Van Morrison Biography

in full George Ivan Morrison

(1945 - )

Share

Table Of Contents

Related Works

  • Albums
  • 1970 Moondance
  • 1971 His Band and the Street Choir
  • 1972 St Dominic's Preview
  • 1973 Hard Nose Highway
  • 1974 It's Too Late To Stop Now
  • 1974 Veedon Fleece
  • 1977 A Period of Transition
  • 1978 Wavelength
  • 1979 Into The Music
  • 1980 Common One
  • 1982 Beautiful Vision
  • 1983 Inarticulate Speech of the Heart
  • 1984 Live at the Grand Opera House Belfast
  • 1986 No Guru, No Method, No Teacher
  • 1987 Champions Compose
  • 1988 Irish Heartbeat
  • 1989 Avalon Sunset
  • 1990 Best Of Van Morrison
  • 1990 Enlightenment
  • 1991 Hymns To The Silent
  • 1993 Best Of Van Morrison Volume 2
  • 1993 Too Long In Exile
  • 1996 The Healing Game
  • 1999 Back On top
  • 2002 Down the Road
  • 2005 Magic Time
  • 2006 Pay the Devil
  • Singles
  • 1967 Brown Eyed Girl
  • 1967 Goodbye Baby
  • 1967 Ro Ro Rosey
  • 1970 Crazy Love
  • 1970 Domino
  • 1971 Wild Night
  • 1971 Blue Money
  • 1972 Jackie Wilson Said
  • 1973 Warm Love
  • 1973 Wild Children
  • 1974 Cul de Sac
  • 1976 Wavelength
  • 1977 Cold Wind In August
  • 1977 Kingdom Hall
  • 1979 You Make Me Feel So Free
  • 1982 Cleaning Windows
  • 1984 A Sense of Wonder
  • 1984 Haunts of Ancient Peace
» More

(born Aug. 31, 1945, Belfast, N.Ire.) Irish singer-songwriter and occasional saxophonist who played in a succession of groups, most notably Them, in the mid-1960s before enjoying a long, varied, and increasingly successful solo career.

Morrison was born into a working-class Protestant family in Belfast. Having been exposed early to blues and jazz through his father's record collection and having taken up the saxophone, guitar, and harmonica, he began playing in bands while in his mid-teens. When he first appeared before British television audiences in 1965, fronting Them's thrilling rearrangement of an old blues song (Big Joe Williams's “Baby Please Don't Go”), it was clear that Morrison was different. Unlike his rivals, such as Mick Jagger or Eric Burdon, he seemed unwilling to flirt with the audience or even to make eye contact with them. The passion behind his harsh, stuttering delivery was obvious, but it seemed to be directed elsewhere.More than anyone else, Morrison signaled the graduation of the rock singer from simple entertainer to something darker, more complex, and less susceptible to the music industry's mechanisms of control. He admired the integrity of the old bluesmen and the willfulness of poets, and his distaste for ingratiation provided a useful template for such later figures as Elvis Costello and John Mellencamp, who traded in related forms of surliness. It also won him a small but devoted following when it became apparent that, despite the success of “Brown Eyed Girl”—a snappy slice of uptown rhythm and blues that was his first solo single after leaving Them in 1967 and moving to the United States—the usual career yardsticks would not be applied. Indeed, that hit was never followed up. Instead, a year later he released Astral Weeks, an album of astonishing originality and inventiveness that stretched the frontier of rock music. A cycle of extended semi-improvised songs with backing from an acoustic group including vibraharp, flute, guitar, bass, drums, and a small string section, it was neither rock nor folk nor jazz, and yet it was something of all three. Almost ignored at the time, it has come to be recognized as one of the most mesmerizingly intense and genuinely poetic works in the history of rock—not least for its classic track, the nine-minute “Madame George,” in which Morrison achieves a sort of poetic trance wholly new to rock.This mode, heavily influenced by the writings of John Donne, William Blake, and William Butler Yeats, was to come in for further investigation in “Listen to the Lion” (1972) and “Vanlose Stairway” (1982), but his future direction was more clearly indicated by Moondance, Astral Weeks's successor, in which he deployed a snappy little rhythm-and-blues band behind tautly structured songs. The title song was the most obvious example, but it was followed over the years by such favourites as “Wild Night” and “Jackie Wilson Said” in pursuit of a style that was to affect the work of Tim Buckley and Bruce Springsteen, among others.Moving between California, Ireland, and London, Morrison seemed oblivious to public taste and reaction to him. He pursued an interest in the music of his Celtic roots by collaborating with the Chieftains, developed his lifelong fondness for jazz with appearances at Ronnie Scott's Club in London, and wrote a series of songs in his own increasingly complex style that gave unmistakable evidence of a deep and unfulfilled spiritual yearning. Yet he was at his best onstage, where he could mix, match, and contrast all these approaches, indulging his love of the gifts of skilled musicians to his advantage and, no less, to theirs.

advertisement

Celebrity Calendar

On TV

I Survived...

Watch FULL Episodes and Previews now!

Shatner

Watch FULL Episodes and Guest Previews now!

Shop Biography

Legends of the Silver Screen DVD Set

Legends of the Silver Screen DVD Set

The brightest stars from the Hollywood universe shine brilliantly in this sweeping collection of profiles. Buy Now

Email Sign Up

Get email updates on your favorite BIO shows and what's new on bio.com!

– Bio.com news
– BIO shows
– Born On This Day

…and more! SIGN UP today!

Featured This Month

It Happened This Week Video

REMEMBER WHEN…

See who was born and what went down this week in Pop Culture history. Find out which celebrities share your birthday and much more in our NEW On This Day feature!

Rosa Parks

Black History

Celebrate Black History Month. Explore our interactive black history timelines, videos, meet hundreds of famous African-Americans and so much more.

Harlem Globetrotters

FULL BIO EPISODES

Could you beat the famous Harlem Globetrotters? How well do you know President Obama? Actors, politicos and everyone in between - see all video!

Celebrity Bookings