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Choppin' Wood

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"Choppin' Wood"
Song by Van Morrison
from the album Down the Road
ReleasedMay 14, 2002
RecordedOctober 2000, The Wool Hall Studios, Beckington
GenreCeltic rock
Length3:26
LabelUniversal
Songwriter(s)Van Morrison
Producer(s)Van Morrison

"Choppin' Wood" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and included on his 2002 album titled Down the Road.

Recording and composition

It was recorded in October 2000 at the Wool Hall Studios in Beckington with Linda Gail Lewis and her band, the Red Hot Pokers and with Walter Samuel as engineer. At the time, it was planned to be the title song for an album that was never released. According to author Clinton Heylin, Lewis' contributions were removed before the song was released on Down the Road.[1][2]

The song is autobiographical and Morrison's musical tribute to his father, George Morrison who had died from sudden heart failure in 1988. The song suggests that the senior Morrison returned from Detroit, Michigan, in his son's early childhood, and led a life of "quiet desperation", having failed to find a permanent job and move his family to America. He brought back with him a record collection that would be of the greatest influence on his young son's development as a blues, R&B, and soul singer. But according to the lyrics of the song his father had become dispirited and spent years of his life just riding his bike to work at the Harland and Wolff shipyard, returning home to sit in front of the television set. In the lyrics of the song, the singer sympathetically assures his father that he did the best he could.[3]

Other performances

Van Morrison has often performed this song in concert since its release; it was recorded on a TV film shown on PBS television from a show performed on September 14, 2006 (Austin City Limits), the night before his festival performance at the Austin City Limits Festival.[4]

Personnel

Notes

  1. ^ Heylin, 2003. p.491-493
  2. ^ Heylin, 2003. p. 529
  3. ^ Rogan, 2006. p.21
  4. ^ "concert at the U of TX Austin City Limits Studio 2006-09-14". ivan.vanomatic.de. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved January 3, 2009.

References