Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The songs included originals and four covers: John Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)", Mike Batt's "A Winter's Tale", Johnny Mathis' "When A Child is Born" and Irving Berlin's "White Christmas". December would ultimately be the Moody Blues' last studio recording.
"The Best Way to Travel" is a 1968 song by the progressive rock band the Moody Blues. Written by keyboardist Mike Pinder , it was released on the album In Search of the Lost Chord . [ 1 ] A wide stereo panning ( ping-pong stereo ) effect, made by the pan pots on the Decca Studios custom-built four-track recording console (with 20 microphone ...
"Driftwood" is a 1978 single by the English progressive rock band the Moody Blues. It was the second single released from the album Octave, after "Steppin' in a Slide Zone". Written by Justin Hayward, "Driftwood" is a slow love ballad, in a similar manner to "Nights in White Satin" and "Never Comes the Day."
"Legend of a Mind" is one of the Moody Blues' longer songs, lasting about six and a half minutes, with a two-minute flute solo by Ray Thomas, in the middle.. During the 1980s, Thomas and keyboardist Patrick Moraz (who joined the band in 1978, replacing Mike Pinder) modified the live performance of the song by composing a flute and keyboard duet as part of the flute solo.
The "orchestral" sounds in the main body of the song were actually produced by Mike Pinder's Mellotron keyboard device, [13] which would come to define the "Moody (Blues)'s signature sound". [14] The song is written in the key of E minor [15] and features the Neapolitan chord (F). [16]
Music video "Floating" on YouTube " Floating " is a song by the Moody Blues from their November 1969 album To Our Children's Children's Children , a concept album about space travel, dedicated to NASA and the Apollo 11 astronauts.
It should only contain pages that are The Moody Blues songs or lists of The Moody Blues songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Moody Blues songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
In January 1997, "Go Now" (without an exclamation mark) was released on The Very Best of the Moody Blues; [16] its release on this album was the first time it had been released on a Moody Blues compilation album. "Go Now" was also released on the subsequent Moody Blues two-disc compilation album Anthology. [17]