Catalogue
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N
O P Q R S T U V W Y Z 0..9
Sponsored Links
Biography
Moody Blues photo

Moody Blues Biography

Although they're best known today for their lush, lyrically and musically profound (some would say bombastic) psychedelic-era albums, the Moody Blues started out as one of the better RB-based combos of the British Invasion. The Moody Blues' history began in Birmingham, England, where one of the more successful bands during that time was El Riot the Rebels, co-founded by Ray Thomas (harmonica, vocals) and Mike Pinder (keyboards, vocals). Pinder left the band, first for a gig with Jackie Lynton and then a stint in the Army. In May of 1963, he and Thomas reunited under the auspices of the Krew Cats. Following some success in Germany, Thomas and Pinder decided to try turning professional, recruiting members from some of the best groups working in Birmingham, including Denny Laine (vocals, guitar), Graeme Edge (drums), and Clint Warwick (bass, vocals). The Moody Blues, as they came to be known, made their debut in Birmingham in May of 1964, and quickly earned the notice and later the services of manager Tony Secunda. A major tour was quickly booked, and the band landed an engagement at the Marquee Club, which resulted in a contract with England's Decca Records less than six months after their formation. The group's first single, "Steal Your Heart Away," released in September of 1964, didn't touch the British charts.

Their second single, "Go Now," released in November of 1964 -- a cover of an American single by RB singer Bessie Banks -- fulfilled every expectation and more, reaching number one in England and earning them a berth in some of the top venues in England (including the New Musical Express Poll Winners Concert, appearing with some of the top acts of the period); its number ten chart placement in America also earned them a place as a support act for the Beatles on one tour and the release of the follow-up LP (Magnificent Moodies in England, Go Now in America) on both sides of the Atlantic. It was coming up with a follow-up hit to "Go Now," however, that proved their undoing. Despite their fledgling songwriting efforts and the access they had to American demos -- including one choice number by Ellie Greenwich -- this version of the Moody Blues never came up with another single success. By the end of the spring of 1965, the frustration was palpable within the band. The group decided to make their fourth single, "From the Bottom of My Heart," an experiment with a different, much more subtly soulful sound, and it was one of the most extraordinary records of the entire British Invasion, with haunting performances all around. Unfortunately, the single only reached number 22 on the British charts following its release in May of 1965. Ultimately, the grind of touring, coupled with the strains facing the group, became too much for Warwick, who exited in the spring of 1966, and by August of 1966 Laine had left as well. Warwick was replaced by John Lodge, an ex-bandmate of Ray Thomas, and in late 1966 singer/guitarist Justin Hayward joined.

For a time, they kept doing the same brand of music, but Hayward and Pinder were also writing different kinds of songs that did get out as singles, to little avail. At one point in 1966, the band decided to pull up stakes from England -- where their bookings had devolved to workingman's clubs and cabaret -- and start playing in Europe, where even a "has-been" British act could earn halfway decent fees. And they began building a new act based on new material that was more in keeping with the slightly trippy, more pop-oriented folk-rock sounds and light psychedelia that were popular at the time. The Beatles were doing acoustic-textured folk-rock and incorporating Indian influences into their music, and even the Rolling Stones were releasing records such as "Lady Jane," so the Moody Blues moved past their RB roots into new, more richly textured music. They were still critically short of money and prospects when fate played a hand, in the form of a project initiated by Decca Records.

In contrast to America, where home stereo systems swept the country after 1958, in England stereo was still not dominant, or even common, in most people's homes -- apart from classical listeners -- in 1966. Decca had come up with "Deramic Stereo," which offered a wide spread of sound, coupled with superbly clean and rich recording, and was trying to market it with an LP that would serve as a showcase, utilizing pop/rock done in a classical style. The Moody Blues, who owed the label unrecouped advances and recording session fees from their various failed releases, were picked for the proposed project, which was to be a rock version of Dvorák's New World Symphony. They did try to fulfill that specific commitment, but were never able to deliver the songs. Luckily, they were able to convince the staff producer and engineer that the proposed adaptation was wrongheaded, and to deliver something else; the producer, Tony Clarke, was impressed with some of the band's own compositions, and they arrived at the idea of an archetypal day's cycle of living represented in rock songs set within an orchestral framework. With Clarke leading the subterfuge in cooperation with engineer Derek Varnals, and conductor/arranger Peter Knight writing the orchestrations that were used to accompany the group's work and bridge the songs, the result was the album Days of Future Passed.

