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词条 T.B. Sheets
释义

  1. Recording

  2. Composition

  3. Critical reactions

  4. Legacy

  5. Notes

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox song
| name = T.B. Sheets
| cover =
| alt =
| type =
| artist = Van Morrison
| album = Blowin' Your Mind!
| released = 1967
| format =
| recorded = 29 March 1967, A & R Studios, New York City
| studio =
| venue =
| genre = Rock
| length = 9:44
| label = Bang
Columbia
| writer = Van Morrison
| producer = Bert Berns
| tracks =
  1. "Brown Eyed Girl"
  2. "He Ain't Give You None"
  3. "T.B. Sheets"
  4. "Spanish Rose"
  5. "Goodbye Baby (Baby Goodbye)" (Farrell / Russell)
  6. "Ro Ro Rosey"
  7. "Who Drove the Red Sports Car?"
  8. "Midnight Special" (traditional)

}}

"T.B. Sheets" is a blues-influenced song written and recorded by Northern Irish singer-lyricist Van Morrison, recorded for the Bang Records label in 1967 and included on his first solo album, Blowin' Your Mind!. It later appeared on the Bang compilation, T.B. Sheets.

Recording

"T.B. Sheets" was recorded on 29 March 1967 at A & R Recording Studios In New York City with Bert Berns as producer. Morrison had intended to record it in one take, but there were two takes recorded that day.[1]

There is a long-standing, but perhaps apocryphal, story of Morrison's emotional state during the song's recording. Michael Ochs, in the liner notes for the 1973 album T.B. Sheets, wrote that "after 'T.B. Sheets' was recorded, the rest of the session had to be cancelled because Van broke down in tears."[2] Likewise, according to John Collis,

Morrison could later joke about this song. "I’m writing 'T.B. Sheets Part II' now," he said in 1972. "Keeping the same riff, the same groove." However, it’s on record – though the story could be exaggerated – that after laying down this track he broke down in tears, unable to continue the session.[3]

Composition

{{further|Tuberculosis in human culture}}

The story as told in the song takes place in a room where a young girl lies dying of tuberculosis and is visited by the story-teller. The overwhelming pain and guilt he feels leads to a desperate feeling of wanting to escape from the enclosed room smelling of death and disease.

Critical reactions

The Allmusic review states, "The listener is placed in the room. Although somewhat disturbing, it certainly describes the term realism with one bold masterful stroke".[4]

John Collis described the song's meaning as: "First of all, the singer chides the terminally ill invalid for crying. 'It ain't natural,' he says. The woman cries all night and the observer, trapped in the death room, is embarrassed and helpless. Later in the song, the sun bouncing off a crack in the window pane 'numbs my brain',...And then there's the crushing claustrophobia of the sickroom - 'Let me breathe,' he demands of the woman whose breath is failing, bubbling in cheesy lungs. There is a street below, a street she'll never walk in again, and he is getting desperate to be down there, to rejoin the living, because 'the cool room is a fool's room'.[5]

Brian Hinton described the song's music: "Here is a Dickensian tale of death and decay in a big city. Organ and drums go free form, then a stately groove, fitting Van's voice like a garrote, led by nagging lead guitar. Van's harmonica hurts the ear, then he's like a terrier, lecturing his girlfriend, 'Julie,' about it not being natural her staying awake at night, dying."[6]

A Paste review by Steve Labate commented on the theme of the song: "'T.B. Sheets' is one of the most real songs about death you’ll ever hear. As life saps steadily from the singer’s beloved, tuberculosis-ridden Julie, there is no trite drama, no nostalgic sugar coating or grand deathbed epiphany, but rather an 'Is That All There Is?' fatalism—a mild, detached, slowly-suffocating bleakness. 'The sunlight shining through the crack in the window pane numbs my brain,' Morrison moans over a skittering Hammond organ."[7]

Legacy

John Lee Hooker included a cover on his 1972 album, Never Get Out of These Blues Alive.[8]

"T.B. Sheets" was featured prominently in the 1999 Martin Scorsese movie Bringing Out the Dead.

Ghostface Killah heavily samples the song on his 2006 song "Greedy Bitches".[9]Lydia Lunch and Cypress Grove included a cover on their 2014 album A Fistful of Desert Blues.[10]

Notes

1. ^Heylin, 2006. p. 153-154
2. ^Ochs, Michael, liner notes, T.B. Sheets, 1973
3. ^Collis. 1996. p85
4. ^{{cite web|url={{Allmusic|class=song|id=t2356570|pure_url=yes}} |title=T.B. Sheets review | publisher= allmusic.com | accessdate=2008-08-03}}
5. ^Collis. 1996. p84
6. ^Hinton. 1997. p81
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/03/van-morrison-tb-sheets.html|title=Van Morrison: T.B. Sheets|date=2010-03-29|publisher=Paste|author=Labate, Steve|accessdate=2010-04-01}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.coversproject.com/artist/john%20lee%20hooker/|title=John Lee Hooker Cover Songs - The Covers Project|publisher=coversproject.com|accessdate=2009-11-20}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://kevinnottingham.com/2008/04/28/more-fish-original-samples/|title=More Fish: Original Samples|publisher=kevinnottingham.com|accessdate=2009-11-20}}
10. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.rustblade.com/2014/a-fistful-of-desert-blues-2/ |title=A Fistful of Desert Blues CD | Rustblade - Label and Distribution |publisher=Rustblade |date= |accessdate=2014-04-16 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140417015014/http://www.rustblade.com/2014/a-fistful-of-desert-blues-2/ |archivedate=2014-04-17 |df= }}

References

  • Collis, John (1996). Inarticulate Speech of the Heart Little Brown and Company, {{ISBN|0-306-80811-0}}
  • Hinton, Brian (1997). Celtic Crossroads: The Art of Van Morrison, Sanctuary, {{ISBN|1-86074-169-X}}
  • Heylin, Clinton (2003). Can You Feel the Silence? Van Morrison: A New Biography, Chicago Review Press, {{ISBN|1-55652-542-7}}

External links

  • [{{Allmusic|class=song|id=t2356570|pure_url=yes}} AllMusic Review: T.B. Sheets]
  • {{MetroLyrics song|van-morrison|t-b-sheets}}

3 : 1967 songs|Van Morrison songs|Songs written by Van Morrison

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