusque, dismissive, moody, bitter.

In his voice there’s pain and comfort, a squealing anger. Resentment, and a squall, a snuffle. The meandering arrow of a fitful quest for transcendence. Or perhaps something more like a ley line—an invisible force of magnetism that compels you whether or not you’re aware of the secret nature of its influence. A Protestant Northern Irish mysticism, rough-and-tumble and pragmatic. B.B. King said about Morrison: “His voice is pure, yet bitter.”

The first time I saw Van Morrison was at the 2007 Jazz and Heritage Festival in New Orleans. Still visible on the fronts of many of the houses around the Fairgrounds where the festival was held was the brutal graffiti (numbers, X’s, markings like tic-tac-toe) left by rescuers checking the houses for the living and the dead after Katrina. In April it was already so hot it verged on the unbearable. It was the weekend I learned that what I thought were small horses leading tourists on carriage tours through the French Quarter were in fact mules—horses couldn’t survive the New Orleans humidity, at least according to my friend.

Morrison was horrible—turgid, sedate, and indifferent. We listened to him from what seemed like a quarter of a mile away, unable to penetrate further into the sea of lawn chairs, beach umbrellas and sunburned frat boys eating crawfish Monica and yelling for “Brown-Eyed Girl.” There were a lot of jazz and blues covers, a lot of mid-tempo numbers. Dr. John may or may not have made a guest appearance on piano. Nothing caught fire. He seemed sleepy; his voice never really got out of his chest. I was incredibly disappointed.

The second time I saw Van Morrison was less than a year later, at the South by Southwest festival in early March 2008 in Austin, Texas. A few nights before his headlining gig at the Austin Music Hall, Morrison played a set at a small club called La Zona Rosa. Both shows were ostensibly to promote his new album Keep It Simple, which was about to be released. I had a press pass and, after a long meandering wait in line, was able to get into the club. I knew no one else there.

There was a sign at the bar saying that it would be closing five minutes before the set started, “by request of the performer,” and would remain closed for the duration of the performance. Coming from a musician who was notorious for enjoying a drink or two over the years, this move struck me as deeply perverse, and therefore admirable. I drank bourbon while I still could and checked out the assembled crowd of mostly English and American journalists. One English guy next to me was audibly dictating the first two paragraphs of his review of the show into a hand-held recorder a good half-hour before it actually began.

The eight- or nine-piece band, serious professionals, came onstage a few minutes before he did. He kind of lurched in front of the microphone from stage right suddenly and violently, even though I remember some sort of typical showbiz introduction by a member of the band: “Ladies and gentlemen, would you please welcome the one, the only, Van the Man… VAN MORRISON!” From 15 feet away, and from a vantage point several feet below him, he still looked short. He wore sunglasses and a fedora and sang into a gold-plated microphone and a gold mic stand accessorized with the letters VM.

Few concessions were made to the crowd, or to his back catalog of beloved, popular songs. Almost every number was drawn from the new album, with the exception of a cover of Webb Pierce’s classic alcoholic country lament “There Stands the Glass” that was especially ironic to listen to with the bar standing in darkness behind us. One review I read later said that Morrison told someone in the crowd to fuck off, but I don’t remember it happening.

After maybe half an hour, something started to shift. Morrison began to attack the syllables of the songs, biting them off, snarling and growling, repeating them in unpredictable flurries and bursts. He reminded me of a bulldog, a prizefighter with a broken face, an old heater warming up. His pale cheeks flaked away from the sides of his sunglasses like fresh-baked biscuit.

The last song he played was the best song on the new album, but I didn’t know that at the time. It started with a gentle rhythm on guitar and ukulele, and quietly he began singing about drinking wine and making time in the alley. It felt fluid and precise. Even the most blasé and exhausted-looking journalists glanced up from their electronic devices and began paying attention. He chanted “Behind the ritual/you find the spiritual” in a low growl again and again, until the words seemed to unmoor themselves from their network of associations and meanings and float free into a zone of spontaneously generated syllables and sounds. His teeth drew back as he sang, and he seemed for a few moments to be transported into a trance, an elongated pause of drawn-out time that manifested in the form of evanescent vocalized phonemes that disappeared the instant they were produced.

At first I wasn’t sure if he was singing what I thought he was singing, but after a moment it was clear that he was: “Blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah,” the syllable most associated with meaninglessness, nonsense, blather, sung with such inexplicable fervor and charged with such momentarily perverse passion that it was as if all previous language had been boiled down to that single (plosive, sibilant) unit, where it could either end or begin again.

