Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Three Chords & the Truth (Van Morrison album)

2019 studio album by Van Morrison From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Three Chords & the Truth (Van Morrison album)
Remove ads

Three Chords & the Truth is the 41st studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, released on 25 October 2019 by Exile Productions and Caroline Records.[1] His sixth record in four years, it reached the Top 20 in seven countries.[2] Morrison's first album to feature all-new original songs since 2012’s Born to Sing: No Plan B, it includes "If We Wait for Mountains", a co-write with Don Black, and "Fame Will Eat the Soul", a duet with Bill Medley of the Righteous Brothers.[3][4]

Quick facts Studio album by Van Morrison, Released ...
Remove ads

Critical reception

More information Aggregate scores, Source ...

According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Three Chords & the Truth received "generally favorable reviews" based on a weighted average score of 80 out of 100 from 7 critic scores.[5] It was chosen as a 'Favorite Blues Album' by AllMusic.[10] Pitchfork concluded that it demonstrates that "Van Morrison remains one of rock’s most enduring studies in contrast, never changing and forever restless."[2] "Songwriter Harlan Howard coined the phrase “Three chords and the truth” to describe the necessary ingredients for country and western music", it notes, but finds that "this isn’t a country record. Van’s talking about his desire to take simple rhymes and traditional song structures and imbue them with Caledonia soul heaviness." American Songwriter writes that "the vibrant, often vivacious Three Chords and the Truth" finds the 74-year-old "dashing along in an extraordinary creative and fertile clip".[11]

Remove ads

Track listing

All tracks are written by Van Morrison, except "If We Wait for Mountains", co-written with Don Black.

More information No., Title ...
Remove ads

Personnel

  • Van Morrison - acoustic rhythm guitar, electric guitar, electric piano, saxophone, vocals
  • Dave Keary - electric guitar, bazouki
  • Jay Berliner - acoustic guitar
  • David Hayes, Pete Hurley, Jeremy Brown - bass
  • John Allair, Richard Dunn - Hammond organ
  • Paul Moran - organ
  • Teena Lyle - piano, percussion, vibes
  • Stuart McIlroy - piano
  • Bobby Ruggiero, Colin Griffin - drums
  • Bill Medley - vocals on "Fame Will Eat the Soul"

Charts

More information Chart (2019), Peak position ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads