Latest Record Project, Volume 1 is the 42nd studio album by Northern Irish singer-songwriter Van Morrison, released on 7 May 2021 by Exile Productions and BMG.[1] The 28-track album includes the songs "Why Are You on Facebook?", "They Own the Media" and "Western Man". Released as a 2-CD set and on triple vinyl, the album marked a return to the UK Top Ten for Morrison, making the 2020s the fourth consecutive decade in which he has reached those heights.[2]
While the album charted in the Top Ten in half a dozen countries, it received a "mixed or average" response, scoring 52 / 100 on review aggregator Metacritic.[3] Reviewing the album for Rolling Stone, Jonathan Bernstein wrote that "Morrison's new record bears a strange resemblance to the unhinged, rambling feel of the pandemic-era internet: more often than not, its 28 tracks come across as a collection of shitposts, subtweets, and Reddit rants set to knockoff John Lee Hooker grooves."[7]Alexis Petridis of The Guardian gave the album just one star in his review, praising the musical arrangements and performances while criticising its lyrical content as "boring and paranoid", describing the total product as "a genuinely depressing listen".[1] Elizabeth Nelson of Pitchfork expressed a similar sentiment in her review, stating that "as with all things Van, his genius consistently shines through irrespective of the asinine context", while simultaneously describing Morrison's lyricism as egotistical and "transparently insane".[6] Both Petridis and Nelson additionally commented on the presence of alt-right themes within the album.[1][6]
Ireland's Business Post said the album was "a late-career highlight" for Morrison who "displays an innate understanding of what swings with unusually direct lyrics".[8] For Classic Rock, Morrison is "surprisingly enjoyable on (an) album of grumpy but bouncy R&B", while Artsfuse concluded that the "[prickly] and polemical tunes are surrounded by some of the most enjoyable music Van Morrison has made in years", and found it "at various points, inspired, insipid, and infuriating".[9][4] Jackie Hayden wrote in Hot Press that while "Van Morrison is an angry man ageing disgracefully... [such] is the sense of confrontational immediacy, there's hardly a track that doesn't justify the price of admission".[10]The Scotsman praised the band who "remain mellow, intuitive and freewheeling throughout".[11][5]