Wonderful Remark

"Wonderful Remark"
Song by Van Morrison from the album The Best of Van Morrison
Released January 1990
Genre Classic rock
Length 3:58
Label Polydor Records
Writer(s) Van Morrison
Composer(s) Van Morrison
Producer(s) Van Morrison
The Best of Van Morrison track listing
  1. "Bright Side of the Road"
  2. "Gloria"
  3. "Moondance"
  4. "Baby, Please Don't Go" (Big Joe Williams)
  5. "Have I Told You Lately"
  6. "Brown Eyed Girl"
  7. "Sweet Thing"
  8. "Warm Love"
  9. "Wonderful Remark"
  10. "Jackie Wilson Said (I'm in Heaven When You Smile)"
  11. "Full Force Gale"
  12. "And It Stoned Me"
  13. "Here Comes the Night" (Bert Berns)
  14. "Domino"
  15. "Did Ye Get Healed?"
  16. "Wild Night"
  17. "Cleaning Windows"
  18. "Whenever God Shines His Light"
  19. "Queen of the Slipstream"
  20. "Dweller on the Threshold" (Hugh Murphy/Morrison)

"Wonderful Remark" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and first released on the soundtrack album for the 1983 film The King of Comedy.[1][2] This recording later appeared on the benefit compilation Nobody's Child: Romanian Angel Appeal and on several compilations of Morrison's works. At least two earlier recordings exist, one of which appeared on Morrison's 1998 album The Philosopher's Stone, a collection of previously-unreleased tracks.

Versions

The original release (running 3:58) first appeared on the soundtrack to the film The King of Comedy, and in 1990 was featured on The Best of Van Morrison and the benefit album Nobody's Child: Romanian Angel Appeal. In 2007 it appeared on two compilation albums: Still on Top - The Greatest Hits and Van Morrison at the Movies - Soundtrack Hits.

The eight-minute version that was released on the 1998 compilation album, The Philosopher's Stone, was derived from one of the Saint Dominic's Preview recording sessions around early 1972 that took place at Wally Heider Studios and Pacific High Studios in San Francisco and at the Church in San Anselmo.[3]

The song was originally recorded in August 1969 at one of the Moondance studio sessions at Century Sound Studios in New York City, but this version of the song remains unreleased.

Legacy

On February 14, 1994 when Van Morrison was awarded the BRIT Award for his outstanding contribution to British music, Beirut hostage John McCarthy testified to the importance of "Wonderful Remark" which he called "a song written more than 20 years ago that was very important to us."[4] McCarthy and Jill Morrell had written a book together in 1993, after McCarthy's release, using the lyric "some other rainbow" from "Wonderful Remark" for the book's title.[5]

Clinging to some other rainbow
While we're standing, waiting in the cold
Telling us the same old story
Knowing time is growing old.

Personnel on original release

Personnel on The Philosopher's Stone

Notes

  1. Discogs.com: The King of Comedy OST
  2. Allmusic: The King of Comedy Original Soundtrack
  3. Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?, pp. 519, 520
  4. Rogan, No Surrender, p. 419
  5. "Some Other Rainbow". listbooks.co.uk. Retrieved 2007-12-16.
  6. "Soundtrack album: The King of Comedy". theband.hiof.no. Retrieved 2008-12-04.

References

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