Van Morrison: Moving On Skiffle - 2023

  

I'm old enough that not many music genres are "before my time", but Skiffle is one of them. Beloved of Van Morrison, Paul McCartney and John Lennon in the late fifties, it was characterised by the rhythmic scratch of the washboard and leading exponent Lonnie Donegan's whiny voice. I never got into it, actually, largely due to my irritation with the afore-mentioned Donegan's delivery. However, any subsequent forays into it by artists such as Mark Knopfler, McCartney, Dylan and obviously Morrison have found me tapping my feet with surprising enthusiasm. This album has had that invigorating effect on me.  

Van has stopped pub-bore style moaning about Coronavirus restrictions (thank the Lord!), bar on a couple of the album's twenty-three songs, and the overall effect is one of a musician and his band having a great time. 

As always with Van, the musicians and backing vocalists are top notch and the sound quality is excellent, that old previously rudimentary washboard sound updated to a warm, bassy upbeat blues shuffle. It is very much to my liking. Sure, at ninety minutes in length it is a long one, but it provides ideal background music. The songs all flow into each other with a joyous feel of being in an Irish bar around ten o'clock. Van's innate Irish instinct for making his studio recordings sound live comes across strongly on this genuine pleasure of an album. It reminds me a bit of Bruce Springsteen's Seeger Sessions. I bet Bruce will love this. Dylan too. 

Highlights are - Freight TrainCareless LoveSail Away Ladies, the Black Jack Davy re-interpretation of Gypsy Davy, the Springsteen-esque and irrepressible gospel workout of the Civil Rights anthem This Loving Light Of Mine and the similar vibe of Take This HammerCotton Fields (also covered by the Beach Boys), the groovy rock 'n' soul of No Other BabyStreamline Train and the nine-minute closer Green Rocky Road - check out that sweet violin. This track reignites memories of the lengthy material on 1972's St. Dominic's Preview album - proper improvisational Van. 

Also impressive are the Celtic soul of Streamlined Cannonball, the Cajun sounds of Greenback Dollar and Yonder Comes A Sucker, the funky guitar of Oh Lonesome Me and the energetic rocking Worried Man Blues

The album plays out like a bluesy soulful creation as opposed to a skiffle one. Yes it is late fifties-influenced but there is something muscular, solid and thoroughly captivating about its effervescent and contemporary but still retro delivery.

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