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Pay the Devil
Pay the Devil
Van Morrison / CD / 2006
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Artist
Van Morrison
Format
CD
Genre
Country
Label Name
Lost Highway
Producer
Van Morrison
Release Date
2006 03 07
Song List
1: There Stands the Glass (2:16)
2: Half as Much (2:35)
3: Things Have Gone to Pieces (3:10)
4: Big Blue Diamonds (2:56)
5: Playhouse (4:13)
6: Your Cheatin' Heart (2:32)
7: Don't You Make Me High (2:46)
8: My Bucket's Got a Hole in It (2:22)
9: Back Street Affair (2:48)
10: Pay the Devil (3:02)
11: What Am I Living For? (3:56)
12: This Has Got to Stop (4:43)
13: Once a Day (2:51)
14: More and More (2:46)
15: Till I Gain Control Again (5:59)
Style.Categories
Neo-Traditionalist Country, Contemporary Country
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Pay the Devil
, an album-long foray into
country
music, shouldn't come as a surprise to
Van Morrison
fans. It's a logical extension of his love affair with American music. Certainly
blues
,
R&B
,
soul
, and
jazz
have been at the forefront, but one can go all the way back to the
Bang
years and find
"Joe Harper Saturday Morning,"
or songs on
Tupelo Honey
that touch
country
. More recently,
You Win Again
, with
Linda Gail Lewis
, offered two
Hank Williams
tunes and
"Crazy Arms."
The
Skiffle Sessions
with
Lonnie Donegan
offered traditional Southern tunes including
Jimmie Rodgers
'
"Mule Skinner Blues."
Morrison
's lyrics have also referenced
country
music blatantly.
Pay the Devil
comes from direct sources of inspiration: his father's
skiffle
band and
Ray Charles
' historic forays into
country
on the two volumes of
Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music
in 1962. The evidence lies in three cuts on this disc, all of which
Charles
recorded:
Curley Williams
'
"Half as Much,"
Art Harris
and
Fred Jay
's
"What Am I Livin' For,"
and
Hank Williams
'
"Your Cheatin' Heart."
Morrison
's a cagey one: his own mercurial versions of these nuggets are more traditional than those of
Charles
, yet are steeped in similar production styles that offer a clear nod to the late artist. While there are no horns on
Pay the Devil
, the layers of strings on top of "fiddles" and
honky tonk
pianos -- as well as earlier pedal steel styles -- are giveaways. And then there is the voice. Like
Charles
,
Morrison
is a
soul
singer no matter what he sings and he digs into these tomes with fire and the uncommon sweetness of tone and limited timbre that
Charles
did. But
Morrison
re-creates these tunes in his own image too.
Recorded in Belfast with his own band,
Pay the Devil
flows seamlessly from start to finish over 15 cuts. It opens with a killer read of
"There Stands the Glass,"
which is brave considering it's synonymous with
Webb Pierce
(one of two here -- the other is
"More and More"
). It's drenched in pedal steel, electric guitar, and a pair of basses. The fiddle floats just above the upright piano and a swell of strings in the bridge. It drips with a swaggering loneliness and gets the full weepy treatment with
Geraint Watkins
' piano solo.
"Things Have Gone to Pieces,"
written by
Leon Payne
, is full of wasted self-pity and
honky tonk
desolation. Once more it's a daring move given how closely associated the song is with
George Jones
. In the grain of his lionhearted voice,
Morrison
tears it back to its essence as a
country-blues
song.
Morrison
outdoes himself on
Clarence Williams
'
"My Bucket's Got a Hole in It,"
turning it into a
rockabilly
shuffle.
Billy Wallace
's
"Back Street Affair"
is full of barroom
soul
.
Bill Anderson
's
"Once a Day"
is given the full '60s
countrypolitain
treatment here, with strings and a full backing chorus that could almost be
the Anita Kerr Singers
.
"What Am I Living For"
is a tune closely associated with
Conway Twitty
in his prime.
Morrison
's version touches on the original but brings it home to Belfast.
In addition to the classics, there are three originals here as well. There's the rollicking hillbilly
blues
of
"Playhouse"
that growl like the young
Conway Twitty
and
Johnny Horton
did. Then comes the misleading title track. Unable to let his discontent stay out of his records,
Morrison
once again assails those who would pigeonhole his music, to the tune of a laid-back, shuffling
country
stroll.
$11.79
List Price:
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