Bulbs (song) explained

Bulbs
Cover:bulbs.VM.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Van Morrison
Album:Veedon Fleece
B-Side:
Released:November 1974
Recorded:March 1974, Mercury Studios, New York City, United States
Genre:
Length:4:19
Label:Warner Bros.
Producer:Van Morrison
Prev Title:Ain't Nothing You Can Do
Prev Year:1974
Next Title:Caldonia
Next Year:1974

"Bulbs" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison. It was the only single to be taken from his 1974 album Veedon Fleece, with a B-side of "Cul de Sac" for the US release and "Who Was That Masked Man" for the UK release.[2] [3]

Recording and composition

"Bulbs" was first recorded, with different lyrics, at the recording session for the 1973 album, Hard Nose the Highway, released in 1973.[4] After the first recording session for Veedon Fleece, "Bulbs" was re-cut at Mercury Studios in New York City in March 1974, along with "Cul de Sac", to give it a more rock feeling. According to Jef Labes this was "cause he (Morrison) didn't feel they had the right feeling... It was me, Van and a bunch of other guys that he'd never played with."[5] bass player Joe Macho had previously played on the 1966 Bobby Hebb hit song "Sunny".[6]

"Bulbs" has been described as "a pleasant, catchy country ditty, a Dire Straits song before its time" by biographer John Collis.[7] As with many of Morrison's songs, "Bulbs" does not have a clear story line, but in part focuses on immigration to the United States as in the lines:

She's leaving Pan American

Suitcase in her hand

I said her brothers and her sisters

Are all on Atlantic sand

Critical reception

Record World called it "Something like a performance from his Astral Weeks days with a graft of pedal steel" and said that "Van benefits from a renewed powersurge."[8]

In an interview with Morrison, Tom Donahue said, after he had listened to "Bulbs": "You always make great noises. The other things you do in songs beside the words."[9]

In a Stylus Magazine review for the album Veedon Fleece, Derek Miller says of the song:[10]

"Of course, the best and most immediately memorable song on Veedon Fleece is "Bulbs". Coming about as close to laying down a groove as he does on the album, the song quickly makes dust of its acoustic start, leaping headstrong into a Waylon Jennings' style bass-roll, rump heavy and plush, pianos shimmering and fingerdense."

Morrison performed the song on the German television show Musikladen on 13 November 1974.

Title

The title might come from the lines:

And her batteries are corroded

And her hundred watt bulb just blew

or the repeated chorus:

.. she's standing in the shadows

Where the street lights all turn blue

Personnel

Other releases

A live performance of this song is featured on the 1974 disc of Morrison's 2006 issued DVD, Live at Montreux 1980/1974. Morrison used a stripped-down band on this Montreaux Jazz Festival appearance consisting of:

Covers

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Segretto, Mike. 33 1/3 Revolutions Per Minute - A Critical Trip Through the Rock LP Era, 1955–1999. 2022. 1974. 301–302. Backbeat. 9781493064601.
  2. Web site: Van Morrison – Bulbs. www.45cat.com.
  3. Web site: Van Morrison – Bulbs. www.45cat.com.
  4. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence? p. 521
  5. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence? p. 284
  6. Web site: Soul Hits from NYC . soul60scodified.wordpress.com.
  7. Collis, Inarticulate Speech of the Heart, pp. 140–141
  8. Record World. September 28, 1974. 2023-03-15. Single Picks. 12.
  9. Hinton, Celtic Crossroads, p. 179
  10. Web site: Van Morrison – Veedon Fleece . stylusmagazine.com . 3 August 2008 . 28 July 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140728143621/http://www.stylusmagazine.com/articles/on_second_thought/van-morrison-veedon-fleece.htm . dead .
  11. Web site: Hal Horowitz . Vanthology: A Tribute to Van Morrison – Van Morrison | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards . AllMusic . 5 August 2003 . 15 February 2014.
  12. Web site: Stegall . Tim . Jason Boland & the Stragglers: Hard Times Are Relative Album Review . The Austin Chronicle.