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Down the Road (Van Morrison album)

Down the Road
VanMorrison DowntheRoad album cover .jpg
Studio album by Van Morrison
Released 14 May 2002
Recorded Autumn 2000 - September 2001
Wool Hall, Bath, Somerset, England
Genre Celtic rock, blues, R&B
Length 67:09
Label Universal
Producer Van Morrison
Van Morrison chronology
You Win Again
(2000)
Down the Road
(2002)
What's Wrong with This Picture?
(2003)
Singles from Down the Road
  1. "Hey Mr. DJ" b/w "Someone Like You"/"Bright Side of the Road"
    Released: May 2002
  2. "Meet Me In The Indian Summer" b/w "In the Afternoon/Ancient Highway/Raincheck/Meditation/Joe Turner Sings/Don't You Make Me High"/"In the Midnight"
    Released: August 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars
The Music Box 4/5 stars
Pop Matters (favorable)
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars
ShakingThrough.net (4.2/5)

Down the Road is the twenty-ninth studio album by Northern Irish singer Van Morrison (see 2002 in music). The album has a nostalgic tone, lyrically and musically, and its arrangements mix R&B and blues with country and folk, and with a few exceptions, like "Georgia on My Mind," the music is most often rooted in 1950s and early 1960s popular music.

The album charted at #6 in the UK and #26 in the US, while consistently charting in the top 20 across Europe.

The album was originally recorded with singer and pianist Linda Gail Lewis within a month of the release of You Win Again. It was originally entitled Choppin' Wood, but Morrison re-recorded it, removing Linda Gail Lewis' contributions to the songs and deleting other songs from the album. Morrison recorded another nine songs to the album in late 2001 and retitled it Down the Road. The songs that were included were increased from an original ten to fifteen tracks and a lengthy sixty-seven minutes. One of the original songs, "Just Like Greta", that was not included on the album would appear on Morrison's 2005 release Magic Time, without a rerecording. It was finished by year's end in 2001 and released after numerous delays.

The songs on the album lean towards the blues the singer listened to in his youth. The title track was originally entitled "Down the Road I Go" and was first recorded in 1981 with guitarist Mark Knopfler. The song was then re-recorded with Linda Gail Lewis in November 2000 with additional lyrics. "Choppin' Wood" is a tribute to the singer's father, George Morrison, who had died suddenly from a heart attack more than a decade earlier. In "The Beauty of the Days Gone By", Morrison attempts to come to terms with approaching old age. In the song "Whatever Happened to P.J. Proby?" Morrison refers to musicians P J Proby and Scott Walker and makes political references to Screaming Lord Sutch, the former leader of the British Monster Raving Loony Party, who died in 1999. In the second verse of the song Morrison claims that he


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Wikipedia

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