The record's mix of rock and classical sounds was new, and at first puzzled the record company, which didn't know how to market it, but eventually the record was issued, first in England and later in America. It became a hit in England, propelled up the charts by the single "Nights in White Satin" (authored and sung by Hayward), which made the Top 20 in the U.K.; in America, the chosen single was another Hayward song, "Tuesday Afternoon." All of it hooked directly into the aftermath of the Summer of Love, and the LP was -- totally accidentally -- timed perfectly to fall into the hands of listeners who were looking for an orchestral/psychedelic recording to follow works such as the Beatles' Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. Better still, the band still had a significant backlog of excellent psychedelic-themed songs to draw on. Their debt wiped out and their music now in demand, they went to work with a follow-up record in short order and delivered In Search of the Lost Chord (1968), which was configured somewhat differently from its predecessor. Though Decca was ecstatic with the sales results of Days of Future Passed and the singles, and assigned Clarke and Varnals to work with them in the future, the label wasn't willing to schedule full-blown orchestral sessions again. And having just come out of a financial hole, the group wasn't about to go into debt again financing such a recording.

The solution to the problem of accompaniment came from within the group, with keyboard player Mike Pinder, and an organ-like device called a Mellotron. Using tape heads activated by the touch of keys, and tape loops comprised of the sounds of horns, strings, etc., the instrument generated an eerie, orchestra-like sound. Introduced at the start of the 1960s as a potential rival to the Hammond organ, the Mellotron had worked its way into rock music slowly, in acts such as the Graham Bond Organisation, and had emerged to some public prominence on Beatles records such as "Strawberry Fields Forever" and, more recently, "I Am the Walrus"; during that same year, in a similar supporting capacity, it would also turn up on the Rolling Stones' Their Satanic Majesties Request. As it happened, Pinder not only knew how to play it but had also worked in the factory that built them, which enabled him over the years to reengineer, modify, and customize the instruments to his specifications. (The resulting instruments were nicknamed "Pindertrons.")

In Search of the Lost Chord (1968) put the Mellotron in the spotlight, and it quickly became a part of their signature sound. The album, sublimely beautiful and steeped in a strange mix of British whimsy ("Dr. Livingston I Presume") and ornate, languid Eastern-oriented songs ("Visions of Paradise," "Om"), also introduced one psychedelic-era anthem, "Legend of a Mind"; authored by Ray Thomas and utilizing the name of LSD guru Timothy Leary in its lyric and choruses, along with swooping cellos and lilting flute, it helped make the band an instant favorite among the late-'60s counterculture. (The group members have since admitted at various times that they were, as was the norm at the time, indulging in various hallucinogenic substances.) That album and its follow-up, 1969's To Our Children's Children's Children, were magnificent achievements, utilizing their multi-instrumental skills and the full capability of the studio in overdubbing voices, instruments, etc. But in the process of making those two LPs, the group found that they'd painted themselves into a corner as performing musicians -- thanks to overdubbing, those albums were essentially the work of 15 or 20 Moody Blues, not a quintet, and they were unable to re-create their sound properly in concert.

Indeed, from their album To Our Children's Children's Children -- which was also the first release of the group's own newly founded label, Threshold Records -- only one song, the guitar-driven "Gypsy," ever worked on-stage. Beginning with A Question of Balance (1970), however, the group specifically recorded songs in arrangements that they could play in concert, stripping down their sound a bit by reducing their reliance on overdubbing and, in the process, toughening up their sound. They were able to do most of that album and their next record, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour, on-stage, with impressive results. By that time, all five members of the band were composing songs, and each had his own identity, Pinder the impassioned mystic, Lodge the rocker, Edge the poet, Thomas the playful mystic, and Hayward the romantic -- all had contributed significantly to their repertoire, though Hayward tended to have the biggest share of the group's singles, and his songs often occupied the leadoff spot on their LPs.

