Pay the Devil (CD) by Van Morrison
Pay the Devil (CD) by Van Morrison
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Pay the Devil (CD) by Van Morrison

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Forty years into a distinguished pop and rock career, Van Morrison has cut a 15-track album of country songs. Why? Because he can; he's Van the Man.

Vocally, Morrison can do it all: from the time he came out as a bluesy garage rocker with his group Them in the early '60s, to his folkie singer/songwriter phase circa Astral Weeks, on into his soul and jazz excursions and even in his latter day persona as The Singer, with the brusque and seen-it-all persona who finally came to terms with himself on Hymns To The Silence, he's demonstrated that one man can sing it all. Now following on the heels of his most recent roots-oriented project, a duets record with Linda Gail Lewis (Jerry Lee's sister), Morrison tries his hand at country and western - old school variety. And wouldn't you just know it: he tackles it just as masterfully as he did when he topped the blue-eyed soul genre in the '70s. Truly, there is no vocal frontier that Morrison has left to explore.

The dramatic standard. "There Stands the Glass," the story of a man who relies on alcohol to ease his misery, fits perfectly in Morrison's steady hands. "Don't You Make Me High," another old time drinking tune, is good for some yuks. Leon Payne's "Things Have Gone to Pieces" is a nice slice of a "poor me, now that you're gone" song to which Morrison brings some of his trademark, soulful tenderness.

He plays it straight on Hank Williams' "Your Cheatin' Heart" (heavy on the steel guitar) and the twangy "My Bucket's Got A Hole In It," which both rest comfortably beside his original compositions, like the honky tonkin' "Playhouse" and the title song, "Pay the Devil;" both sound like the genuine country article. Another original, "This Has Got to Stop," is Morrison's bid in the countrypolitan (sophisticated country) game.

In the melancholy "What Am I Living For?" Morrison puts some of his meandering style of vocalizing to work; Webb Pierce's "More and More" also gets the patented Morrison treatment. The lyric to "Once A Day," penned by Bill Anderson, is perfect for Morrison's sad sack persona on this album: "The only time I wish that you weren't gone is once a day, every day, all day long." The final track is the contemporary country of Rodney Crowell and his poignant "Till I Gain Control Again." The proverbial man on the road song, Morrison gives it his heartfelt best.

Clearly this album project was a labor of love for Morrison; you can't help but believe him when he sings "Have to pay the devil for my music, keep on rolling from town to town." It's a hard life, pardner; but Morrison's music makes it that much easier for the rest of us.

By Danielle Santiago

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Sep 21, 2009
LoonOnTheLake
2 out of 5 stars review

Disappointed

I am a huge Van Morrison fan, but I was disappointed with Pay The Devil. He is singing classic country songs with a western twang and it doesn't sound right to me. I like classic country, maybe if he brought more of his own style to the songs, it would have been better. Sorry Van, I still love you.

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