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    • Source: Back on Top (Van Morrison album)
    • Back on Top is the twenty-seventh studio album by Northern Irish singer/songwriter Van Morrison, released in 1999 by Point Blank. It reached the Top Twenty in seven countries, building on the success of 1997's The Healing Game.


      Recording


      Recorded at the Wool Hall Studios, south of Bath, England, except strings, which were recorded at Windmill Lane Studios, Dublin, Ireland. The musicians on the album are understated with Ian Jennings playing double bass, Geraint Watkins playing Hammond organ and Pee Wee Ellis on saxophones.


      Composition


      The opening track, "Goin' Down Geneva", has a very bluesy feel. Morrison's harmonica is prominent on "Philosopher's Stone", which features "one of the most limber vocal performances he's put on record in years, even tentatively jumping into the high squawk he seemed to have lost." Harmonica also features on "High Summer", which includes references to "Lucifer" and "God", and also alludes to Morrison's 1960s songs by way of "red sport cars" and "mansions on the hill". "In the Midnight" is "bedroom music, pure and simple", while "Back on Top" is an optimistic statement of the singer's outlook. The ballad, "When the Leaves Come Falling Down", features a string section, while "Golden Autumn Day" is about being mugged.
      "Reminds Me of You" dates back to a 1996 break-up of his engagement to Michelle Rocca; they had reunited by the time of the song's release. "New Biography" was prompted by Brian Hinton's Celtic Crossroads, written in 1996. Morrison complains about celebrity and "'so-called friends' who chose to spill inside information and memories to biographers." Morrison has often performed "Precious Time" live, which includes the lyrics, "It doesnā€™t matter to which God you pray/Precious time is slipping away."


      Release


      The video for the title track received significant airplay on the Canadian music station, "MuchMoreMusic". Performances of "Back on Top" and "When the Leaves Come Falling Down", along with "Gloria", featured on Later... with Jools Holland on 16 April 1999.
      The photograph of Morrison on the inside of the album cover was originally used for the front cover of Peter Handke's book, My Year in the No-Man's-Bay (1994). The album was remastered and reissued on 29 January 2008 with two bonus tracks; an alternative take of "Philosopher's Stone", and a new arrangement of Fats Domino's song, "Valley of Tears". "Golden Autumn Day" was also used as the credits song for the 2001 and 2004 World Series.


      Reception



      The album received mixed reviews from critics, but performed well commercially and was his highest charting album in the US since Wavelength. It went gold in both the US and UK. Allmusic welcomed Morrison's "return to the music that suits him so well... blues and R&B", and found that the album finds him "celebrating life and its pleasures to the limit." Rolling Stone summed it up as being "solid, brilliant, silly in sad ways. But it's still one Monet and nine Norman Rockwells." The Irish Independent was critical, suggesting that "[somewhere] in the mid-Eighties the poet/philosopher accolades seem to have seeped into his skull, and he began churning out same-sounding albums on an almost annual basis." Critic George Graham lauded it as "one of his best, most tasteful albums in recent years, and Van Morrison has had some very good albums in this period."


      Track listing


      All songs by Van Morrison, unless otherwise noted.

      "Goin' Down Geneva" ā€“ 4:24
      "Philosopher's Stone" ā€“ 6:05
      "In the Midnight" ā€“ 5:07
      "Back on Top" ā€“ 4:23
      "When the Leaves Come Falling Down" ā€“ 5:39
      "High Summer" ā€“ 5:12
      "Reminds Me of You" ā€“ 5:39
      "New Biography" ā€“ 5:23
      "Precious Time" ā€“ 3:45
      "Golden Autumn Day" ā€“ 6:31
      Bonus tracks (2008 CD reissue)
      "Philosopher's Stone" ā€“ 4:52 (alternate take)
      "Valley of Tears" ā€“ 5:02 (Fats Domino, arranged Morrison)


      Personnel


      Van Morrison ā€“ vocals, acoustic guitar, harmonica, producer
      Mick Green ā€“ acoustic and electric guitars
      Pee Wee Ellis ā€“ soprano, tenor and baritone saxophones, background vocals
      Matt Holland ā€“ trumpet
      Geraint Watkins ā€“ piano, Hammond organ
      Fiachra Trench ā€“ piano
      Ian Jennings ā€“ double bass
      Liam Bradley ā€“ drums, percussion, background vocals
      Bobby Irwin ā€“ drums
      Brian Kennedy ā€“ background vocals
      Irish Film Orchestra ā€“ strings
      Leo Green ā€“ tenor saxophone (2008 reissue)
      Jools Holland ā€“ piano (2008 reissue)
      Mike Sanchez ā€“ piano, guitar (2008 reissue)
      Production
      Walter Samuel ā€“ recording, mixing
      Brian Masterson ā€“ recording
      Sean Doherty ā€“ assistant engineer
      Sam Miller ā€“ assistant engineer
      Ciaran Cahill ā€“ assistant engineer
      Ian Cooper ā€“ mastering
      Brad Wilson ā€“ photography
      Paul Cox ā€“ photography
      John Mintoft ā€“ photography
      Matt Curtis ā€“ photography, art direction, design


      Charts




      = Singles

      =
      UK Singles Chart


      Certifications




      References


      Hage, Erik (2009). The Words and Music of Van Morrison, Praeger Publishers, ISBN 978-0-313-35862-3
      Handke, Peter (1994). My Year in the No-Man's-Bay, Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0-374-21755-6
      Heylin, Clinton (2003). Can You Feel the Silence? Van Morrison: A New Biography, Chicago Review Press ISBN 1-55652-542-7
      Van Morrison Back on Top by George Graham


      Notes

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