They weren't really a "singles" act by then, their audience principally consisting of college students who primarily purchased LPs, and their music was more prominent on FM radio than on AM radio. "Question" and "The Story in Your Eyes," for example, were known as singles, but were also totally overshadowed by their respective LPs. Their music had evolved from pop psychedelia to a very accessible, almost pop variety of progressive rock. Meanwhile, a significant part of their audience didn't think of the Moody Blues merely as musicians but, rather, as spiritual guides. John Lodge's song "I'm Just a Singer (In a Rock Roll Band)" was his answer to this phenomenon, renouncing the role that had been thrust upon the band -- it was also an unusually hard-rocking number for the group, and was also a modest hit single. Ironically, in 1972, the group was suddenly competing with itself when "Nights in White Satin" charted again in America and England, selling far more than it had in 1967; that new round of single sales also resulted in Days of Future Passed selling anew by the tens of thousands.

In the midst of all of this activity, the members, finally slowing down and enjoying the fruits of their success, had reached an impasse. As they prepared to record their new album, Seventh Sojourn (1972), the strain of touring and recording steadily for five years had taken its toll. Good songs were becoming more difficult to deliver and record, and cutting that album had proved nearly impossible. The public never saw the problems, and its release earned them their best reviews to date and was accompanied by a major international tour, and the sales and attendance were huge. Once the tour was over, however, it was announced that the group was going on hiatus -- they wouldn't work together again for five years. During this era, Hayward and Lodge recorded a very successful duet album, Blue Jays (1975), and all five members did solo albums. All were released through Threshold, which was still distributed by English Decca (then called London Records in the United States), and Threshold even maintained a small catalog of other artists, including Trapeze and Providence, though they evidently missed their chance to sign a group that might well have eclipsed the Moody Blues musically, King Crimson. (Ironically, the latter also used the Mellotron as a central part of their sound, but in a totally different way, and were the only group ever to make more distinctive use of the instrument.)

Other bands, including Barclay James Harvest and the Strawbs, the latter coming into progressive rock from a folk orientation, picked off some of the Moody Blues' audience during the 1970s. Still, the Moodies' old records were strong enough, elicited enough positive memories, and picked up enough new listeners (even amid the punk and disco booms) that a double-LP retrospective (This Is the Moody Blues) sold extremely well, years after they'd stopped working together, as did a live/studio archival double LP (Caught Live + 5). By 1977, the members had decided to reunite, a process complicated by the fact that Pinder had moved to California during that period. Although all five participated in the resulting album, Octave (1978), there were numerous stresses during its recording, and Pinder was ultimately unhappy enough with the LP to decline to go on tour with the band. The reunion tour came off anyway, with ex-Yes keyboardist Patrick Moraz brought in to replace Pinder, and the album topped the charts.

The group's next record, Long Distance Voyager (1981), was even more popular, though by this time a schism was beginning to develop between the band and the critical community. The reviews from critics (who'd seldom been that enamored of the band even in its heyday) became ever more harsh, and although their hiatus had allowed the band to skip the punk era, they seemed just as out of step amid the MTV era and the ascendancy of acts such as Madonna, the Pretenders, the Police, et al. By 1981, they'd been tagged by most of the rock press with the label "dinosaurs," seemingly awaiting extinction. There were still decent-sized hits, such as "Gemini Dream," but the albums seemed rather mechanical and soulless, the result of going through the motions of being a group. Without Pinder with his broadly arcing mysticism, and with his would-be successor, Moraz, seemingly unable to contribute to the songwriting, they seemed a shadow of what they'd been to longtime fans. There were OK records, and the concerts drew well, mostly for the older songs, but there was little urgency or very much memorable about the new material.

That all changed a bit when one of them finally delivered a song so good that in its mere existence it begged to be recorded -- the Hayward-authored single "In Your Wildest Dreams" (1986), an almost perfect successor to "Nights in White Satin." Mixing romance, passion, and feelings of nostalgia with a melody that was gorgeous and instantly memorable (and with a great beat), the single -- along with its accompanying album -- approached the top of the charts. They were boosted up there by a superb promotional video (featuring the Mood Six as the younger Moody Blues) that suddenly gave the group at least a little contemporary pop/rock credibility. The follow-up, "I Know You're Out There Somewhere," was a lesser but still impressive commercial success, with an even better secondary melodic theme, and the two combined gave them an essential and memorable pair of mid-decade hits, boosting their concert attendance back up and shoring up their contemporary songbag.

