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Inarticulate Speech..

Inarticulate Speech..
Artist: Van Morrison
Label: Warner Bros
Category: Music

List Price: CDN$ 9.99
Buy New: CDN$ 6.99
You Save: CDN$ 3.00 (30%)



New (12) Used (2) from CDN$ 6.99

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 3742

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 23802
UPC: 759923802252
EAN: 0075992380225
ASIN: B000002KYV

Release Date: December 11, 1990
Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days
Condition: *FACTORY SEALED CD , Ships from Quebec, Canada. B29

Tracks:

   Higher Than the World
   Connswater
   River of Time
   Celtic Swing
   Rave on, John Donne
   Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 1
   Irish Heartbeat
   Street Only Knew Your Name
   Cry for Home
   Inarticulate Speech of the Heart No. 2
   September Night

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Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Enduring Favorite   September 6, 2003
Rick Carlson (Los Angeles, CA)
I too have been listening to Inarticulate Speech of the Heart for over 15 years. I have both LP and CD versions and enjoy both. While I have a number of Van Morrison works, ISOTH continues to be my all-time favorite and I never tire of it. If I were stranded on an island and could only have 10 CD's to listen to for the rest of my life, ISOTH would be on my list and probably near or at the top. If you don't own this work, get it - you will not be disappointed. You will hear somethine new everytime you listen to it.


4 out of 5 stars DEEPLY SPIRITUAL MUSIC   July 10, 2003
Pieter (Johannesburg)
Van Morrison's softer side is revealed here and his RB excursions are nowhere to be found. The lovely ballad Higher Than The World opens this album of mellow music and high spirituality and is followed by the beautiful instrumental Connswater. River Of Time sort of drifts along but Celtic Swing is stunning, another splendid instrumental with a foot tapping rhythm and evocative wind instruments. Rave On, John Donne is a tour de force in which Morrison mentions a long list of visionary artists of the last two centuries, a very powerful song in which I suppose he lists those writers with whom he feels a certain spiritual affinity. He even mentions the Rosy Cross, Theosophy and the Golden Dawn! Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart No. 1 is a flowing instrumental with outstanding piano and just a hint of ethereal backing vocals, whilst Irish Heartbeat is a tender, achingly beautiful ballad, almost like a lullaby. The Street Only Knew Your Name is a mid tempo rocker where Van does some of his characteristic vocalising. Cry For Home is another tuneful ballad with a lilting rhythm, whilst Inarticulate Speech No. 2 has Van's vocals that are missing in the first version and some great lyrics too. The album concludes with another semi-instrumental with ethereal backing vocals and wordless vocalising, the slow and winding September Night. This deeply spiritual album forms a cohesive whole. It may not be amongst Morrison's best, but true fans will love it for its melodic simplicity and stately elegance.


5 out of 5 stars great songs   February 3, 2003
ray b. (worcester, mass)
i love van so much, he is the greatest singer ever, and he's irish he rocks. irish heartbeat is one of the best songs ever heard, simple yet deep and it hits me and makes me cry every time i hear it i recently lost my mother and it was a song she loved and danced to thank you van for giving me memories


5 out of 5 stars Warm and inspiring music for a rainy day   September 23, 2000
This CD is one the gems of Van Morrison's work. Inarticulate Speech of the Heart is music that can make you warm inside on a cold, rainy day. The music is sensual and imaginitive (for me it recalls fond memories of the time when I lived in Ireland). I bought ISOTH almost 15 years ago as an LP which I still play regularly on my old record player. I'm still considering whether to buy the CD-version. The sound of a CD has a different feel to it, but I think the warmth comes out just as much as on LP even though the CD sound is somehow 'smoother'. The softly crackling and spluttering LP with its own 'atmosphere' is no longer available of course. If you are looking for a sparkling and initimate music that gets hold of your heart and soul (the same song is also on the CD), this is IT (if you didn't buy the LP version 15 years ago g). This music is worth every dime, a MUST-BUY.


5 out of 5 stars Rave On, Van Morrison!   August 25, 2000
Barron Laycock (Temple, New Hampshire United States)
As with several other Van Morrison albums, I first became aware of this album when I was living outside London in the early 1980s, and quickly became a re-confirmed Van Morrison fan. No one has a wider range of styles, interpretations, and abilities than Van, and he puts all of his eclectic talents to use here. From the opening "Higher Than The World" to the finals strains of the lovely instrumental "September Night", Morrison evokes a provocative journey into the mystic interiors within his heart. Along the way, Morrison shows why he has so confounded fans and critics for the last three decades. This album was part of his evolution into a new, less popular, but much more mature musical style, or styles, since Morrison is so multi-faceted in his approach to each song that it is hard to describe his musical tastes, uses of instruments or arrangements that he has to be heard across a number of albums to recognize common and recurring themes or approaches. pThere is much to appreciate and enjoy here, from the haunting "Connswater" to the lilting "Celtic Swing", from the title cut of "Inarticulate Speech Of The Heart"' to the Irish recollection found in a memorable "Irish Heartbeat". There are several instrumentals here, and they do much to provide the atmospherics for the mood of the album. My own favorite of the album is the aforementioned "Irish Heartbeat' as well as the rap-like "Rave On, John Donne", an interesting and unusual chanted survey of the contemporary intellectual scene. When you hear an accomplished poet and lyricist like Morrison show you what rap could be, you realize just how prosaic and amateurish most of what passes as rap really is. Morrison later revved up his career with the blockbuster "Avalon Sunset" album later in the 80s. But all the elements he brought so memorably into that later comeback and reemergence onto the popular charts was here in this album in spades. I think you will a lot to enjoy and appreciate in this sleeper of an album by one of the best of the sixties generation of singer/songwriters. Enjoy