Latest news with #RememberingNow


Forbes
30-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Forbes
Van Morrison's New No. 1 Keeps His Career Winning Streak Perfect
Van Morrison's Remembering Now launches at No. 1 on Billboard's Blues Albums chart, marking his ... More fourth consecutive leader and maintaining a flawless record in the genre. MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE - APRIL 29: Van Morrison performs during Beale Street Music Festival at Liberty Park on April 29, 2022 in Memphis, Tennessee. (Photo by) Throughout his decades-long career, Van Morrison's music has been classified under many different genres, as he has experimented and tried his hand at various styles. He has produced work that can be categorized as soul, rock, R&B, folk, and especially blues. Billboard has placed many of his most recent projects on the Blues Albums chart, where the Northern Irish singer-songwriter earns another champion. Remembering Now Debuts at No. 1 in America This week, Morrison's new full-length Remembering Now opens atop the Blues Albums chart, which ranks the most consumed full-lengths and EPs in that style. As it arrives, the musician doesn't only land a new winner — he keeps his track record perfect. Van Morrison's Perfect Track Record Morrison has only sent four releases to the Blues Albums ranking throughout his career. As Remembering Now debuts, all four have now reached No. 1. The singer-songwriter first conquered the tally in May 2021 with Latest Record Project, Volume 1. He returned to the summit a little over a year later with What's It Gonna Take?, and in March 2023, Moving On Skiffle opened in first place. All four of Morrison's chart-toppers have spent just one week running the show, though some of his earlier works have remained on the list for dozens of frames. Van Morrison's Multi-Genre Success Billboard labels Remembering Now not only blues, but also places the title on the Top Americana/Folk Albums chart. On that list, Morrison arrives at No. 20, earning his twelfth career placement. The same set launches one slot lower at No. 21 on the Top Album Sales tally. Morrison's latest kicks off its time on that roster with 4,500 pure purchases, according to Luminate, the company that collects sales and streaming data in the United States, which is then used to compile the Billboard charts every week.


Forbes
24-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Forbes
Van Morrison Charts A New No. 1, Almost 60 Years Into His Career
Van Morrison debuts Remembering Now at No. 1 on the U.K.'s Official Americana chart and earns four ... More additional top 10 placements across other rankings. MARLOW, ENGLAND - MAY 16: Van Morrison performs at Pub In The Park 2024 at Higginson Park on May 16, 2024 in Marlow, England. (Photo by) It's been almost 60 years since Van Morrison kicked off his recording career, and he remains a beloved figure to this day in certain countries, including the United Kingdom. The rocker has never slowed down throughout his more than half-century-long journey. He still typically releases an album a year, and he's back with Remembering Now, which is a quick win across a number of rankings in the region where he got his start. Remembering Now Debuts at No. 1 Remembering Now brings Morrison back to the top spot on one of the half-dozen tallies on which it debuts. The project enters the Official Americana chart at No. 1, earning him his fourth career leader. Morrison only arrived on the Official Americana list for the first time in 2016, when Keep Me Singing gave him his first chart-topper on his first try. That set spent 14 weeks ruling — more than all his other champions combined. He's also led the tally with Roll with the Punches and Three Chords and the Truth. It's been a little over half a decade since Morrison last secured a new No. 1, but in the interim, he's collected several additional top 10s. Van Morrison Scores Several Top 10 Debuts As it leads the Official Americana chart, Remembering Now also starts its time on four other rankings inside the top 10. The project only misses that coveted region on the Official Albums roster — the main list for full-lengths in the U.K. — by one spot. It debuts just below the No. 10 mark, opening at No. 11, which still brings the singer to an impressive position he hasn't seen in some time. Remembering Now is Another Big Win for Van Morrison While Remembering Now may earn its lowest entry point on the Official Albums chart, Morrison has now amassed 54 placements on that tally throughout his storied career. He's only earned seven wins on the Official Americana roster, which is much newer, and yet that's where he leads again this week.
Yahoo
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Van Morrison has a luxury problem: Too many songs to record
Few musicians are so productive in their old age. Every year, Van Morrison - now 79 years old - has been bringing out a new album, and now he has a problem which other recording artists would envy: Too much material. The restless Belfast belter of soulful stream-of-consciousness has recorded so much music that he has a backlog of songs still waiting to be released. "There are new arrangements and projects that have just been sitting there gathering dust," Morrison says in an interview published on his website. "Distribution can only deal with so much at a time. It'd be difficult to get out two records a year. One is manageable." His first original album in three years With his latest album, "Remembering Now," Van Morrison is tackling some of the backlog with songs he recorded years ago. One is the moody opening number "Down To Joy" which movie buffs should recognize as the Oscar-nominated track from the 2021 film "Belfast" by Kenneth Branagh. "That was supposed to come out a long time ago — it's just priorities and timing," Morrison says. The bluesy song is about Belfast, the musician's place of birth and home town in the north of Ireland. "This is who I am. This is where we are. Back in Belfast. This is how I started," he sings. "It's like you never left where you started from." "Remembering Now" is his first album in three years to feature his own songs – for him, an extremely long hiatus. The veteran musician with the unmistakeable iconic voice presents a timeless mixture of pop, folk, soul, blues, jazz and country - trademark Van Morrison. Trying to move past that anti-lockdown business The new songs emerged parallel to the last albums, recorded during the Covid lockdowns. It was a period when Morrison stirred up controversy in his anger over some of the lockdown measures and restrictions imposed on public concerts. "I was getting quite a lot of negative feedback during this period," Morrison said without going into details. The "Brown Eyed Girl" singer faced backlash from some fans for questioning the government response to the pandemic, even singing in "No More Lockdown" that governments were "enslaving" the people. At a time when the UK and Ireland were grappling with one of Europe's worst Covid-19 outbreaks and hundreds were dying every week, Morrison slammed lockdowns and concert limits justified by what he saw as "pseudo-science." Morrison now appears to be trying to move past that period. "I just wanted to do something. And the musicians – we all wanted to do something that was going to be fun," he says. Especially good listening are the melancholic "Haven't Lost My Sense Of Wonder" and the grooving soul number "Back To Writing Love Songs." The lyrics of "Every Time I See A River" is from songwriting legend Don Black ("Diamonds Are Forever", "No Matter What"). And on the topic of whether more music is coming after this, Morrison says: "There's always more music."