Still, the Moody Blues were no longer anywhere near the cutting edge of music, and by the end of the 1980s, they were again perceived as a nostalgia act, albeit one with a huge audience -- a bit like the Grateful Dead without the critical respect or veneration. By that time, Moraz was gone and the core group was reduced to a quartet, with salaried keyboard players augmenting their work (along with a second drummer to back up Edge). They had also begun attracting fans by the tens of thousands to a new series of concerts, in which -- for the first time -- they performed with orchestras and, thus, could do their most elaborately produced songs on-stage. In 1994, a four-CD set devoted to their work, entitled Time Traveller, was released. By that time, their new albums were barely charting, and seldom attracting any reviews, but their catalog was among the best-selling parts of the Polygram library. A new studio effort, Strange Times, followed in 1999 and the live (at the Royal Albert Hall) Hall of Fame followed a year later, but it was the 1997 upgrades of their original seven albums, from Days of Future Passed to Seventh Sojourn, that attracted far more attention from the public. In 2003, Ray Thomas retired, and the Moody Blues carried on as a core trio of Hayward, Lodge, and Edge. Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Discography

2007 - Collected (3 CD)

01. Moody Blues - nights in white satin
02. Moody Blues - tuesday afternoon
03. Moody Blues - the morning another morning
04. Moody Blues - voices in the sky
05. Moody Blues - dr livingstone i presume
06. Moody Blues - ride my see-saw
07. Moody Blues - legend of a mind
08. Moody Blues - lovely to see you
09. Moody Blues - never comes the day
10. Moody Blues - are you sitting comfortably
11. Moody Blues - dear diary
12. Moody Blues - gypsy (of a strange and distant time)
13. Moody Blues - watching and waiting
14. Moody Blues - higher and higher
15. Moody Blues - i never thoughy i'd live to be a hundred
16. Moody Blues - candle of life
17. Moody Blues - melancholy man
18. Moody Blues - dawning is the day
19. Moody Blues - question
20. Moody Blues - the story in your eyes
21. Moody Blues - emily's song
22. Moody Blues - isnt life strange
23. Moody Blues - im just a singer
24. Moody Blues - new horizons
25. Moody Blues - blue guitar
26. Moody Blues - remember me (my friend)
27. Moody Blues - king and queen
28. Moody Blues - what am i doing here
29. Moody Blues - raised on love
30. Moody Blues - carry me
31. Moody Blues - had to fall in love
32. Moody Blues - driftwood
33. Moody Blues - forever autumn
34. Moody Blues - its not on
35. Moody Blues - the voice
36. Moody Blues - gemini dream
37. Moody Blues - blue world
38. Moody Blues - your wildest dreams
39. Moody Blues - the other side of life
40. Moody Blues - vintage wine
41. Moody Blues - i know you're out there somewhere
42. Moody Blues - lean on me (tonight)
43. Moody Blues - say it with love
44. Moody Blues - bless the wings
45. Moody Blues - this is the moment
46. Moody Blues - strange times
47. Moody Blues - december snow
48. Moody Blues - go now
49. Moody Blues - boulevard de la madelaine
50. Moody Blues - from the bottom of my heart
51. Moody Blues - fly me high
52. Moody Blues - cities
53. Moody Blues - love and beauty
54. Moody Blues - a simple game

2006 - In Search Of The Lost Chord (Deluxe Edition) (2CD)

