On The Insufferable What's It Gonna Take?, Van Morrison Declines Even Further

Oh, how the mighty have fallen.

Van Morrison just released his new LP What's It Gonna Take?, his 43rd studio album and the follow-up to last year's Latest Record Project Volume 1. That album was 28 songs and over two hours of grouching about computer-assisted modern music, expensive divorce proceedings, being "a targeted individual," Saturday nights ruined by lockdowns, the debunked theory of white men supposedly being oppressed, the mainstream fake news media controlling people's thoughts, how Facebook users need to get a life, and how you, dear listener, should get up off your ass and actually do something about all of this. Yet somehow, What's It Gonna Take? is even worse, and it's shocking to think that it's by the same artist who made Astral Weeks, Saint Dominic's Preview, Veedon Fleece, or, hell, even the Bang Contractual Obligation Session.

For as lyrically awful and musically generic as Latest Record Project was, it at least had a few listenable, maybe even slightly redeemable, moments. "Love Should Come With A Warning" could've been decent if it didn't sound so bitter, and "Thank God For The Blues" might've been fine if it was two minutes shorter and in a different context. As recently as 2019, Van Morrison made thoroughly listenable—if often sleep-inducing—records; just listen to Three Chords And The Truth, which while far from spectacular is a respectable enough late-career effort.

What's It Gonna Take?, however, lacks a single redeemable quality. It looked awful from the start—the singles were more glorified Facebook rants set to bland blues backing tracks, and the song titles include "Sometimes It's Just Blah Blah Blah," "Fighting Back Is The New Normal," "Fodder For The Masses," and "I'm Not A Celebrity." The full 79-minute album is a grueling, insufferable experience, and you might wonder if Morrison is simply trolling us. But if that was the case, you'd think he'd stop before a public health official sues him for defamation.

Which is exactly what he whines about on the opening track, "Dangerous." For nearly eight minutes, Morrison alludes to his ongoing conflict with Robin Swann, the Northern Ireland Minister of Health. In fall 2020, Swann expressed disappointment with Morrison's anti-lockdown stance, to which Morrison responded by calling Swann "very dangerous" and a "fraud." Swann is now suing Morrison, who on this song asserts that he's "getting close to the truth" and "was just looking for the evidence." The title track, "Fighting Back Is The New Normal," and "Can't Go On This Way" find him asking listeners to fight against taxes and lockdown measures and "realize this is fake," "Fodder For The Masses" complains about how the media "[lies] to you continuously" and only serves to "fill you up with fake news for their masters," and "Money From America" revisits his "there's no such thing as free money" grievance (the last record's "No Good Deed Goes Unpunished" already mentioned how "there's no such thing as a free lunch"). Of course, Morrison takes great pains to emphasize the "freedom" of his "thinking," such as on the self-explanatory, six and a half-minute "Not Seeking Approval." "I'm having a nervous breakdown/I'm having some kind of breakthrough," he sings on the lead single "Nervous Breakdown." No, he is not having "some kind of breakthrough;" he is simply losing his mind, as further confirmed by his further diatribes about mind control, government overreach, and everything otherwise being "blah blah blah blah."

Van Morrison's political and societal views might be objectionable, but that's not what makes What's It Gonna Take? a steaming pile of shit; rather, it's his inability to express those views in an interesting, artistically thoughtful manner. All he does is whine and complain nonstop for the length of an entire CD, because he thinks his insights will encourage listeners to fight against this system that he so often yet so vaguely refers to. For an artist whose last record has a five-minute song called "Stop Bitching, Do Something," Morrison certainly can't take his own advice. Some listeners argue that if you can get over the political stuff, Latest Record Project has some value. Yet, I don't enjoy even my favorite artists listing every last personal annoyance, nor do I like politically-minded works that I find artistically mediocre, even if I agree with the message. Separate an artist and their politics from the art, sure, except when the politics becomes the "art" itself and said "art" is a grumpy old man berating you nonstop (at least Latest Record Project gave you a break every now and then) for 79 minutes, it's a failure in every way, and a depressing one at that.

The sound quality on the 96/24 Apple Music stream is fine, if a bit sterile and compressed, but none of that really matters here. Please, do not buy this record. Spare your wallet and your ears from this utter crap, which becomes musically blander and lyrically even more pathetic when you revisit Morrison's poetically written, beautifully arranged classics (which at this point might as well include songs like "The Big Royalty Check" and all the out-of-tune one-minute improvisations about some idiot named George, because Sir George Ivan Morrison is now that "Dum Dum George"). 79 minutes of recorded farts and burps pressed on vomit-scented vinyl would be eons better than the painful What's It Gonna Take. That's how unbearably awful this is.

(Malachi Lui is an AnalogPlanet contributing editor, music obsessive, avid record collector, and art enthusiast. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram.)

COMMENTS
Lemon Curry's picture

I listened to a few tracks, individually they aren't horrible but it gets relentless.

I think if Van got all the venting in one or two strong tracks, with all the remaining tracks non-political, he would have had something more powerful.

