Saint Dominic’s Preview begins as a rich, piano-driven piece before gradually unfolding into a folk-rock song with strong elements of soul and jazz. It moves forward as a loose, stream-of-consciousness narrative, giving Van Morrison’s voice plenty of space to shine. The song is thick with atmosphere, built from vivid images and shifting scenes.
Van’s true voice is rooted in soul, and the song slowly drifts toward that core. It ebbs and flows, building to a powerful climax marked by near-gospel backing vocals and warm, swelling brass.
A friend of mine – someone more conversant with Van Morrison’s music than I am – recently told me Saint Dominic’s Preview was their favourite Van song. As soon as I heard it, I understood why they held it in such high regard. What still surprises me is how few views the official release has.
The following was abridged from the Wikipedia reference below:
Saint Dominic’s Preview is the title track from sixth album by the Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison. Rolling Stone declared it “the best-produced, most ambitious Van Morrison record yet released.” It was recorded at the Wally Heider Studios in San Francisco in April 1972, with overdubs made later on.
The song’s narrative moves from France to San Francisco, Morrison’s place of residence at the time, to Belfast, where he grew up, to New York City (“52nd Street apartment”). Morrison revealed to journalists in 1972: “I don’t think I want to go back to Belfast. I don’t miss it with all that prejudice around. We’re all the same and I think it’s terrible what’s happening. But I think I’d like to get a house in Ireland. I’d like to spend a few months there every year.”
The song remains one of his most allusive. Brian Hinton believes the lyrics in “Saint Dominic’s Preview” are “the most Dylanesque Van ever gets“, while Peter Wrench claims that “Saint Dominic’s Preview” “is, by some distance, the densest and most allusive songs on the record and one of the most striking in the Morrison canon.”
Saint Dominic’s Preview contains wide-ranging references including The Troubles (an ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland that lasted for about 30 years from the late 1960s to 1998), Morrison’s pre-fame career cleaning windows, Notre-Dame cathedral and the vicissitudes of the recording industry. The song also mentions Edith Piaf, Irish poet W. B. Yeats, country singer Hank Williams and the California supermarket chain Safeway.
Morrison told John Grisham:
I’d been working on this song about the scene going down in Belfast. And I wasn’t sure what I was writing but the central image seemed to be this church called St Dominic’s where people were gathering to pray or hear a mass for peace in Northern Ireland. A few weeks later I was playing at a gig in Reno, Nevada. I picked up a newspaper, and there in front of me was an announcement about a mass for peace in Belfast to be said the next day at St Dominic’s Church in San Francisco. Totally blew me out. Like I’d never even heard of a St Dominic’s Church.
[Verse 1]
Chamois cleaning all the windows
Singin’ songs about Edith Piaf’s soul
And I hear blue strains of “Ne regrette rien”
Cross the street from Cathedral Notre Dame
Meanwhile back in San Francisco
We’re trying hard to make this whole thing blend
As we sit upon this jagged
Story block with you my friend
[Pre-Chorus]
And it’s a long way to Buffalo
It’s a long way to Belfast city too
And I’m hoping the joist won’t blow the hoist
‘Cause this time they bit off more than they can chew
[Chorus]
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on (Yeah)
Saint Dominic’s preview
Saint Dominic’s preview
Saint Dominic’s preview
[Verse 2]
All the orange boxes are scattered
Against the Safeway supermarket in the rain
And everybody feels so determined
Not to feel anyone else’s pain
No one makin’ no commitments
To anybody but themselves
Talkin’ behind closed doorways
Tryin’ to get outside, get outside of empty shelves
[Pre-Chorus]
And for every cross-cuttin’ country corner, country corner
For every Hank Williams railroad train that cried
And all the chains, badges, flags and emblems
And every strain on the brain and every eye
[Chorus]
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on (Yeah)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Look at the man)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Look at the band)
Saint Dominic’s preview
[Verse 3]
All the restaurant tables are completely covered
And the record company has paid out for the wine
You got everything in the world you ever wanted
And right about now your face should wear a smile (Doin’ alright)
That’s the way it all should happen
When you’re in, when you’re in the state you’re in
Have you got your pen and notebook ready?
I think it’s about time, time for us to begin
[Pre-Chorus]
And meanwhile we’re over on a 52nd Street apartment
Socializing with the wino few
Just to be hip and get wet with the jet set
But they was flyin’ too high to see my point of view
[Chorus]
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on
As we gaze out on, as we gaze out on
Saint Dominic’s preview (Look at the man)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Look at the band)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Set their freedom marching)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Out in the street, freedom marching)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Out in the street, look at the man)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Turn around)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Turn back, come back)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Turn around and look at the man)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Said, “Hold on”)
Saint Dominic’s preview (Hey, hey)
Saint Dominic’s preview (A soul meeting)
Saint Dominic’s preview
References:
1. Saint Dominic’s Preview – Wikipedia
















