Van Morrison ♫ Beautiful Vision ♫ Rare 1982 Warner Bros. Records Vinyl LP 🔥

Sold Date: September 1, 2022
Start Date: August 26, 2022
Final Price: $29.99 (USD)
Seller Feedback: 1857
Buyer Feedback: 0


Welcome to Classic Cadillac Records!  I visually grade all my records as accurately as possible and will never grade anything above Near Mint unless it's still sealed.  Please note that a visual grade can differ from a play grade, and am happy to spot check a record upon request.   All orders are shipped within 1 business day (usually sooner) and packed with extra care to ensure fast, safe arrival.  Please look closely at all pictures, read all relevant details and ask any questions you may have before buying.  I offer a full 30-day return policy on everything I sell, so buy with confidence!  20% restocking fee charged on items returned for reasons other than it not working properly.  Thanks for looking!
Beautiful Vision by  Released16 February 1982RecordedMay–summer 1981Studio
Sausalito, , , , Length45:31 (All countries except US & Canada [Original release])
 (US & Canada)
 (1989 & 1998 European reissues)Van Morrison chronology
(1980)Beautiful Vision
(1982)
(1983) from Beautiful Vision "" b/w ""
Released: March 1982 "" b/w ""
Released: June 1982

Beautiful Vision is the thirteenth studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter , released in February 1982. It continued Morrison's departure from  at the time, instead favoring  and American  in its music. As with many of Morrison's recordings, spirituality is a major theme and some of the songs are based on the teachings of . Other songs show Morrison's Celtic heritage and reminiscence of his  background.

Beautiful Vision received critical acclaim but garnered only modest chart success, peaking at number 31 on the  and number 44 on the US .

Recording

The first recording session started in May 1981 at the  studios, , near the , San Francisco. Although only "" was released on Beautiful Vision from this session, "Cleaning Windows" and "Celtic Ray" were re-recorded for Beautiful Vision later on. All the other songs or instrumentals from the session were included on one of Morrison's later albums: the  "All Saints Day" and "Daring Night" appeared with lyrics on the albums  and , and "Down the Road I Go" was renamed "Down the Road" and used as the title track on .

On 27 July Morrison entered the recording studio to record "Cleaning Windows" and "Aryan Mist". Morrison brought in different musicians for this session, including his former drummer  and guitarist .

Morrison concluded recording in the summer, when he recorded the rest of the songs for the album. Four songs were not used from this session, including the future singles "" and "". Neither Knopfler nor  were able to produce the guitar tone Morrison wanted, so engineer Jim Stern suggested : "I got the call when I was doing a session in San Francisco. Van's producer Jim Stern said 'Can you get to the Plant [in Sausalito] in twenty minutes?' I said 'Yeah.' I walked into the studio with my gear as the band and Van were doing ... basic tracks. I was set up and playing before the end of the song 'She Gives Me Religion'". Michie later added lead guitar overdubs to "Cleaning Windows" and "Aryan Mist". Knopfler's contributions still featured on the final release, but are not as audible as Michie's.

Composition

According to the liner notes, some of the lyrics derive from the book Glamour: A World Problem by  writer . It is also said to have been strongly influenced by his new girlfriend, Ulla Munch, from  in Copenhagen, Denmark. The album also emphasised the distance Morrison had moved away from  and was inspired by . He commented at the time, "It's important for people to get into the music of their own culture... I think it can be dangerous to not validate the music of where you're from, for anybody, whether it's Bulgaria or whatever."

The opening song, "Celtic Ray", was one of the first songs to be written for the album. It is concerned with the singer's connection to the ancient  culture. The song has the concept of messages coming through the ether from Mother Ireland. "Northern Muse (Solid Ground)" adds a young woman in  to a similar theme. Morrison commented in an interview with  in 1982 that "Some of the material [on Beautiful Vision], when it started, was more traditional. Some of the songs – like 'Solid Ground' and 'Celtic Ray' – they basically started out as folk-oriented stuff, and ... ended up being integrated as folk/R&B."

