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"Someone Like You"
Single by Van Morrison
from the album Poetic Champions Compose
B-side"Celtic Excavation"
ReleasedNovember 1987
RecordedSummer 1987
Studio The Wool Hall, Beckington
Genre Smooth jazz
Length4:06
Label Mercury
Songwriter(s)Van Morrison
Producer(s)Van Morrison
Van Morrison singles chronology
" Did Ye Get Healed?"
(1987)
"Someone Like You"
(1987)
" Queen of the Slipstream"
(1988)

"Someone Like You" is a song written by Northern Irish singer and songwriter Van Morrison and recorded on his seventeenth studio album, Poetic Champions Compose (1987). It has become a wedding and movie classic and the song subsequently furnished the framework for one of Morrison's most popular classics and love ballads, " Have I Told You Lately", released in 1989. [1]

In 1987, the single charted at number 28 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary in the U.S. [2] In 2019, it peaked at #1 on the Ireland radio airplay chart. [3]

Recording

"Someone Like You" was recorded in the summer of 1987 at Wool Hall Studios in Beckington, Somerset with Mick Glossop as engineer. [4]

Other releases

This song was released again on two of Morrison's compilation albums in 2007. A remastered version has been included in the album, Still on Top - The Greatest Hits and it is one of the songs on Van Morrison's 2007 compilation album, Van Morrison at the Movies - Soundtrack Hits.

Movies featuring "Someone Like You"

Personnel

Covers

"Someone Like You" is a popularly performed cover song, with the best-known versions by Dina Carroll, [5] Vanessa L. Williams, [6] Shawn Colvin [7] and John Waite. [8]

Notes

  1. ^ Hage. The Words and Music of Van Morrison. p. 109
  2. ^ Van Morrison chart history at Billboard.com
  3. ^ "Someone Like You".
  4. ^ Heylin, Can You Feel the Silence?, p. 525
  5. ^ "Dina Carroll: Someone Like You". allmusic.com. Retrieved 18 September 2009.
  6. ^ "Vanessa L. Williams, Next Album Review". Retrieved 13 September 2009.
  7. ^ "One Fine Day (Original Soundtrack)". allmusic.com. Retrieved 14 November 2009.
  8. ^ "allmusic (((John Waite - Songs - All Songs)))". allmusic.com. Retrieved 14 November 2009.

References