He reached a point of fine frenzy, put the microphone back in its gold-plated stand, said “Let’s hear it for the BAND!” and abruptly walked off stage. The band kept playing for three or four minutes. Morrison did not reappear to play an encore or take a bow. It was unclear how much time had elapsed during the last song, what exactly had happened onstage.

The third time I saw Van Morrison was in the summer of 2013 in what was essentially a cornfield deep in the heart of Oxfordshire, England. Morrison was headlining the final night of the Cornbury Festival, a typical, if smallish, British summer music festival that nevertheless proved extremely difficult for my date and me to make our way to, even though it was ostensibly only 30 or 40 miles away from Oxford, where we were staying. Getting there without an automobile proved baffling and difficult, especially on a Sunday, when in the British hinterlands, the availability of public transportation grows thin on the ground or nonexistent altogether. Our journey to the festival site involved a late-running train, a missed shuttle bus and a long, awkward cab ride with a driver who seemed befuddled and slightly miffed by our request to go to Cornbury, even though it was the only event of note taking place within any significant distance of the taxi stand that afternoon.

We walked for half a mile from where the cabbie dropped us off and asked directions from about four volunteers before we finally were directed to the proper location. We seemed to be the only Americans there, as well as the only people who didn’t know exactly where we were going and what we were doing. It was about 10 minutes past 6 p.m.; we assumed we had arrived early enough, with time to spare and wander around in. Van Morrison, festival headliner, would surely go on around 8 or 9 p.m., with the sun slowly setting picturesquely behind him in the background. The very nice women who took our tickets and affixed complicated, multicolored cloth bracelets to our wrists informed us that Mr. Morrison was currently onstage and had started his performance at 6 p.m. sharp, per his personal request. I expressed surprise that the headliner was playing so early in the evening, and she murmured something less than complimentary about Mr. Morrison’s behavior in and about the Cornbury complex that afternoon. “I think he does whatever he wants to do, whenever he wants to do it, frankly…regardless of how it affects others!” She pointed us in the right direction, and we followed a vague, Morrisonesque sound down a gently sloping hill before finally arriving at a large stage in front of which were sprawled several thousand nice-looking British people, many of whom were in the process of conducting extensive picnics and apparently had been for quite some time. The man himself was a small blot a quarter of a mile away, a backdrop of rolling cornfields behind him in the distance.

We darted to the far right, skirting most of the main mass of the crowd, angling our way as close to the stage as possible without causing disturbance to any picnics, until we were probably a few hundred feet away. Somewhere in the course of our journey from the back (not front) gate to the stage, I told my date, “If he starts scatting, or doing any sort of vocal improvisations, really, we’re in luck. He’s into it. It’ll be a decent show.”

We found a spot to stand behind a group of neo-hippieish women in their 40s who had by all appearances been drinking white wine for several days straight. A Big Joe Williams cover dating from Morrison’s Them days, “Baby Please Don’t Go,” rendered straightforwardly but passionately. No scatting yet, but nothing to complain about, either. His voice was there, shockingly well-preserved and rich, which surprised me somehow, and he seemed less detached, more relaxed and engaged than the last time I’d seen him, five years earlier. There is a soupiness, an inoffensive, middle-of-the-road quality, a leaden, dozing sound to much of Van Morrison’s work in the ‘80s and ‘90s that bothers me, makes being a fan of his occasionally embarrassing, and for a few moments early on in the set I’m worried the show could slide in that direction. The setlist is much more greatest-hits-oriented than the earlier shows I’d seen, and somewhere about five or six songs in, in the middle of a real crowd-pleaser—“Jackie Wilson Said” or “Real Real Gone”?—he wanders off script for the first time, with a joyous burst and volley of bop-bop-bop-dit-dit-dits. I nudge my companion, raise my eyebrows to her affirmatively. The Belfast cowboy might take flight after all.

Somewhere in a three-song sequence near the end of the set that includes a barn-burning cover of the Sonny Boy Williamson blues classic “Help Me” followed by one of the only new songs in the set, “Pagan Heart,” and a wild, blues-drenched, Ray-Charles-inflected version of the Don Gibson country number “I Can’t Stop Loving You,” the rough magic shakes forth, and the angry angel in Morrison’s phlegm and windpipe presses a bruise onto the afternoon. Evidence of the intrusion is traced on my ganglia and nerves. The lion is in full roar, whole invented choruses, refrains, plots and subplots of growls, slurs, pops, blue notes, proclamations and exclamations in strange Irish and American tongues. At one point, he stands stock-still in the center of the stage with his head tilted all the way back, microphone held above him like a raised scepter, barely moving for a full two or three minutes, again suspended in some sort of temporary trance.

