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HMV in Bath. |
It is Sunday morning; the sun is shining and I’m listening
to my new 3cd deluxe set of The Healing
Game by Van Morrison. I bought it
in the HMV record store in Bath yesterday afternoon. This shop had closed
recently but a Canadian business man stepped in and saved it and it has
re-opened. I’m pleased about that because a great city like Bath deserves to
have a good music shop. When I was served at the counter the man said they had
been playing it in the shop and he liked it. I told him Van was playing in Bath
on June 2nd. He knew that and said he would be going. It should be a
great day seeing Van in one of his old stamping grounds, especially if the
weather is nice.
Disc 1 is called The
Original Album…Plus. Is it really twenty-two
years since this album came out? It seems only yesterday that Kim went away for
a week to Torquay with her residents from work. When she returned she had bought me Van's new
album. I thought at the time that it was a huge return to form after the
disappointment of Tell Me Something and
How Long Has This Been Going On? when
I thought Van had just been treading water for a couple of years. In the 22
years since this album came out Van has written some great songs and released
some excellent albums, but I don’t think he ever again quite reached the
brilliance of The Healing Game. About
the album, I think the rough god referred to in the opening track has something
to do with a Yeats poem or it might be about Van having a go at the press who
gave him a hard time the previous year. Fire
In The Belly has the same title as a book by Sam Keen. I don't know if that’s
where Van got the idea from, but I like hearing 'Gotta get through January, gotta
get through February' on a nice sunny morning in March. This Weight is Van complaining about the weight of being famous and
all he wants is anonymity. The Waiting Game
is a great song with mysterious lyrics such as ‘I am the brother of the
snake’. It’s a great song even if it is an enigma inside a mystery. It also
incorporates one of Vans favourite images of leaves coming tumbling down.
Piper At The Gates Of Dawn is based as
you know on Wind In The Willows by Kenneth Grahame. It is very Irish in flavour
featuring Van’s old friends Phil Coulter and Paddy Moloney. It was commissioned
for a film by Terry Jones of Monty Python fame but wasn’t used so it ended up
on this album and makes a nice contrast to the heavier songs. Burning Ground is a powerful song driven
along by some awesome sax playing by Pee Wee and Leo Green. I have read lots of
discussion between Van fans over the years about the meaning of the lyrics such
as ‘Dump the jute’. It Once Was My Life has
a very 1950’s feel to it. Then we get to one of Van's all-time great songs Sometimes We Cry which is a masterpiece.
From Alec Dankworth’s opening notes on the bass to Pee Wee's exquisite solo and
Robin’s piano playing it is faultless. I met Pee Wee once when he played in a pub in
Bradford On Avon and he signed my Healing Game CD booklet on the Sometimes We
Cry page and he put 'Thanks, Pee Wee Ellis’. If You Love Me is another 1950’s style song before the tour de
force of the title track The Healing Game
which is another of Vans greatest songs. I first heard it a year previously at
Wembley Arena when Van appeared with Ray Charles. Of the bonus tracks, I
sometimes think Look What The Good People
Done is about Van’s friend George Best. There is a reference to the Wogan TV show on which George made a
notorious drunken appearance. At The End
Of The Day is a Van song that I can’t remember hearing before. It was a
track on a cd single. I never have rated the Full Force Gale 96 remake all that much. I do like the version of St Dominic’s Preview included here. It
is from a compilation album called Sult and
produced by Donal Lunny. I wish they had included another song that Van
recorded around this time with Paddy Moloney called Celtic Spring.
Disc 2 is called Sessions
& Collaborations. There are three more alternate versions of The Healing Game here including one with
John Lee Hooker. I really like the alternate version of Fire In The Belly which shows off the delicate piano playing of
Robin Aspland to great effect. Didn’t He
Ramble is a great song of Van’s that is previously unissued, maybe because the
lyrics evolved into The Philosophers
Stone. The full length eight minutes of Sometimes
We Cry is fabulous. I have never been all that keen on Muleskinner Blues of which there are two versions here, one with
Lonnie Donegan. I don’t think I have ever heard A Kiss To Build A Dream On before. It is a song first made famous
by Louis Armstrong and recorded by many other people. The two songs with Van’s
friend John Lee Hooker Don’t Look Back and
The Healing Game are great. I bet Van
enjoyed working with John Lee. He seems to have had a great time recording with
Carl Perkins as well. There are five songs all recorded on March 27th,
1996 just down the road from here at the Wool Hall in Beckington. It sounds
like they had great fun and Carl loved the sound of that saxophone. The sad
thing is that Carl died less that two years later in January 1998.
Disc 3 is called Live
At Montreux 19 July 1997. It is a recording that is well known to Van fans
as a bootleg but it’s great to hear it finally on an official release. The
sound quality is excellent, and Van and the band are on top form. The band all
deserve a mention, Georgie Fame, Ronnie Johnson,
Geoff Dunn, Nicky Scott, Robin Aspland, Pee Wee Ellis, Leo Green, Matt Holland
& Brian Kennedy. Hearing this
performance again brings lots of memories flooding back because we saw Van at Glastonbury
just three weeks prior to this Montreux show and they performed all these
songs if my memory serves me well. It had rained nonstop since Friday and the site
was a quagmire. The sun came out on Sunday afternoon though in time for
performances by Sting, Beck and Van. Van started his performance with Rough God Goes Riding, the opening track
on this disc. The lyrics seemed strangely appropriate referring to the 'mud
splattered victims' which was us. I remember that performance vividly because
during Van singing 'Its A Man’s, Man’s, Man’s World' he stopped and asked the
audience "Who is the godfather of soul?”. Quick as a flash I shouted out
"James Brown”, “That’s right”,
said Van. Lots of people looked at me and I felt quite brainy although I expect
lots of other people also shouted it out as well. Van closed that show with a
slowed down version of Burning Ground,
lifting the mike stand above his shoulders before finally smashing it down on
the stage and walking off in triumph with the applause of at least 50,000
people ringing in his ears.
I’m tired now after a most enjoyable morning of listening
to The Healing Game for three hours
and writing about it. The sun is still shining. I might go to the pub to
unwind. See you later.