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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The definitive early Van,
By
This review is from: Bang Masters (Audio CD)
Van Morrison's early transitional recordings (between leaving Them in 1967 and signing with Warner Bros. in 1968) have been packaged and repackaged many times, four of them through Sony Music alone (this disc, "T.B. Sheets" in 1990, "Blowin' Your Mind!"--which was the original--in '95 and again in '98, and the "Super Hits" budget compilation). Of these now-redundant rehashes, "Bang Masters" is by far the most complete, and therefore the definitive collection, let no one tell you differently. The liner notes say that, at the time of the CD's release (in early '91), this was the fourth repackaging of the Bang Records sessions. One dares not consider all the imports from small European and Asian labels.One of the reasons I chose this one was because it had the complete "Brown-Eyed Girl" (unlike the inexplicable single edit on "T.B. Sheets," wherein "Making love in the green grass" was replaced by "Laughin' and a-runnin', hey hey"). As I have a copy of "Astral Weeks" (also highly recommended), I thought it would be fun to hear the original versions of "Madame George" and "Beside You," as well. The version of "Madame George" presented here sounds like a Johnny Rivers track (and Rivers would cover Van's "Into the Mystic" in 1970), but has an extra verse left out of the "Astral Weeks" version of the song. (In trying to learn this song on guitar, I actually went to the trouble of learning the extra verse from the first version while playing like the second, jazzier version.) "T.B. Sheets" is an absolutely riveting track--Van nervously edging towards the door while Julie, his terminally ill girlfriend, begs him to stay and keep her company. It's been rumored that, at the end of the final take, Van broke down in tears and further sessions were postponed (since this song is based on a real-life experience, that would have been understandable), but there is no evidence here of emotional upheaval, impending or otherwise. Ignore all the imitations. "Bang Masters" is the '67 sessions disc to get.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A fascinating glimpse at the beginning of his solo career-,
By
This review is from: Bang Masters (Audio CD)
Since so many others have written quite well of the origins of these sessions, I won't rehash that. I simply wanted to say that these are excellent songs and the liner notes in this collection are concise in explaining the fact that Van did not intend for these songs to end up as an album by any title. As it turned out, producer Bert Burns died and Van left Bang records through an escape "key man" clause. So that is why there have been endless repackagings of the 21 or 22 tracks that exist. "T.B. Sheets" is the most fascinating song in the Van Morrison collection as far as I'm concerned. It's almost like something Edgar Allan Poe or William Blake might have written had their art been music. The rest of the collection is a snapshot of the mindset of a 21 year old legend-in-the-making. My only complaint with this album is the inclusion of an alternate version of "He Ain't Give You None". The better version appeared on the "T.B.Sheets" vinyl version. Presumably, that is also the version that Sony put on the CD, but I do not know. The other version is a more sinister reading, and the lyrics are altered slightly.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Packaging of Van's Bang Material,
By Chris Lauer(cflauer@us.ibm.com) (Atlanta, Ga.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bang Masters (Audio CD)
Anyone interested in the work of Van Morrison is aware that Van recorded this material without planning for a studio album. Ironically, this work has been rereleased over and over again on one rip-off album after another. This is the only release that deserves merit. Historically, these recordings provide interesting insight into the way Van developed from the soulful pop/rock of Them into the stream-of-consciousness jazz/folk of "Astral Weeks". "T.B. Sheets" and the seminal "Brown Eyed Girl" stand out, but such lesser-known songs as "Spanish Rose" and "Joe Harper Saturday Morning" are what make this collection really enjoyable. Add the rarely heard "Chick-a-Boom",the original versions of "Beside You" and "Madame George", and an alternate take of "Brown Eyed Girl" and you get an important piece of music history. Avoid all other repackaging of this material!!!!
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