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Moondance is the third studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison. It was released on 27 January 1970 by Warner Bros. Records . After the commercial failure of his first Warner Bros. album Astral Weeks (1968), Morrison moved to upstate New York with his wife and began writing songs for Moondance .
"Moondance" is a song recorded by Northern Irish singer and songwriter Van Morrison and is the title song on his third studio album Moondance (1970). It was written by Morrison, and produced by Morrison and Lewis Merenstein .
This is the discography of Northern Irish singer Van Morrison.. Morrison made his first recording playing saxophone on "Boozoo Hully Gully" with the International Monarchs in 1962. [1]
Moondance was both well received and favourably reviewed. Lester Bangs and Greil Marcus had a combined full-page review in Rolling Stone, saying Morrison now had "the striking imagination of a consciousness that is visionary in the strongest sense of the word." [111] "That was the type of band I dig," Morrison said of the Moondance sessions ...
Moondance is a 1994 drama film based on the 1936 novel The White Hare by Francis Stuart. It was directed by Dagmar Hirtz [ de ] and stars Rúaidhrí Conroy , in his second feature film following Into the West .
Moondance [1] is an online international women's literary, culture and art journal. The magazine began in 1996. [2]Said Editor-in-Chief Loretta Kemsley, "My background in newspaper design was a good start for our fledgling ezine but so very different from the demands and opportunities of Internet publishing.
"Moondance" (Van Morrison song), a song from the album of same name "Moondance", an instrumental by Nightwish from the album Oceanborn "Moon Dance", a song by Andreas Vollenweider from the 1986 album Down to the Moon
"Crazy Love" is a romantic ballad written by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison and included on his 1970 album, Moondance. The song was originally released as the B-side to "Come Running" in May 1970 before it was released as a single in the Netherlands, "Come Running" as the B-side. [2]