"" and "Aryan Mist" are credited to the religious writings of Alice Bailey. Her book discusses the  ideas of "glamours" or "mental illusions", which formed a fog that covers the "spiritual warrior" and the "Aryan race" from the world. When the "dweller on the threshold" was covered with the light of the soul or "Angel of Presence" illumination came. Some of these ideas were quoted in the two Morrison compositions, both co-written with Hugh Murphy. In 1982 Morrison revealed in an interview: "I've read Glamour four or five times, and I get different things out of it each time. [Alice Bailey]'s saying a lot of things. It's depth reading. You might read it on Wednesday and on Thursday you pick it up again and get an entirely different thing. I don't feel qualified to speak about what it's about – you really have to read it yourself ... because there's so much in there."

"Beautiful Vision" can be interpreted as either a vision of heaven or of his girlfriend, who also influences "She Gives Me Religion" and "" (which refers to the stairway in the apartment where she lived). Biographer  believes the songs "'Vanlose Stairway' and 'She Gives Me Religion' [were] perhaps Morrison's most captivating love songs since the days of ." "" is about Morrison's first full-time job and the last carefree days of his adolescence in the years 1961 to 1962, and is a metaphor for the idea that his music alters people's perceptions of life. Biographer  believes in this song Morrison "captured the balance between his contentment at work and his aspirations to learn more about music. It conveyed the impression that his happiness with the mundane routine of smoking Woodbine cigarettes, eating Paris buns and drinking lemonade was made possible by the promise that at the end of the day he could enter the world of books and records ... ". The melody is very upbeat and embellished with organ and guitar, reminiscent to the music of . The song is written in a similar fashion to Morrison's 1970 song, "".

It is interpreted by three of Morrison's biographers that "Across the Bridge Where Angels Dwell" is literally about the bridge that separated Morrison's  home from the  house where his daughter,  and ex-wife Janet Morrison Minto (née Rigsby) lived. The interpretation originated with Irish musician  who, according to biographer Rogan "...assumed there was [such] a subtext". There is no other evidence for this interpretation, however, and the song makes no reference to either Morrison's daughter or ex-wife. Further weakening Coulter's interpretation is the fact that the lyrics were co-written by . Murphy's two other songwriting contributions to the album are "Dweller on the Threshold" and "Aryan Myst", both explicitly influenced by Alice Bailey's work "Glamour: A World Problem", which contains direct references to angels. Beautiful Vision ends with the instrumental "", with Morrison on piano and prominently features 's synthesizer.

Release and reception Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingA–A

Beautiful Vision was released in February 1982 by  in the United Kingdom and  in the United States. Its packaging featured a front cover conceptualized by Rudy Legname (later known as Rudi). It consists of a hand reaching up to a circle of cloud, containing a crescent shape, stars and a prismatic rainbow. The album was not released with a lyric sheet, and many of the first vinyl pressings were cut off-center, all because of production issues that resulted in a lack of quality control and "shoddy packaging", according to Morrison biographer .

Beautiful Vision received acclaim from contemporary critics. In a review for ,  deemed it a musically cohesive album whose songs nonetheless all sound distinct, especially "Cleaning Windows", which he said ranks among Morrison's greatest songs: "This music is purely gorgeous (or at times lovely), its pleasure all formal grace and aptness of invention." Chip Stern from  believed even the inferior songs are a pleasure to listen to because of Morrison's maturation into a more relaxed and disciplined singer, while his band is eclectic yet subtle enough to incorporate a number of styles without sounding ostentatious: "On tunes like 'Dweller on the Threshold', an r&b groove will suddenly support Celtic, Oriental, or Northern European folk references."  magazine's John Milward was less enthusiastic and lamented four of the songs because of what he felt were unimaginative lyrics, instances "when he lets his brain trivialize his heart" on an album that is otherwise superior to the temporal, superficial nature of most popular music, "a cogent statement of belief that finds Morrison touching his dangerously dogmatic themes with the grace of God".

At the end of 1982, Beautiful Vision was voted the 28th best album of the year in the , an annual poll of prominent critics published by The Village Voice magazine's Sam Sutherland named it 1982's ninth best record in his own year-end list and said "Morrison's fusion of Celtic folk, American jazz and universal mysticism remains unique." "Scandinavia" was nominated in the  category for the .

