Veedon Fleece is the eighth studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, released in October, 1974 (see 1974 in music). Morrison recorded the album shortly after his divorce from wife Janet (Planet) Rigsbee. With his broken marriage in the past, Morrison returned to his homeland for new inspiration, arriving in Ireland on holiday on 20 October, 1973 (with his fiancee at the time, Carol Guida), where he wrote in less than three week's time all of the songs on the album (except "Bulbs", "Country Fair" and "Come Here My Love").
Biographer Clinton Heylin has said: "Veedon Fleece is by far the most underplayed album in Morrison's canon. This is due to only five of the ten songs having ever been played by Morrison in concert.
The July 01, 2008 re-issued and re-mastered version of the album contains an alternative take of "Cul de Sac" and "Twilight Zone".
The opening track, "Fair Play" derived its name from Morrison's Irish friend, Donall Corvin's repeated use the Irish colloquialism "fair play to you" as a wry compliment. According to Morrison, the song derived "from what was running through my head" and it marked a return to the stream of consciousness channeled song-writing that had not been evident since several of the songs contained in his 1972 album, Saint Dominic's Preview.
"Linden Arden Stole the Highlights" segues into "Who Was That Masked Man" (sung in falsetto) which has a similar melody. The story line pertains to a mythological Irish expatriate living in San Francisco who, when cornered, turns violent and then goes into hiding, "living with a gun", and references a childhood interest in The Lone Ranger. Morrison described the anti-hero Linden Arden as being "about an image of an Irish American living in San Francisco - it's really a hard man type of thing, whilst the latter was a song about what it's like when you absolutely cannot trust anybody. Not as in some paranoia, but in reality.
"Streets of Arklow" describes a perfect day in "God's green land" and is a tribute to the Wicklow town visited during this vacation trip. "You Don't Pull No Punches, But You Don't Push the River" is frequently regarded as one of Morrison's most accomplished compositions. He revealed that the song owed a considerable debt to his readings in Gestalt therapy.
On the second side of the album, the songs "Bulbs" and "Cul De Sac" focus on emigration to America and homecoming. The album concludes with the love songs, "Comfort You", "Come Here My Love", and "Country Fair" — the latter two employing the traditional Irish ballad style. To Clinton Heylin, the songs also spoke to "the healing power of love...here at last are songs that speak of what he can do for her, rather than concerned solely with his needs and wants." Heylin comments on the song, "Come Here My Love": "This is no 'Autumn Song'. Rather, it sounds a lot like a man learning how to love again.
Years before "Twilight Zone" was released as a bonus track on the 2008 re-mastered version of Veedon Fleece, Brian Hinton had said about the version of the song on The Philosopher's Stone: "'Twilight Zone' is a very slow, bluesy, late-night song that would fit right in on Veedon Fleece.
Generally, critics initially reacted by underrating or ignoring the album altogether, as it represented a significant departure from Morrison's more familiar R&B and soul genres. Both Rolling Stone and Melody Maker printed dismissive reviews. However, the current Rolling Stone biography of Morrison hails the album as "the culmination of everything Van was doing up to that point, all celtic mystic tumult in the vocals and pastoral beauty in the music" and ranks it among "his most majestic music".
John Kennedy in PopMatters writes in 2004:
Scott Thomas states in his review: "Veedon Fleece is one of the most ambitious albums ever made and one of the greatest: inexhaustible, eclectic, inspiring, beautifully performed, intellectually challenging, it remains the pinnacle of Morrison's art."
Sinéad O'Connor reviewed the album on 28 November, 2007 on The Dave Fanning Show and praised it as: "the record I always come back to again and again...It is far superior to Astral Weeks and I love Astral Weeks. This is the definitive Van album with the definitive Van song, "Who Was That Masked Man"...It's the most obvious album he's ever done about Ireland...Veedon Fleece is the only thing I listen to just before I go on stage. RTE Radio 1 has made the audio interview available at: The Dave Fanning Show with Sinéad O'Connor
Derek Miller of Stylus Magazine concludes: "Veedon [Fleece] is the kind of album, so frothy and thick, that requires silence when it's over. You have to turn the stereo off for a while. To me that's the better explanation for Morrison's three year absence. He'd just finished Veedon Fleece.
Elvis Costello has referred to this album one of his favourites.
| Year | Chart | Position |
| 1974 | Pop Albums | 53 |