
Artist: Van Morrison
Title Of Album: Born To Sing: No Plan B
Year Of Release: 2012
Label: Blue Note Records
Genre: Blues / Jazz
Quality: Flac tracks+.cue+log
Bitrate: Lossless
Total Time: 00:59:54
Total Size: 336 MB
Tracklist:
01 Open The Door (To Your Heart)
02 Goin' Down To Monte Carlo
03 Born To Sing
04 End Of The Rainbow
05 Close Enough For Jazz
06 Mystic Of The East
07 Retreat And View
08 If In Money We Trust
09 Pagan Heart
10 Educating Archie
The album was well received by critics with most reviewers giving it four out of five stars, including Allmusic and Rolling Stone. It debuted at No. 10 on Billboard 200.
David Fricke with Rolling Stone gave the album four out of five stars calling it a "vividly irritated, vocally compelling record". Fricke concluded: "At 67, on his 35th studio album, Morrison feels like an endangered species, surrounded by jive and crooks, with nothing to fall back on but his sinuous growl – like gravel rolling through velvet – and scatting hallelujahs."[22]
A four out of five star review by Thom Jurek with Allmusic described the music: "Employing his trademark Celtic soul, the album also showcases incursions into jazz and blues and sometimes all three within the same tune."[14]
Stephen Graham with Jazzwise gave the album four out of five stars and wrote: "On this, his first studio album since Keep it Simple, this time recorded unusually in his home town of Belfast, Morrison has come up with the goods once again after the commercial and critical success of Keep It Simple and the huge interest shown when he followed it by releasing a live album based on his great 1960s masterpiece, Astral Weeks."[19] Previously in August 2012, journalist Mike Flynn wrote an early review of the unreleased album in Jazzwise commenting that "initial listens suggest it’s his strongest album for some time" and that the album "finds Morrison emphatically moving back into jazz territory, and has resulted in a wonderfully laconic, live-in-the-studio atmosphere. Yet the laidback feel is counterbalanced with some of his most acerbic, politically charged and socially conscious lyrics to date."[24]
A reviewer in the Belfast Telegraph rated the album with four out of five stars and called it "effortless, cool and classy" and commented that "when Plan A is this good, there's no reason to look any further".[15]
The Guardian's Dave Simpson reviewed the album and gave it four out of five stars. In his review of the album he wrote: "His 35th solo studio album is his jazziest: the warm brass and catchy, sweet melodies recall 1970's Moondance. But the music's velvet glove delivers some of his hardest-hitting lyrics."[16] A review in The Observer again rated the album four out of five stars and found "Morrison's voice remains peerless. A keeper, a goodie."[21]
The album received a four star rating in musicOMH and reviewer John Murphy commented on the band being "particularly wonderful, with a muted trumpet and double bass making for memorable solos." He concluded that the album "will probably be an acquired taste for some (the jazzy backing may put some off, as may Morrison's tendency to incessantly repeat lines and start scatting every so often), but it's yet another example of his sometimes erratic genius."[20] Another four star rating was given the album by The Independent's reviewer Andy Gill who called it "Van Morrison's best album in some while" and "a set of songs that, despite the relaxed tone of their jazz-blues settings, foam with indignation about the venality of capitalist adventurism."[17] The album was also reviewed with a four star rating in The New Zealand Herald where it was referred to as "Another worthwhile late-career high from Van" by reviewer Graham Reid.[25]
Jason Heller with The A. V. Club gave the album a C+ rating noting "His voice remains in sturdy form, all rumble and husk, and his once sinuous cadence feels wizened, not weakened, by the occasional arthritic crick" and that ending songs of the album, one of which the critic found "cynical" and another "exhausted R&B", but wrote it was salvaged by "solid, serviceable, latter-day Morrison material."[26] Uncut gave the album 7 out 10 stars with reviewer, Graeme Thomson concluding that the album "remains a vibrant and timely reaffirmation of Morrison’s talents. It is not the transcendent album some may have read in the runes, but it contains several hints that such greatness may, finally, be within his grasp once more."[23]
Tony Clayton with Irish Times gave the new album three out of five stars commenting that "While lyrically he ruminates on financial crises and (once again) the pressures of being Van the Man, musically it’s all jazzy breezes (Going Down to Monte Carlo) and leisurely blues (Pagan Heart). Nothing new then, but the same-old same-old somehow sounds fresher. Life in the old dog yet."[18] Brandon Stewart with 612 ABC Brisbane praised the album and commented: "The sound is warm and immediately familiar, as Van and his road band swing through the freshest set of songs we’ve heard from Morrison in some years











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Posted on October 14, 2012 at 6:00 AM
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