How to Hire VAN MORRISON For Your Event!
“Van the Man”
aka: Sir George Ivan Morrison
Based in: Ireland
Hire: Van Morrison
GRAMMY award-winning Sir George Ivan Morrison OBE (born 31 August 1945), known professionally as Van Morrison, is a Northern Irish singer, musician and songwriter whose recording career spans seven decades.
Morrison began performing as a teenager in the late 1950s, playing a variety of instruments, including guitar, harmonica, keyboards, and saxophone, for various Irish showbands, covering the popular hits of that time.
Much of Morrison’s music is structured around the conventions of soul music and early rhythm and blues. An equal part of his catalogue consists of lengthy, spiritually inspired musical journeys that show the influence of Celtic tradition, jazz, and stream of consciousness narrative.
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Van Morrison was born in Belfast in 1945, the son of a shipyard worker who collected American blues and jazz records. He grew up listening to the music of Muddy Waters, Mahalia Jackson, Lightnin’ Hopkins and John Lee Hooker. As a teenager, he played guitar, saxophone, and harmonica with a series of local Irish showbands, skiffle, and rock ‘n’ roll groups before forming an r&b band, called Them, in 1964.
In 1967, he began his solo career in New York, where he recorded an LP titled “Blowin’ Your Mind” with the producer Bert Berns, who had previously produced Them. Following Berns’ death in 1968, Van Morrison recruited a group of jazz musicians to record “Astral Weeks,” a timeless classic that brought together elements of Celtic music, improvised jazz, and r&b.
Based initially in Boston and then California, Morrison produced a string of albums, including “Moondance,” “Tupelo Honey” and “St Dominic’s Preview,” while touring extensively with his band, the Caledonia Soul Orchestra. His 1974 live set “It’s Too Late to Stop Now” marked the end of this prolific early phase as Van returned to Ireland to explore further his Celtic roots. The ensuing album, “Veedon Fleece” (1974) featured a quieter, more pastoral sound and was to be his last release for three years.
Hire Van Morrison for your special event.
He returned to the public eye in 1977 with the aptly titled “A Period of Transition,” an album co-produced by Mac ‘Dr. John’ Rebennack. Following his re-location to London, he released Wavelength (1978) and Into The Music (1979) by which time Morrison’s interest in spiritual matters was finding regular expression in his recordings.
The theme of spiritual quest came to prominence in the albums he made in the 1980’s: “Common One,” “Beautiful Vision,” “Inarticulate Speech of The Heart,” “A Sense of Wonder,” “No Guru No Method No Teacher,” and “Poetic Champions Compose,” which established Morrison’s status as an artist of unrivalled integrity and vision.
In 1988, he revisited his Irish roots with The Chieftains on “Irish Heartbeat.” The following album, 1989’s “Avalon Sunset,” was his most commercially successful for many years and concluded what had been a remarkably productive decade for Van Morrison.
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As prolific as ever, Van varied his musical approach in the 1990’s. “Enlightenment” (1990) and “Hymns to the Silence” (1991) continued down the road of spiritual self-discovery, while 1993’s “Too Long In Exile” leaned towards the blues, returning Van to the singles chart again with a re-working of “Gloria”, performed with his blues buddy, John Lee Hooker.
After the acclaimed “Days Like This” (1995) came “How Long Has This Been Going On” (1995), an album of mostly jazz standards featuring his old sparring partner, Georgie Fame.
Following the release of 1997’s “The Healing Game” came “The Philosopher’s Stone” (1998), an album containing 30 previously unreleased tracks recorded between 1971 and 1988, a mixture of new songs and interpretations of Morrison classics like “Wonderful Remark” and “Bright Side of The Road.” In the same year (1998), Van won a Grammy for his collaboration with John Lee Hooker on “Don’t Look Back,” which he also produced.
“Back On Top” was released in March 1999 and was widely heralded as one of Morrison’s most accomplished and successful albums in years, spawning his first solo Top 40 hit with the single, “Precious Time.”
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After a career spanning some four decades, it seemed appropriate that the year 2000 saw Van returning to his roots, a musical full-circle, with “The Skiffle Sessions – Live In Belfast.” Re-uniting with the musical heroes of his youth, Van joined skiffle maestro Lonnie Donegan and Chris Barber on stage at Belfast’s Whitla Hall for a magical performance, and the energy and enthusiasm of both the performers and the crowd were captured in full on this album, which met with huge critical acclaim.
In 2002, Van Morrison returned to Polydor Records and released his new album, “Down the Road.” The album featured 13 brand new songs alongside a unique version of “Georgia on My Mind” and “Evening Shadows,” an Acker Bilk instrumental to which Van added his own lyrical magic.
In recognition of his unique position as one of the most important songwriters of the past century, Van Morrison was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame at an awards ceremony in New York City in June 2003.
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Later in the same year (2003), he signed a worldwide deal with the legendary Blue Note Records, a natural home for one of music’s most creative figures. Morrison’s debut release at the prestigious jazz label was “What’s Wrong with This Picture?” This album draws upon the jazz and blues influences that he has explored consistently throughout his career. “What’s Wrong with this Picture?” received a Grammy Awards nomination for Van Morrison in the ‘Best Contemporary Blues Album’ category.
His album, “Magic Time“, was released on his own Exile Music Recordings label in May 2005, with songs such as “Stranded,” the title track, “Magic Time,” “Celtic New Year” and “Gypsy in my Soul”.
Van Morrison continues to play a busy schedule of regular concerts every year throughout Europe and in the US.
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