According to Morrison biographer Johnny Rogan, Beautiful Vision was "well-structured and arranged ... which offered depth and listenability. It also underlined the extent to which Morrison had moved away from the R&B stylings which had made him such a hit on American FM radio." In  (1983),  called it proof of his enduring strength as a recording artist, a more consistent set of songs than  (1980), and the most he has used jazz rhythms since  (1968).  was more critical in a retrospective review for , writing that because of the music's indistinct melodies and measured pace that threatens to dull, many of the songs are unessential for most listeners. 's Laura Barton, on the other hand, said it "never struck me as dull; on the contrary, its particular strangeness has always proved appealing – an exploration of Celtic heritage, distance, reminiscence, spirituality and the writings of Alice Bailey."  magazine named it the 45th greatest album of the 1980s, while Rolling Stone ranked it fourth in a poll of both critics and readers on the "15 Worst Albums by Great Bands".

Aftermath

Morrison was eager to include the new material recorded for Beautiful Vision in concert. Before the album was released he performed three-quarters of it at shows in California in October 1981. However his live performances at this point were increasingly confined to the . His manager, , was concerned that Morrison was not promoting the album with a nationwide tour of the US. Morrison fired Graham on stage in San Francisco. Herbie Armstrong remembered "He was taking Van in the wrong direction. He was trying to commercialize him." Warner Brothers persuaded Morrison to allow Tom Dowd to produce the album but after Morrison became suspicious of Warner's motives, Dowd's services were not used and Morrison took over production of the album.

Morrison performed four shows at the , London to promote the album.

After the release of the album, Morrison performed a series of concerts at the , London, opened by Herbie Armstrong with an  set. Paul Charles, who managed Morrison's business affairs at the time, commented that

"The idea [behind the Dominion residencies] was [to go against the] 'come into town, do one show, get all the press down, get the radio and TV and record-company people' [mentally]. My logic was, 'Look, with Van it's not just a rock & roll tour. It's not just here's the hits, here's the new record, please buy it, whatever.' It was a performance. ... A certain number of people would come back every night, [knowing that] Van will not have a set-list that he adheres to religiously ... So I thought, 'Here's a way. Van is not having any singles. Van doesn't do TV. How can we get attention to him doing what he does?' Well, the best thing that he does is perform live. I think we did four [concerts] the first time. We ended up doing eleven [in 1984]. We got a lot of coverage, we got a lot of attention, without him having to do something he didn't like."

Morrison's love of live performing was reignited by this set of concerts and he commented at the time that it was "more like appearing in a play, going to the theatre and doing your job every day – which I prefer to touring because that's very fragmented and disorientating." According to Johnny Rogan, these performances "are still regarded by many as his most memorable since the glory days of the Caledonia Soul Orchestra.

All the songs of the album have been performed live, some of them many hundred times, whereas "Across the bridge where angels dwell" and "Scandinavia" were only played on very few concerts. A concert on 3 to 4 April 1982 at the , , Germany, was broadcast in many European countries as a TV/radio  in the  TV series by German TV station . Seven of the songs that were performed were from Beautiful Vision.

In March 1983, Morrison performed a series of four concerts at the ; six of the Beautiful Vision songs were featured on the live album  that was composed of the two best concerts performed at this venue. On 27 January 1984, Morrison performed at another Rockpalast TV special from the  at , where he promoted  and included seven songs from Beautiful Vision.

"Vanlose Stairway" is one of the songs that Morrison has performed most frequently since the release of the album; the song has featured in over seven hundred of Morrison's shows, behind only "", "" and "" (as of 2010).

Track listing

All tracks are written by Van Morrison, except as indicated.

Side oneNo.TitleLyricsMusicLength1."Celtic Ray"  4:112."Northern Muse (Solid Ground)"  4:053.""Van Morrison/Hugh MurphyVan Morrison4:494."Beautiful Vision"  4:085."She Gives Me Religion"  4:33Total length:21:46Side twoNo.TitleLyricsMusicLength1.""  4:432.""  4:103."Aryan Mist"Van Morrison/Hugh MurphyVan Morrison4:004."Across the Bridge Where Angels Dwell"Van Morrison/Hugh MurphyVan Morrison4:315.""  6:41Total length:24:05