Van Morrison- Tupelo Honey
Wrap yourself in the warm musical blanket Tupelo Honey by Van Morrison. The enigmatic Irish singer Van Morrison took us from seminal garage rock with “Gloria” to joyous pop with “Brown Eyed Girl”, from ballads (“Crazy Love”) to jazz (“Moondance”) to soul (“Domino”) and then “Into the Mystic”. Morrison had another one of his classic albums, Tupelo Honey, turn fifty, released in Fall 1971 a year after the timeless Moondance and His Band and Street Choir, both in 1970. Join us here In the Studio for an ultra-rare, gloves off bare-knuckled conversation with Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Van Morrison. No matter who first coined the term “blue eyed soul” to describe the Righteous Brothers, it is a safe bet that the phrase was next used to describe the Belfast singer/songwriter Van Morrison. Practically speaking, it is impossible to explain the width and depth of this Northern Ireland native’s contribution without resorting to hyperbole, as music writer Jason Ankeny found out on AllMusic.com when describing Morrison’s output (quote)”…perhaps the most spiritually transcendent body of work in the rock and roll canon. Subject only to the whims of his own muse, his recordings cover extraordinary stylistic ground yet retain a consistency and purity virtually unmatched among his contemporaries.” Yet until this revealingly frank interview by the BBC’s intrepid John Bennett, Van Morrison easily would qualify as the most mysterious of celebrated singer/songwriters, by comparison making Bob Dylan look positively chatty.
This ultra-rare, fascinating classic rock interview is nothing short of a revelation set against the backdrop of his early Warner Bros Records career snapshot of some of Van Morrison’s greatest hits, including the seminal “Brown Eyed Girl”, the jazzy”Moondance”,”Crazy Love”, and “Into the Mystic”; the New Orleans stomp of”Domino”,”Blue Money”, and “Wild Night”; the sweet soul dripping in “Tupelo Honey”, and the title song from St. Dominic’s Preview, all from this most durable career (sixty years a professional ); most prolific recording artist ( his 2015 Duets was Morrison’s forty-first release, not counting hits compilations & anthologies); most acclaimed (Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, with two albums in the top seventy on Rolling Stone’s Top 500 Albums of All Time, including Astral Weeks at #19). And most reclusive, the Howard Hughes of rhythm and blues. –Redbeard