What Does It All Mean? Van Morrison – Ballerina

It’s been an eternity (almost 2 years!?!?!) since I did one of these posts so I thought I’d ruminate a moment on one of my favorite songs from one of my favorite albums. The nascent music suprevisor in me has always envisioned this song being used near the end of a film when a man sees his wife in her wedding dress for the first time and then played throughout the credits. Something about the way the song opens with the vibes and acoustic guitar and bass that just puts the picture in my mind of a man looking up to see the woman he loves as she comes towards him. From an album of truly beautiful work, this one continues to take the cake for me even though you never hear it on the radio (even non-commercial radio shies away from the 7 minute running time).  I hear this song and I hear a man that desperately wants a woman to be his, perhaps she’s someone he’s just met, or someone who he used to know who he’s become reacquainted with, but the nature of their relationship seems to make him a bit unsure at various times, such as when he sings “and if somebody, not just anybody, wanted to get close to you…for instance me baby” or “well I maybe wrong, but something in my heart tells me I’m right that I don’t think so.” He also strikes me as a man who feels like he can save this woman, or perhaps she can save him depending on who you think he is describing in the lyrics.

You know I saw the writing on the wall,
When you came up to me,
Child, you were heading for a fall,
But if it gets to you,
And you feel like you just can’t go on,
All you gotta do,
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, and step right up

I’ve never been able to tell here if this is what the singer is telling this woman, or if “when you came up to me,” signifies that the woman is telling the singer, “child, you’re heading for a fall,” Similar themes rise up again later on:

Well it’s getting late,
Yes it is, yes it is,
And this time I forget to slip into your slumber,
The light is on the left side of your head,
And I’m standing in your doorway,
And I’m mumbling and I can’t remember the last thing that ran through my head,
Here come the man and he say, he say the show must go on,
So all you gotta do,
Is ring the bell,
And step right up,

I’ve always loved that line about mumbling and not remembering what’s in your mind. (along with the whole “Grab it, Catch it” verse, which I occasionally still hear as “Grab the ketchup” which really confuses the hell out of me with the whole “Sigh it, Die It” later…) Love can have that kind of powerful effect on you when you meet the person that’s right for you. But I like how the singer regains his senses and when the “show must go on” he’s able to give the advice that serves as the chorus, to get up and keep on moving.  I’ve never read anything directly from Morrison on the exact inspiration behind Ballerina. Strangely a number of people seem to be convinced that this song is about a prostitute, perhaps because of some of the other somewhat shady characters that populate Astral Weeks (especially thinking of “Madame George”), but there’s nothing in the lyrics that give me that sense at all. I more apt to believe that he wrote this after meeting one of his wives, who I believe was an actress and dancer. The song’s lyrical narrative seems to tell double stories, one about this newfound rush of love the singer feels and another that seems to be related to either the struggles of the singer or of the woman he loves as they attempt to “keep a-moving on, little bit higher” through their life. But those are just my thoughts, what do you hear when you hear “Ballerina”?

Van Morrison – “Ballerina” from Astral Weeks (1968)

Spread your wings,
Come on fly awhile,
Straight to my arms,
Oh little angel child,
You know you only,
Lonely twenty-two story block,
And if somebody, not just anybody,
Wanted to get close to you,
For instance, me baby,

All you gotta do
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, step right up
And step right up,
Ballerina

Grab it, catch it, fly it, sigh it, try it

Well, I may be wrong,
But something deep in my heart tells me I’m right that I don’t think so,
You know I saw the writing on the wall,
When you came up to me,
Child, you’re heading for a fall,
But if it gets to you,
And you feel like you just can’t go on

All you gotta do,
Is ring a bell,
Step right up, and step right up,
And step right up,
Just like a ballerina, stepping lightly

Alright, well it’s getting late,
Yes it is, yes it is,
And this time I forget to slip into your slumber,
The light is on the left side of your head,
And I’m standing in your doorway,
And I’m mumbling and I can’t remember the last thing that ran through my head,
Here come the man, here come the man and he say, he say the show must go on,
So all you gotta do,
Is ring the bell,
And step right up, and step right up,
And step right up,
Just like a ballerina, yeah, yeah
Grab it, catch it, fly it, sigh it, c’mon die it, yeah
Just like a ballerina,
Just like a just like a, just like a, just like a ballerina
Get on up, get on up, keep a-moving, movin on, movin on, movin on
little bit higher, baby,
Get on, get on, get on, get on, get on, get on, get on up baby,
Alright, a-keep on, a-keep on, a-keep on pushing, keep-on, a-keep on pushing,
Stepping lightly,
Just like a ballerina,
Ooo-we baby, take off your shoes,
Working on,
Just like a ballerina

5 Replies to “What Does It All Mean? Van Morrison – Ballerina

  1. Absolutely beautiful! Yes to it is a love song. I can listen to it everyday and it stirs something within me that is so deep, gentle and challenging!

  2. Little angel child. You have been a ballerina since you were 4 years old. Van Morrison is one of the greats. I know he's " a local Ulster lad ". I also know you pops used to play this at every one of your birthdays. Lux, all you gotta do is ring the bell. Step right up ballerina. I will never deny you. I want is to be close to you. We came so close. Let's get closer.

  3. Beautiful song from a wonderful album. Van's finest in my book, I can play it endlessly and not tire.I've had a copy of Astral Weeks in one form or another since 1969 and it sounds even better in 2015 than it did then.

  4. I find the "lonely 22 story block" clause particularly poingnant. In the 1960's after the war Britain was recovering and part of this was to knock down the slums and build cheap high rises that became another form of lonely slum except vertical with less ability to see and know the friendship of your neighbors. Thus they had little redeeming features and were very sad and lonely for people living in them. The line captures this well.

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