In a 2009 interview on the CBS show Sunday Morning, Morrison says that if he can find a way to get into such a “place” on stage, where he can receive (from where, he does not indicate), he considers the performance successful, but he’s often prevented from doing so, for whatever reason. Perhaps that’s what I had seen and heard—seen and not heard, actually—for so much of the first two hours I’d spent in the same space with him: that thwarted effort. Few find themselves in that space ever, or do so completely by accident. The sunglasses must help shield him, make such a public entrance into such a private space more possible, likely, bearable. Greil Marcus says that Morrison’s best work takes place in “a continuous present.” This place he seeks, on stage and in the studio, exists in that continuous present somehow, and when he enters into it, it does something extraordinary to the quality of the sound and texture of his voice—changes its relationship to language—makes it an enterprise both transcendent and absolutely simple.

Later on, he plays both harmonica and saxophone, conducts his small horn section and walks off stage while still singing the chorus to “Gloria,” a song he wrote in 1964 when he was 19 years old. No encore. Mystery intact. Corn swaying everywhere behind him.

Throughout his life, Van Morrison has been periodically fascinated by the mystical and the supernatural, the occult and the astral. In the late 1980s, a German Rosicrucian master met with several members of Morrison’s touring band and told one of them, Clive Culbertson, that, in regard to his voice, Morrison was essentially in the karmic grip of what was called “an Angelic Knot.”

“I was told that from a past life through certain occult works he had been involved in, there had been a knot placed in his throat and that had a lot to do with his mood swings. Energy would come in there. That was where he was caught. The German Rosicrucian master told me…all this. He offered, at no cost to himself or no signing to anything, to break this knot of these other beings that were around [Morrison]...The darker parts of him are operating through the throat chakras. That’s where his message was coming from. The energy that’s coming from there could be used for lighter, holier things. He could free himself, but it’s a past life committing him, from a ritual commitment he had made [in a previous existence] that’s karmically still with him.”

Who knows?

Jeff Fallis teaches in the English department at Clemson University and lives in Athens, Georgia. His writing has appeared in The Oxford American, Ploughshares and The Iowa Review.

Friday, August 28, 2015

24-August-2015
Slieve Donard Hotel

 Newcastle, Northern Ireland

Brendan Hynes sent in his thoughts on night 2 at Slieve Donard
As on the previous night, the second concert by Van Morrison at this venue started well ahead of the scheduled start time but on this occasion as the band took to the stage we had the added bonus of seeing Irish broadcaster and game-show host Marty Whelan leap onto the stage to lead the audience in a rendition of Happy Birthday specially for Van. At this point I almost anticipated Van being carried shoulder high through the audience onto the stage but alas it didn’t materialise. Celtic Swing and Close Enough For Jazz gave the show itself a pretty predictable opening before By His Grace got proceedings properly under way. Wild Honey got a rare but welcome airing but suffered somewhat from an apparent breakdown in communications where Dana Masters stopped singing a verse as if she was expecting an instrumental solo but it didn’t materialise which resulted in the band just playing but no one singing. Playhouse got another airing to great acclaim with Dave Keary and Paul Moran excelling with guitar and organ solos respectively. Mystic of the East which followed was the highlight of the night for me with Van playing guitar and singing and humming over it as only he can do. Magical!.

The lively Guitar Slim number Things I Used To Do was followed by Van telling us he had a request which turned out to be Who Can I Turn To? (featuring a great Paul Moran trumpet solo) but not before a fan had shouted out looking for Not Supposed To Breakdown from the Philosopher’s Stone album. Van explained that they didn’t perform that song and hadn’t rehearsed it but encouragingly he did say ‘next time’ which would be a great treat as it is another neglected musical gem from his incredible repertoire that I would love to hear live.

Moondance was notable for a great piano solo by Paul Moran(one more time) and was quickly followed by another eminently forgettable version of Brown Eyed Girl.An outstanding Carrying A Torch was followed by a really good Cleaning Windows which saw the gentleman from the previous night reprise his John Travolta dancing role to great acclaim. The absence of the brass section was, however, particularly noticeable on this song and they would undoubtedly have enhanced it further but it nevertheless went down a storm and received a standing ovation from many of the audience .Days Like This and Precious Time rather surprisingly were played again tonight and were followed by an absolutely blistering version of Think Twice Before You Go with Van and the band perfectly synchronised and earning another standing ovation.Whenever God Shines His Light and Baby Please Don’t go/Parchman Farm/Don’t Start Crying Now kept the tempo up and got a great reaction yet again.

