Celtic Connections
Van Morrison, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
Keith Bruce
four stars
With a packed house and folk standing at the back upstairs, the appropriate support provided for Van Morrison in gospel quartet The McCrary Sisters should have made a few friends prepared to turn out for their own gig tomorrow (Wednesday) in the Old Fruitmarket. Between them Regina, Ann, Alfreda and Deborah have worked with some of the top names in music (and have Dylan's personal approval to cover Blowin' in the Wind), and together - and accompanied by an all-Scottish quartet of instrumentalists - they make fine contemporary praise indeed.
There was a slice of gospel in Morrison's set too, in Shine A Light from the Avalon Sunset album, but then there was a little bit of everything in it, including a nod to country in I Can't Stop Loving You, and some fine jazz trumpet and flugel horn doubling from his MD behind the keys, as well as the vocal improvisation of the man himself. His sax playing is not his strongest suit, and he did blow his alto a lot, but that was a small price to pay for a good-humoured Van the Man, whose thick, chewy voice was in top form, and who added some mean blues harp. Accompanied by a similarly compact combo, with the addition of female backing singer, this was a lean approximation of a Too Late To Stop Know set, that ranged right back to Them's Baby Please Don't Go, and included Moondance, Into the Mystic, and even an encore of Ballerina from Astral Weeks. Directing the band with a waving right fist, when he is channelling Big Joe Turner, you can forgive Morrison that he can't do Cannonball Adderley as well.
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