Ivan Lietaert's picture

agree

Glotz's picture

A light hand would have been tolerable.

spencer1's picture

When you make an album pushing divisive political and medical ideas that promote what are pretty universally thought of as wrong-headed and dangerous it of course can be reviewed with that stuff in mind.
Ignoring it would not be a complete, honest review.
Van Morrison has always been cranky but he has now turned into that old guy on the porch shaking his cane and yelling at those kids to get off his lawn.
Even if you side with his anti-vax, anti-government stance you gotta admit that this album is nowhere near his classic stuff and is in fact pretty awful.

spencer1's picture

By the way, if it matters I'm in my late 60's.

M1chael's picture

The libs didn’t trust the vaccine when it was Trump’s, once Biden was elected the vaccine was golden. I haven’t trusted the government since JFK was assassinated, especially the Democrats. And stay off the lawn!

Tom L's picture

what Van Morrison has to say about politics, and I care even less about the opinions of a random guy with a butt avatar.

MagniflexOlmo's picture

Mister Fremer scurries into the München show in a mask and announces that he just "had covid". So - jabbed - boosted = suckered. See THE 40,000 person trials which Pfizer and Moderna ran. After 6 months, the results in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that fewer people died in the placebo group and the trials were "unblinded" (i.e. cancelled) This result was buried in Appendix table S4 https://www.nejm.org/doi/suppl/10.1056/NEJMoa2110345/suppl_file/nejmoa21.... Right, Mr Van Morrison - The music might be unchallenging syrup, but what's it gonna take? Clearly tough rock rebels like Foo Pfizers would rather jab themselves to death rather than call it as they should.

fredericmercier's picture

(Français plus bas) For the author of this article, who is painfully biased by some frustration, Morrison asking relevant questions in the face of this pandemic is tantamount to a long, incessant complaint. The author bases his "musical opinion" on this thematic disagreement to decree that the album is rotten, while the music is excellent. The lyrics may seem weak compared to Morrison's past poetry, but that's only because Van has to cut to the chase.
.
Pour l'auteur de cet article, visiblement biaisé par sa frustration, le fait que Van pose des questions pertinentes face à cette pandémie équivaut à une longue plainte incessante. L'auteur fonde son "opinion musicale" sur ce désaccord thématique pour décréter que l'album est pourri, alors que la musique est excellente. Les paroles peuvent paraître faibles si on compare avec les poésies passées de Morrison, mais c'est seulement parce que Van doit aller droit au but.

fredericmercier's picture

Simply put, I'm having (as a bassist) a great time listening to this and playing along. This is __NOT__ "Astral weeks", it's a boogie/blues album, and it's very good at it. PERIOD.
I love it and it's NOT because I agree with him regarding the great hypocrisy around this pandemic.

lakeallen's picture

I just found this review- sounds like a good choice for me. Finally, an artist that dares to express an opinion that falls outside the mandatory music industry gross progressive liberalism. Look forward to more reviews of "alternate" music, which Van's new album is now. Thanks

San Antone's picture

Regarding the Covidiocy, Van is right - but sadly one of the few artists to speak out against attempt by governments across the world to oppress what had been open and free societies, by fomenting a fake pandemic and using health policy to turn populations into prisoners in their own homes. Resist. Don't wear a mask; for sure don't get the experimental and dangerous injection; and do not accept restrictions of your freedom.

Van's late career resurgence over the last decade, releasing sometimes two albums in a year, is nothing short of amazing - and it has provided us with more of his relevant songs and even better singing and bands.

This review is a disgraceful example of the hive mind.

MalachiLui's picture

as if you're not a disgraceful example of that too?

i have plenty of skepticism about our governments, but i straight up said in this review that my negative opinion had nothing to do with the politics.

if van could make an anti-government, anti-lockdown, anti-vax record that was the greatest album ever made, i'd recognize it as such. but no, he hasn't done that. would i pay to hear ecco2k (whose short discography is one of the greatest of all time) complain into a microphone about anything political or not in the most boring manner? no. and i especially won't pay to hear van do it.

Thomas Siebert's picture

You said your piece, but now you know you blew it and are trying to regroup and defend. No legitimate critic claps back at complaints about his (lousy) criticism. It makes you an amateur.

Meanwhile, Van has been proven right again and again about the lockdowns (they accomplished nothing and made things worse), the vaccine (causing more harm & death than the virus) and the masks (debilitating child development, etc.).

Your bad analysis was not only immature and poorly reasoned, it was another brick in the wall of fools' authoritarianism. It doesn't surprise me at all this review remains the #1 search engine response, because it's the work of a lapdog establishment big pharma apologist, not a music critic.

Just keep getting your boosters, pal. Keep getting those boosters.

Daniel Emerson's picture

Van Morrison's been phoning it in for decades. He's been an egocentric pig for even longer. The difference is that it has been harder to ignore recently. No wonder he teamed up with Clapton.
See also Morrissey. The scales have taken a long time to fall from his acolytes' eyes, but they are starting to realise that he is exactly what he always obviously was, but has become worse over the years.

M1chael's picture

Trump became President promising to do certain things, and he did most of them. When he wouldn’t kowtow to the liberal media they couldn’t stand it. We have a habit in this country of knocking anyone who is successful off that pedestal. The Rolling Stones sang “Who killed the Kennedy’s? When after all it was you and me”. I remember the atmosphere in 1962-63, the people of this country practically willed his assassination. Then afterwards boo hoo hoo and put him right back on that pedestal. You go, Van the Man!

Tube123's picture

Great album by the way.

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