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Van Morrison - The Bedroom Tape

Track listing:
  1. I Was Born To Sing The Blues 4:47
  2. All Night Long 2:47
  3. Wild Mountain Thyme 3:31
  4. Gloria 6:46
  5. Spanish Rose 4:10
  6. Walking In The Queen's Garden 6:21
  7. Harmonica Breakdown [Instrumental] 1:59
  8. T.B. Sheets 15:59

Notes


VAN MORRISON - The Bedroom Tape @1964-1967

VAN MORRISON
The Bedroom Tape, @1964-1967

01. I Was Born To Sing The Blues [aka "That's All I Know"]
02. "All Night Long"
03. Wild Mountain Thyme
04. "Gloria" [aka "You're The One"]
05. Spanish Rose
06. "Walking In The Queen's Garden"
07. "Harmonica Breakdown" [instrumental]
08. T.B. Sheets

FLAC FINGERPRINTS:
01. I Was Born To Sing The Blues.flac:c3d395350ecc2c28cb494e5f02252a16
02. All Night Long.flac:3379996231c64fdcc14f1d936bef6ab6
03. Wild Mountain Thyme.flac:45a4d91d0bb75cc690389104cddd77af
04. Gloria.flac:a6d4643a51605e15029f770b3b80e774
05. Spanish Rose.flac:8f461378a5208067ac71064155831627
06. Walking In The Queen's Garden.flac:da16df2f7198a1d521ae40b9fbc8c179
07. Harmonica Breakdown [instrumental].flac:47fdd2498d3e7ce13a730f134f415d34
08. T.B. Sheets.flac:85722507b9aef544de115131a23cbbd3

SOURCE: unknown
LINEAGE: ?? > unknown generation cassette tape > CD-R > EAC wav > Trader's Little Helper flac level 8 & torrent > HungerCity

NOTES:
This was treed via the Van Morrison trading groups in 2000. I wrote the original liner notes (below) and the artwork was created by Robert Glenn Plotner. The cover photo comes from a photocopy of an original photo loaned to me by Janet “Planet” Minto, which was taken @early 1967.

These songs seem to have been, by the scant bit of fact & fiction surrounding them, recorded sometime between 1964 and 1967. The original source tape may have been sent (so rumored) by Violet Morrison (Van's mother) to a fanclub in Holland (called "His Mysterious Strength", at Van's suggestion) sometime during 1967 (along with notes referring to recording with The Sweet Inspirations in NYC). The overall sound quality of these recordings is, frankly, terrible. But, their historical significance is priceless. The audio generation/history of these recordings is unknown, as is pretty much everything else about them.

"I Was Born To Sing The Blues" (aka "That's All I Know") is in the style of early John Lee Hooker.

"All Night Long" (so titled on the the source tapes) includes backup singers, possibly The Sweet Inspirations, and may be from the first Bang studio sessions (March 28-29, 1967). The standout chorus though sounds more like "Call my name". Whatever the correct title, it does have a "Twist and Shout" style to it, a song that was penned by Bert Berns, thus this is likely also a Berns composition recorded by Van at his suggestion.

"Gloria" (aka "You're the One") may be an early take of that song (which would place it possibly as early as 1964?), but it is difficult to say, let alone to distinguish the lyrics. What can be heard at points throughout, aside from "you're the one", are mentions of "Bo Diddley" (whom Van met in Los Angeles in the first week of August 1966), "do you remember?", "I'm the one", and what sounds like Van spelling out "G-A-M" (though, due to the muddy sound, it could be "G-I-M", as in George Ivan Morrison)..."I'm the one". On the promo interview for "The Healing Game" Van states that Gloria was conceived as "a Muddy Waters / Bo Diddley sort of thing".

"Spanish Rose" is likely a pre-Bang demo (before March 28, 1967), possibly as early as late-1966 when Van was trying to figure out what to do next while cagily stuck in Belfast performing with a hand-picked band dubbed THEM AGAIN.

"Walking In The Queen's Garden" is probably an early version of a song by the same name later recorded in late-1967 by Them (after Van left) on their "Now And Them" album (released 1/68). Jim Armstrong (guitarist with Them from late-1965 through their US tour with Van, and afterwards) explained, "'Walking In The Queen's Garden' is one we used to do with Van. It's based on an old Howlin' Wolf lick." Armstrong has also mentioned that this was a song that Them were practicing during their West Coast US tour during the summer of 1966.

"Harmonica Breakdown" (correct title, if there is a title, unknown) is probably an emulation of Little Walter's style, whom Van had met, and run errands for (to pick up Chinese food), while rooming at a hotel in London during Them's first visit in mid/late-1964. In return, Little Walter showed him some techniques with the harp.

"T.B. Sheets" is, again, likely a pre-Bang demo. 16 minutes of improvisational blues, extremely raw, but from which emerged a notable early studio recording, an early rock genre "death blues" which generated a point of conjecture as to its "inspiration". Some books & articles have zeroed in on this song as stemming from a real-life tragic relationship...there are stories of Van emerging from the BANG studio recordings for this spent & sobbing, all of which Van Morrison denies as fiction.