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Belfast Live
Belfast Live
Entertainment
Sophie McLaughlin

Van Morrison makes top 50 in Rolling Stone's '200 Greatest Singers of All Time' list

Van Morrison has been named one of the 'Greatest Singers of All Time' by leading music magazine Rolling Stone.

This year, Rolling Stone decided to revisit their '100 Greatest Singers' article written in 2008 and double the talent by creating a new list compiled by staff and key contributors to encompass 100 years of pop music as an ongoing global conversation.

The Belfast singer not only featured on the list of history's 200 greatest singers, but he also makes his mark in the top 50 - coming in at number 37.

Read more: Van Morrison announces extra date for intimate Belfast shows

In their ranking, the publishing powerhouse stressed that the list is not necessarily "the greatest voices" but considering the full package of talent, genius and impact.

They said: "In all cases, what mattered most to us was originality, influence, the depth of an artist’s catalog, and the breadth of their musical legacy.

"A voice can be gorgeous like Mariah Carey’s, rugged like Toots Hibbert’s, understated like Willie Nelson’s, slippery and sumptuous like D’Angelo’s, or bracing like Bob Dylan’s.

"But in the end, the singers behind it are here for one reason: They can remake the world just by opening their mouths."

Van the Man beat out a number of other influential performers such as 'The King of Pop' Michael Jackson (86), Rocketman Elton John (100) and Fleetwood Mac icon Stevie Nicks (93).

Van Morrison announces new album and Belfast show (Bradley Quinn)

Speaking about the Brown Eyed Girl singer, Rolling Stone said: "To experience the height of Van Morrison’s vocal genius, you have to get beyond the words.

"Zero in on, say, the free-form back half of a 1974 performance of 'Listen to the Lion', where he starts out with honeyed crooning and blissed-out humming, tries out around a dozen different cadences on the word 'you' and eventually lets fly with full-on grunts and groans.

"Ever since his early days in Them, on through the overtly mystical years of Astral Weeks and Veedon Fleece, and up to his current incarnation as a gruff R&B songman (yes, with profoundly wrongheaded views on Covid-19 vaccines and lockdowns), he’s always aimed to unify the moans and shouts of his idols like Lead Belly and Ray Charles with a insatiable quest for what Greil Marcus (via Ralph J. Gleason) likes to describe as 'the yarragh' — the bedrock truth of a given song."

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