Pages

Subscribe:

Friday, February 24, 2012

Tupelo Honey review

Tupelo Honey Van Morrison's "Caledonia soul"--his unique blend of Irish mysticism and spiritual questing, literary allusion and blue-eyed R&B--can be as beautiful and deeply emotional every music ever made. That's certainly the situation on 1971's Tupelo Honey, one from the finest albums of Morrison's long career. Kicking off using the classic "Wild Night," Tupelo Honey will be as completely joyous since the normally bitter Van gets, particularly on the title track and the unabashedly grateful, slow-building "You're My Woman," both among one of the most moving love songs he's recorded. --David Cantwell --This text refers for an beyond print or unavailable edition of the title.

Tupelo Honey is often a digitally remastered and expanded edition of Van's 1971 release. Two previously unreleased bonus tracks are 'Wild Night' (alternative extended version) plus a jazzy reworking from the traditional 'Down From The Riverside'. The opening sax-fuelled, R&B-infected 'Wild Night" is an additional joyous, soulful offering which earned Morrison a US Top 30 single. This album is often a vary from his earlier album of R&B flavour, His Band And Street Choir, in a more luminously pastoral drift typified by the nostalgic Old Old Woodstock. Trippy! 11 tracks. Polydor/Universal. 2008. --This text refers for an out of print or unavailable edition on this title.





other Customer Rating:







arrow  More Info .:

Tupelo Honey


No comments:

Post a Comment