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#50GreatestConcerts: Van Morrison, 1973

Morrison was, as usual, lost in the music, getting so into it that he gave himself backaches

Jul 21, 2017

Van Morrison's in the early 1970s. Photo: Trade ad for the album 'Saint Dominic's Preview.'

It takes an extraordinary band to top the studio versions of songs like “Domino” and “Cyprus Avenue,” but with the 10-piece Caledonia Soul Orchestra, Van Morrison pulled it off night after night. With horns, strings and blazing jazz chops, the band was ready to “take the songs anywhere Van wanted to take them,” says guitarist John Platania. “Every performance of each song was different.”

Morrison was, as usual, lost in the music, getting so into it that he gave himself backaches ”“ the platform shoes he was favoring at the time probably didn’t help. He rarely addressed the crowd, and kept his band on its toes with subtle gestures that sparked dynamic shifts worthy of James Brown. “He had these signals behind his back,” says Platania. “He would flash his hand and spread his fingers out. We knew instantly we had to bring it down and then build it up again.”

Morrison was stretching out, toying with his phrasing, elongating syllables like a jazz singer. The band ended when the tour did ”“ but it lives on in Morrison’s It’s Too Late to Stop Now, one of the most essential live albums of all time, recently released in a gloriously extended version. “We were sad to see it end,” says Platania. “But in those days, he would say stuff like, ”˜The show doesn’t have to go on.’”

Click here to check out the entire story in the digital edition of Rolling Stone India. 

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