At this point Van told us he was going to slow things down and he embarked on It’s All In the Game.Van referenced Jimmy Witherspoon as having also recorded the song and told us that he had been an artist who used to engage in the old blues tradition of ‘testifying’.Van did some ‘testifying’ himself at this point to the extent that he didn’t get to bring us to the burning ground and the song delivery came nowhere near the heights reached the previous night.After departing the stage, Van returned for a brisk rendition of Gloria before leaving the band to bring proceedings to a close which they did to great effect, especially Dana doing some wonderful chanting over the music.

The set time was 1 h 38 m and while there were a number of outstanding moments I didn’t feel the concert matched the previous night’s quality.

Brendan Hynes

Setlist
Happy Birthday (sung from the audience)
Celtic Swing
Close Enough For Jazz
By His Grace
Wild Honey
Playhouse
Mystic of the East
Things I Used To Do
Who Can I Turn To
Moondance
Brown Eyed Girl
Carrying a Torch
Cleaning Windows
Days Like This
Precious Time
Think Twice Before You Go
Whenever God Shines His Light
Baby Please Don't Go/Parchment Farm
Cry Cry Baby
All in the Game
Gloria

Big Hand for The Band!
Dave Keary (Guitar)
Paul Moore (Bass)
Paul Moran (Keyboards)
Bobby Ruggiero (Drums)
Dana Masters (Vocals)

23-August-2015
Slieve Donard Hotel

 Newcastle, Northern Ireland

Brendan Hynes sent in this review
And so it finally came to pass after many months of great anticipation for one of the largest ever gatherings of Van Morrison fans that the week long musical celebration of Van’s 70th birthday and career finally got under way in earnest with the first of two shows at the venue.

Arriving on stage around 15 minutes ahead of schedule, Van opened as usual with Celtic Swing before a welcome rendition of Higher Than The World which followed. Next up was a stirring Kingdom Hall which went down a treat although the sight of Van so obviously reading the lyrics as he sang was a bit off putting.Carrying a Torch featuring nice vocal exchanges between Van and Dana Masters was a treat yet again and hugely appreciated by the very enthusiastic audience.Magic Time,Days Like This and Choppin Wood followed in quick succession and were well performed without reaching any great heights.The same could not be said of Mystic Of the East which followed which was quite beautiful and so appropriate for the concert setting.Deep in the Heart of Down is right!. A fairly rip roaring Playhouse followed and when played live like this it certainly stands up well by comparison with other top songs in the country rock songbook. I Can’t Stop Loving You was well delivered as was Whenever God Shines His Light which featured a brilliant Dave Keary guitar solo.Another but quite different sounding guitar solo on Precious Time was met with laughter by Van who was quite clearly impressed.

At this stage we were treated to something quite different with Van performing a stunning cover of Cole Porter’s Miss Otis Regrets which quite rightly received a standing ovation from many of the audience. Enlightenment and HelpMe followed in quick succession with the latter being a particularly good version.Baby Please Don’t go/Parchman Farm/Don’t Start Crying Now went down an absolute storm so much so that one more senior audience member could supress his exuberance no longer as he leapt to his feet and engaged in some slick dance moves between the tables.What a mover and shaker!After all that excitement Van told us he had a request and what followed was a brilliant All In The Game with Van getting right into it and bringing us into You Know What They Are Writing About before heading to the Burning Ground.On and on it went as Van gave us one of those real magical moments that one yearns for when attending a Van concert.Van shuffled off stage to bring the song to it’s conclusion as the audience jumped to their feet and roared their approval. Van returned one more time to deliver Ballerina but with many of the audience now storming to the front of the stage Van seemed somewhat uneasy and he cut short his rendition leaving the band to finish the job which they did with fine extended solos.
The concert length was 1 h 39m and it provided a very encouraging start to the week’s proceedings.

-Brendan Hynes

Setlist
Celtic Swing
Higher Than The World
Kingdom Hall
Carrying A Torch
Magic Time
Days Like This
Choppin' Wood
Mystic of the East
Playhouse
I Can't Stop Loving You
Whenever God Shines His Light
Precious Time
Miss Otis Regrets
Enlightenment
Help Me
Baby Please Don't Go/Parchment Farm
Cry Cry Baby
All in the Game
Ballerina

Big Hand for The Band!
Dave Keary (Guitar)
Paul Moore (Bass)
Paul Moran (Keyboards)
Bobby Ruggiero (Drums)
Dana Masters (Vocals)

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Radio & TV Events For Van's Upcoming Birthday Concerts

  

BBC Radio Ulster is marking the 70th birthday of Belfast-born music legend Van Morrison with six days of special programmes, features and events - culminating in an exclusive full, live broadcast of the superstar’s sold-out 70th birthday concert from Cyprus Avenue, Belfast.
Happy Birthday Van
Wednesday 26 August – Monday 31 August
BBC Radio Ulster
bbc.co.uk/radioulster

BBC Radio Ulster is marking the 70th birthday of Belfast-born music legend Van Morrison with six days of special programmes, features and events – culminating in an exclusive full live broadcast of the superstar’s sold-out 70th birthday concert from Cyprus Avenue, Belfast.

