The Healing Game (song)

"The Healing Game"
Single by Van Morrison
from the album The Healing Game
A-side "The Healing Game"
B-side "Full Force Gale 96/Look What the Good People Done" or "Have I Told You Lately/Whenever God Shines His Light/Gloria"
Released February 1997
Format CD
Recorded 13 August 1996
Genre Folk rock, rock
Length 5:16
Label Polydor for Exile Productions Ltd.
Writer(s) Van Morrison
Producer(s) Van Morrison
Van Morrison singles chronology
"That's Life"
(1996)
"The Healing Game"
(1997)
"Rough God Goes Riding"
(1997)
The Healing Game track listing
"If You Love Me"
(9)
"The Healing Game"
(10)

"The Healing Game" is the title song on Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison's 1997 album. It was released twice as a single in 1997 as an A-side with different B-sides - including "Have I Told You Lately" and "Gloria". The single reached #46 in the U.K..[1]

Recording and composition

"The Healing Game" was recorded in 1996 at Windmill Lane Studios in Dublin with Walter Samuel as engineer.[2]

Morrison explains the song in Q Magazine as: "The song is about when people used to sing on the streets: It came from America, where they had all the doo-wop groups. That's the general idea of the song: you've never really moved from this position. You took a lot of detours but you're still back on the corner."[3]

Brian Hinton remarks on the song: "Van is like the protagonists in Yeats play, Purgatorial, condemned to eternal recurrence, 'here I am again', back with the 'backstreet jelly roll'....only music can assuage."[3]

Other releases

"The Healing Game" is one of the songs on disc one of the 2007 compilation album, The Best of Van Morrison Volume 3. It is also included as one of the hits on Morrison's third compilation album issued in 2007 — Still on Top - The Greatest Hits. It is listed as an alternate take and appears on both the 2-CD album issued in the UK and also the single disc - 21 hit album released in the U.S. on 6 November 2007.

Personnel

Covers

John Lee Hooker recorded a duet of this song with Van Morrison and included it on his 1997 album, Don't Look Back.[4]

Notes

  1. Chart stats: Van Morrison
  2. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence, p. 527
  3. 1 2 Hinton, Celtic Crossroads, p. 335
  4. "allmusic (((Don't Look Back>Overview)))". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2009-10-08.

References

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