Van Morrison Bootlegs !exclusive! [ FHD ]
Van has dozens of original songs he has never officially released but has played live for decades. “Linden Arden Stole the Highlights” evolved live. But there are also covers: his take on Dylan’s “Just Like a Woman,” Ray Charles’ “I Believe to My Soul,” or the traditional “Shenandoah” —often performed but rarely pressed to plastic.
In the digital age, the hunt for physical "silver" CDs has mostly shifted to online archives and fan forums. van morrison bootlegs
The bootlegs fill the gaps that Van refuses to acknowledge. Van has dozens of original songs he has
There is a term among Van Morrison fans called the "Van the Man" moment. Bootlegs are the only place to reliably find these. He is famously curmudgeonly, and sometimes he sounds bored. But when he is "on," the energy is terrifyingly intense. In the digital age, the hunt for physical
Start with the soundboard. If that doesn’t hook you, Van boots might not be for you. If it does, explore the 1971 Pacific High session, then the 1978 Boarding House show. Avoid compilations with generic covers. Always check the lineage (source > transfer > encoding) in the info file.
: A high-energy performance from a transition period, featuring rare live versions of tracks from Veedon Fleece Key Studio Outtakes & Rarities Van’s vault was so legendary that the unofficial 3-CD set The Genuine Philosopher's Stone