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Transcendent moment with Morrison

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Times Staff Writer

Van Morrison’s current tour consists of just six shows, two of which were at the Wiltern LG over the weekend. The brevity could be read as a marginal commitment to his new “Pay the Devil” country album, in which he takes on a dozen songs from the golden age of honky-tonk and adds three stylistically complementary originals.

The album has sporadic rewards, chiefly his song selection -- Leon Payne’s “There Stands the Glass” (a 1953 hit for Webb Pierce), Bill Anderson’s “Once a Day” (Connie Smith’s 1964 No. 1 single) and Payne’s paean to self-pity, “Things Have Gone to Pieces” (George Jones, 1965).

It’s one more exercise in recent years for Morrison to immerse himself in a genre that inspired him, apparently as a way to come back to his own R&B-folk-rock-country-gospel; amalgam with renewed energy, and that’s exactly what happened Saturday at the Wiltern.

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Such were the stylistic shifts that he had essentially two bands with him that traded off in alternating configurations to emphasize the fiddle/steel-guitar framings of the country numbers, then the horn/organ/piano-centered tunes.

It culminated in a transcendent reading of the pop standard “It’s All in the Game.” Transcendence is what Morrison’s music has consistently aimed for, and, as the sold-out crowd observed, sometimes achieves magnificently.

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