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Scotsman
11-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Scotsman
Album reviews: Van Morrison Mary Chapin Carpenter Marianne Faithfull
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Van Morrison: Remembering Now (Exile Productions/Virgin Records) ★★★★ Mary Chapin Carpenter: Personal History (Lambent Light/Thirty Tigers) ★★★ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Marianne Faithfull: Burning Moonlight EP (Decca Records) ★★★★ Mike McKenzie: I'd Wait Again (Metro 13 Music) ★★★★ Such is his prolific flow that it seems barely a week goes by without a new album by Van Morrison. In fact, Remembering Now is only his first album of new material in three years, following collections of skiffle and rock'n'roll covers. Van Morrison | Lewis McClay The past and present ebb and flow across its 14 tracks, as Morrison continues to pay tribute to his musical and geographical roots. Down to Joy is already familiar from the soundtrack to Kenneth Branagh's Belfast while If It Wasn't For Ray ('I wouldn't be where I am today') is a lightly exultant ode to Mr Charles' rocking R&B. The self-soothing hymn Haven't Lost My Sense of Wonder features warm, brooding Hammond organ and gospel reassurance and, as if to prove the point, Back to Writing Love Songs sounds like the burden of grievance has been lifted off his shoulders. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He backs up his claims with the spiritual southern soul of Love, Lover and Beloved and makes light weather of the hard work needed to hold down a relationship on The Only Love I Ever Need Is Yours. Stomping Ground crosses over into whimsical nostalgia but the low-slung title track is a more intriguing exploration of what shapes us. Best of all, closing track Stretching Out is a soul jazz saunter which does indeed stretch out to a luxurious nine minutes and is a pleasure all the way. Mary Chapin Carpenter | Contributed Mary Chapin Carpenter also looks back in languor on her latest album. Arriving on the heels of her Looking for the Thread collaboration with Karine Polwart and Julie Fowlis, Personal History was recorded live at Peter Gabriel's Real World Studios and produced by Bonny Light Horseman's Josh Kaufmann, with his bandmate Anais Mitchell providing sweet support on the yearning Home is a Song. Telling life stories through song is a running theme, introduced on What Did You Miss and refined on Paint + Turpentine, which ponders the mysteries of creativity. New Religion deals with finding her tribe while The Saving Things is Carpenter's spin on a favourite things list song. Musically, she moves from uncluttered acoustic confessionals to the rootsier rock of Bitter Ender and limpid piano waltz The Night We Never Met with her usual restrained mastery. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Marianne Faithfull | James Robjant Marianne Faithfull's swansong EP comprises four songs recorded in the last year of her life. Like Morrison and Carpenter, she drew inspiration from her own past, specifically her first two albums, Marianne Faithfull and Come My Way, which were released simultaneously in April 1965 on Decca Records. The opening lines of her debut hit As Tears Go By provided a jumping off point for Burning Moonlight, on which Faithfull's commanding voice is accompanied by sonorous strummed guitar. The fuller sound of classy cocktail pop track Love Is, written with her grandson Oscar Dunbar, incorporates spoken word samples of the younger Marianne and the EP is rounded off with two traditional songs attesting to her lifelong love of folk music. Three Kinsmen Bold was originally learned from her father Glynn, while She Moves Thru The Fair is a song she has turned to throughout her career, rendered here as a ghostly a capella. Edinburgh singer/songwriter Mike McKenzie is the spring chicken of the bunch but has lived enough of a life as a musician and frontman to present a sophisticated debut solo album, I'd Wait Again, recorded at Granton's Metro 13 studios. His natural pop voice hits the spot across the ebullient Mr Bang!, big brassy number Control the Tide and the easy, rootsy pop of Sunshine, while the light dusting of Bacharach brass, strings and plangent guitar on Mourn You and Breathe You In are effortlessly but elegantly arranged. Sign up to our FREE Arts & Culture newsletter at CLASSICAL Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Heinrich Biber: Complete Violin Sonatas - 1681 (Delphian) ★★★★★