Ralph’s Top 70 Van Tracks Countdown
From Wednesday 26 August until Friday 28 August, Ralph McLean presents three two-hour programmes on BBC Radio Ulster each night from 8-10pm, where he will be counting down songs from Van’s illustrious career, which spans more than 50 years. Ralph’s Top 70 Van Tracks Countdown celebrates the Belfast-born musician’s best known work as chosen by BBC Radio Ulster listeners.

Happy Birthday Van
During the week well known personalities from these shores pass on their birthday greetings to the multi-award winning artist in a series of short programmes called Happy Birthday Van. Famous Van Morrison fans such as Barry Douglas, Paddy Maloney, Brian Keenan, Phil Coulter and Sir Bob Geldof discuss how Van inspired them and choose the song that means the most to them. Happy Birthday Van can be heard before 11.55am and approximately 9.50pm from Wednesday 26 August until Friday 28 August and at 8.55am, 11.55pm and 4.55pm on Monday, August 31.

Arts Show
From 6.30pm on BBC Radio Ulster/Foyle, the Arts Show will include a daily celebration of Van Morrison and his work.

Gardeners’ Corner & John Toal
On Saturday 29 August, the Van Morrison themed programmes take a horticultural turn as Cherrie McIlwaine presents a Gardeners’ Corner special featuring gardens and green spaces in east Belfast from 9am. Later that morning, at 11am, John Toal will bring his show live from east Belfast in advance of Van’s two sell-out concerts on Monday 31 August.

Into The Music
And winding up the Van Morrison programming on Saturday 29 August is the special BBC Radio Ulster concert Into The Music at 6.05pm where Ralph McLean introduces local musicians, including The Four Of Us,The Clameens, Anthony Toner, Wookalilly and Ronnie Greer, as they pay a birthday tribute to Van Morrison at the Park Avenue Hotel in east Belfast.

The Story Of Them
On Sunday 30 August at 2pm there is another chance to hear Dan Gordon present The Story Of Them. Who are Them? What are Them? - asked the newspaper ads in 1964. This documentary tells the story of the five-piece rhythm & blues band from Belfast who scored a string of hits including Baby Please Don’t Go and Here Comes The Night.The programme features interviews with band members and, of course, music for the band. This is the story of the incredible rise and fall of one of Northern Ireland’s most famous musical exports.

Van Morrison Live On Cyprus Avenue
And finally on Monday 31 August, the day of Van’s birthday – BBC Radio Ulster will exclusively broadcast Van Morrison’s full 70th birthday concert live from Cyprus Avenue – the street which famously inspired the Astral Weeks track of the same name. Broadcast on BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Radio Foyle from 2.45pm, this is a unique opportunity for Van Morrison lovers to hear the artist in all his live glory as he performs his sold-out matinee concert as part of the Eastside Arts Festival. Prior to the concert starting, Ralph McLean will be setting the scene for listeners as he takes in his surroundings at the Cyprus Avenue concert and chatting to fans lucky enough to get tickets for the event.

BBC Northern Ireland viewers will also have the chance to witness Van Morrison in action and relive the concert when it receives its exclusive television broadcast on BBC One NI on Friday, September 4 at 10.35pm. (Transmission times correct at time of publication.)

Sunday, August 02, 2015

02-August-2015
Skeppsholmen

 Stockholm, Sweden


Setlist
Celtic Swing
Close Enough For Jazz
By His Grace
Days Like This
Baby Please Don't Go/Don't Start Crying Now
Wild Night
Moondance
Brown Eyed Girl
Wild Honey
Whenever God Shines His Light
Precious Time
Jackie Wilson Said
Bright Side Of The Road
Real Real Gone
Think Twice Before You Go
And The Healing Has Begun
Things I Used To Do
The Way Young Lovers Do
Help Me
In The Garden
Gloria

Big Hand for The Band!
Dave Keary (Guitar)
Paul Moore (Bass)
Paul Moran (Keyboards)
Bobby Ruggiero (Drums)
Dana Masters (Vocals)