Blue Money | |
Cover: | BlueMoney.VM.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Van Morrison |
Album: | His Band and the Street Choir |
A-Side: | Blue Money |
Released: | 1971 |
Recorded: | 1970 |
Genre: | R&B |
Length: | 3:40 |
Label: | Warner Bros. |
Producer: | Van Morrison |
Prev Title: | Domino |
Prev Year: | 1970 |
Next Title: | Call Me Up in Dreamland |
Next Year: | 1971 |
"Blue Money" is a song written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison. It was the second of two Top Forty hits from his 1970 album, His Band and the Street Choir (the other being "Domino"), reaching No. 23 on the US chart. The US single featured "Sweet Thing", from the album Astral Weeks, as the B-side. It was released as a single in the UK in June 1971 with a different B-side, "Call Me Up in Dreamland". The song became Morrison's third best selling single of the 1970s, remaining on the charts for three months.[1]
The lyrics have the singer promising his girl that they will paint the town together with her "blue money".[2] Critic Maury Dean states that the theme picks up from Lefty Frizzell's 1950 No. 1 song "If You've Got the Money I've Got the Time".[2] In a 1972 Rolling Stone interview with John Grissim Jr., Morrison commented about the popularity of "Blue Money" in cities like Boston and New York City: "Out here I get asked to play 'Blue Money' all the time. All the kids love it, the kids in the street. It's their favorite number."[3]
Robert Christgau, writing in the Village Voice in 1971, described "Blue Money" and "Domino" as "superb examples of Morrison's loose, allusive white r&b."[4] Record World called it a "nifty cut" and praised Morrison's "scat singing."[5] Cash Box said "Van Morrison heads further into the blues base that marked his early hit material, but which now serves as a change of recent pace."[6] Billboard called it "a solid rocker that should keep [Morrison] active on the charts."[7]
Writer M. Mark described it as "a pun-filled song about time and cash."[8] Biographer Brian Hinton compared the song's sound to Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames: "boozy horns and a nonsensical chorus."[9] Dean praises the song's "snarly, snappity sounds" and Morrison's "jazzy baritone."[2]
Cristina covered "Blue Money" on her 1984 album, Sleep It Off and The Flying Pickets included an a cappella version as the title track on their 1990 album, Blue Money. The song was also featured throughout the 1985 British television film Blue Money, starring Tim Curry[10]
The Street Choir: