词条 | Into the Music | ||||||||||||
释义 |
| name = Into the Music | type = Album | artist = Van Morrison | cover = Van Morrison Into the music cover.jpg | alt = | released = August 1979 | recorded = Early 1979 | venue = | studio = Record Plant, Sausalito | genre = Rhythm and blues, rock and roll, Gaelic music | length = 49:30 | label = Mercury | producer = Van Morrison, Mick Glossop | prev_title = Wavelength | prev_year = 1978 | next_title = Common One | next_year = 1980 | misc = {{Singles | name = Into the Music | type = studio | single1 = Bright Side of the Road" b/w "Rolling Hills" | single1date = September 1979 | single2 = Full Force Gale" b/w "Bright Side of the Road | single2date = December 1979 | single3 = You Make Me Feel So Free" b/w "Full Force Gale | single3date = 1980 }} }} Into the Music is the 11th studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, and was released in August 1979. The record received widespread acclaim that year, and was named by critics as one of the year's best albums. RecordingInto the Music was recorded in early 1979 at the Record Plant in Sausalito, California, with Mick Glossop as engineer.[1]During the recording of the album, one of the musicians, trumpet player Mark Isham, referred Morrison to Pee Wee Ellis who lived nearby. Morrison brought him in to do the horn charts for "Troubadours", but Ellis remained and worked on the entire album. The band also included Toni Marcus on strings, Robin Williamson on penny whistle, and Ry Cooder playing slide guitar on "Full Force Gale".[2] According to Hymns to the Silence author Peter Mills, Into the Music was titled after Ritchie Yorke's 1975 biography of the same name on Morrison, while the book had been titled in reference to his song "Into the Mystic" (1970).[3] Music and lyricsMorrison wrote most of the songs while he was staying with Herbie Armstrong in the Cotswold village of Epwell, England, and the sense of place is reflected in the spirit of the music. During this time, he would often walk through the fields with his guitar composing the future album's songs.[4] Erik Hage commented that after the favourable commercial reception of Wavelength, Morrison was inspired to "return to something deeper, to once again take up the quest for music, that was spontaneous, meditative, and transcendent—music that satisfied the other side of his artistic nature."[5] Morrison was quoted on his opinion of the album, "Into the Music was about the first album where I felt, I'm starting here...the Wavelength thing, I didn't really feel that was me." (1988) "That's when I got back into it. That's why I called it Into the Music." (1984)[6]The opening track, "Bright Side of the Road" was a successful single in the UK, charting at #63. The healing power of music would be subtly introduced on "And the Healing Has Begun", and would be a continuing theme in Morrison's music. Although celebration of love and life was the predominant theme of the album, this was especially true of "Troubadours", "Steppin' Out Queen" and "You Make Me Feel So Free".[7] "Troubadours" is an uplifting celebration of the singer-songwriter from ancient days, walking through towns "singin songs of love and chivalry". "Rolling Hills" is a joyful song in which the singer directly refers to Christianity and to living his life "in Him" and reading the Bible. The album is notable for its interpolation of an elegiac version of the fifties pop hit "It's All in the Game", which was voted #813 on Dave Marsh's list of 1001 Greatest Singles Ever Made. It was a B-side of the Morrison song "Cleaning Windows".[8] Critical reception{{Album ratings|rev1 = AllMusic |rev1Score = {{rating|4.5|5}}[9] |rev2 = The Great Rock Discography |rev2Score = 8/10[10] |rev3 = MusicHound Rock |rev3Score = 3.5/5[11] |rev4 = The Rolling Stone Album Guide |rev4Score = {{Rating|5|5}}[12] |rev5 = The Village Voice |rev5Score = A[13] }} In a contemporary review for Rolling Stone, Jay Cocks hailed Into the Music as a daring "record of splendid peace" and "vastly ambitious attempt to reconcile various states of grace: physical, spiritual and artistic". "That's what this album is about, proudly and stunningly and with no apologies", Cocks wrote. "Resurrection. Real Hope."[14] Tom Bentkowski from New York found Morrison's spirituality casually but confidently expressed in songs that are "introspective, impressionistic", and "charged by the author's overwhelming belief in them".[15] High Fidelity was impressed by Morrison's ability to explore a diversity of universal emotions and called the album "the full-circle complement to his most cosmic, allegorical work", veering from gospel-rooted R&B and Gaelic songs to rock and roll blended with "heartfelt religious fervor". "There's a general sense of happiness and clarity here", the magazine wrote, "as if Morrison has finally distilled his feelings down to their most essential musical level."[16] In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau deemed Into the Music his best record since 1970's Moondance while writing that like Bob Dylan, Morrison had "abandoned metaphorical pretensions, but only because he loves the world". Morrison's simple odes to rural life, he believed, were made vivid and deeper by backing musicians such as Marcus and "by his own excursions into a vocalise that has never been more various or apt." Christgau viewed "It's All in the Game" as the album's only great song, however, and was somewhat critical of the "lightweight rockers" and "You Know What They're Writing About", which he felt sounded tedious halfway through.[13] Into the Music was voted the sixth-best album of 1979 in the Pazz & Jop, an annual poll of American critics nationwide;[17] Christgau, the poll's supervisor, ranked it fourth on his own year-end list.[18] In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (1983), Dave Marsh later said the second half's suite of nocturnal ballads was "the greatest side of music Morrison has created since Astral Weeks".[12] Morrison biographer Erik Hage called the record "a fully fleshed-out musical vision that often surrenders to rapturous moments of pure beauty".[2]AftermathAfter the release of Into the Music and before his next release Common One in 1980, Morrison appeared at the Montreux Jazz Festival with a fleshed-out band. He performed two of the songs from the album, "Troubadours" and "Angeliou". These two songs featured Morrison interacting with the brass section, composed of Pee Wee Ellis and Mark Isham. Erik Hage describes this musical relationship between Morrison and the two brass musicians as "simply stunning".[19] Morrison's 2006-released DVD, Live at Montreux 1980/1974, contained these performances of the two songs. The 29 January 2008 reissued and remastered version of Into the Music contains alternative takes of "Steppin' Out Queen" and "Troubadours". Track listingAll songs written by Van Morrison, unless noted.
PersonnelMusicians
ChartsBillboard
Notes1. ^Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?, p.523 2. ^1 Hage, The Words and Music of Van Morrison, pp. 90-91 3. ^{{cite book|last=Mills|first=Peter|page=322|title=Hymns to the Silence: Inside the Words and Music of Van Morrison|year=2010|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing|isbn=1441156771}} 4. ^Turner, Too Late to Stop Now, p. 141-142 5. ^Hage, The Words and Music of Van Morrison, p. 88. 6. ^Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?, p.345 7. ^Rogan, No Surrender, p. 327 8. ^{{cite web|author=Marsh, Dave |date=1989 |url=http://www.control.lth.se/~anton/personal/music/1001_number.html |title=The 1001 Greatest Singles |publisher=control.lth.se |accessdate=2008-08-12 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20020204203107/http://www.control.lth.se/~anton/personal/music/1001_number.html |archivedate=4 February 2002 |df=dmy-all }} 9. ^{{cite web | url ={{Allmusic|class=album|id=r13465|pure_url=yes}} | title = Into the Music - Overview | publisher = AllMusic | first = Stephen Thomas | last = Erlewine |authorlink=Stephen Thomas Erlewine | accessdate = 2010-02-06}} 10. ^{{cite book|last=Strong|first=Martin C.|authorlink=Martin C. Strong|year=2004|chapter=Van Morrison|title=The Great Rock Discography|publisher=Canongate U.S.|isbn=1841956155|edition=7th}} 11. ^{{cite book|last=Rucker|first=Leland|editor-first=Gary|editor-last=Graff|editor-link=Gary Graff|title=MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide|publisher=Visible Ink Press|location=Detroit|year=1996|isbn=0787610372|chapter=Van Morrison}} 12. ^1 {{cite book|last=Marsh|first=Dave|authorlink=Dave Marsh|editor1-last=Marsh|editor1-first=Dave|editor2-last=Swenson|editor2-first=John|year=1983|title=The Rolling Stone Record Guide|page=345-46|chapter=Van Morrison|publisher=Random House|isbn=0394721071|edition=2nd}} 13. ^1 {{cite news|last=Christgau|first=Robert|authorlink=Robert Christgau|date=8 October 1979|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/cg/cgv10-79.php|title=Christgau's Consumer Guide|newspaper=The Village Voice|accessdate=26 May 2016}} 14. ^{{cite magazine|magazine=Rolling Stone|title=Into the Music|last=Cocks|first=Jay|authorlink=Jay Cocks|date=1 November 1979|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/into-the-music-19791101|accessdate=7 December 2008|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140227133226/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/into-the-music-19791101|archivedate=27 February 2014 |deadurl=yes}} 15. ^{{cite magazine|magazine=New York|pages=114-15|title=Van Extraordinaire|last=Brentkowski|first=Tom|date=22 October 1979}} 16. ^{{cite magazine|magazine=High Fidelity|issue=2|volume=29|pages=138-39|year=1979|title=Van Morrison: Into the Music}} 17. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/pnj/pjres79.php|title=Pazz & Jop 1979: Critics Poll|newspaper=The Village Voice|year=1980|accessdate=26 May 2016}} 18. ^{{cite news|last=Christgau|first=Robert|year=1980|url=http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/pnj/deans79.php|title=Pazz & Jop 1979: Dean's List|newspaper=The Village Voice|accessdate=26 May 2016}} 19. ^Hage, The Words and Music of Van Morrison, p.91 20. ^http://allmusic.com/album/into-the-music-r13465/charts-awards References
6 : Van Morrison albums|1979 albums|Albums produced by Van Morrison|Mercury Records albums|Warner Bros. Records albums|Polydor Records albums |
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