01. Moody Blues - Departure
02. Moody Blues - Ride My See-Saw
03. Moody Blues - Dr. Livingstone, I Presume
04. Moody Blues - House Of Four Doors (Part 1)
05. Moody Blues - Legend Of A Mind
06. Moody Blues - House Of Four Doors (Part 2)
07. Moody Blues - Voices In The Sky
08. Moody Blues - The Best Way To Travel
09. Moody Blues - Visions Of Paradise
10. Moody Blues - The Actor
11. Moody Blues - The Word
12. Moody Blues - Om
13. Moody Blues - Departure (Alternate Mix)
14. Moody Blues - The Best Way To Travel (Additional Vocal Mix)
15. Moody Blues - Legend Of A Mind (Alternate Mix)
16. Moody Blues - Visions Of Paradise (Instrumental Version)
17. Moody Blues - What Am I Doing Here? (Original Version)
18. Moody Blues - The Word (Mellotron Mix)
19. Moody Blues - Om (Extended Version)
20. Moody Blues - A Simple Game (Justin Hayward Vocal Mix)
21. Moody Blues - King And Queen (1968 Studio Recording)
22. Moody Blues - Doctor Livingstone I Presume (BBC Top Gear Radio Show)
23. Moody Blues - Voices In The Sky (BBC Top Gear Radio Show)
24. Moody Blues - Thinking Is The Best Way To Travel (BBC Top Gear Radio Show)
25. Moody Blues - Ride My See Saw (BBC Top Gear Radio Show)
26. Moody Blues - Tuesday Afternoon (BBC The Afternoon Pop Show)
27. Moody Blues - A Simple Game (1968 Single B-Side)

2006 - On The Threshold Of A Dream (Remastered)

01. Moody Blues - In The Beginning
02. Moody Blues - Lovely To See You
03. Moody Blues - Dear Diary
04. Moody Blues - Send Me No Wine
05. Moody Blues - To Share Our Love
06. Moody Blues - So Deep Within You
07. Moody Blues - Never Comes The Day
08. Moody Blues - Lazy Day
09. Moody Blues - Are You Sitting Comfortably
10. Moody Blues - The Dream
11. Moody Blues - Have You Heard - Part 1
12. Moody Blues - The Voyage
13. Moody Blues - Have You Heard - Part 2
14. Moody Blues - In The Beginning (Full Version)
15. Moody Blues - So Deep Within You (Extended Version)
16. Moody Blues - Dear Diary (Alternate Vocal Mix)
17. Moody Blues - Have You Heard (Original Take)
18. Moody Blues - The Voyage (Original Take)
19. Moody Blues - Lovely To See You (John Peel's Top Gear, 18th Feb 1969)
20. Moody Blues - Send Me No Wine (John Peel's Top Gear, 18th Feb 1969)
21. Moody Blues - So Deep Within You (The Tony Brandon Show, 2nd April 1969)
22. Moody Blues - Are You Sitting Comfortably (The Tony Brandon Show, 2nd April 1969)

2006 - To Our Children's Children's Children (Deluxe Edition) (2CD)

01. Moody Blues - Higher And Higher
02. Moody Blues - The Eyes Of A Child - Part One
03. Moody Blues - Floating
04. Moody Blues - The Eyes Of A Child - Part Two
05. Moody Blues - I Never Thought I'd Live To Be A Hundred
06. Moody Blues - Beyond
07. Moody Blues - Out And In
08. Moody Blues - Gypsy
09. Moody Blues - Eternity Road
10. Moody Blues - Candle Of Life
11. Moody Blues - Sun Is Still Shining
12. Moody Blues - I Never Thought I'd Live To Be A Million
13. Moody Blues - Watching And Waiting
14. Moody Blues - Gypsy (Alternate Version)
15. Moody Blues - Candle Of Life (Alternate Version)
16. Moody Blues - Sun Is Still Shining (Extended Version)
17. Moody Blues - Gypsy (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
18. Moody Blues - Sunset (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
19. Moody Blues - Never Comes The Day (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
20. Moody Blues - Are You Sitting Comfortably (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
21. Moody Blues - The Dream (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
22. Moody Blues - Have You Heard, The Voyage, Have You Heard (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
23. Moody Blues - Nights In White Satin (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)
24. Moody Blues - Legend Of A Mind (BBC Radio One Concert 1969)

2005 - Classic

01. Moody Blues - Your Wildest Dreams
02. Moody Blues - Question
03. Moody Blues - No More Lies
04. Moody Blues - Sitting At The Wheel
05. Moody Blues - Driftwood
06. Moody Blues - Nights In White Satin
07. Moody Blues - Say It With Love
08. Moody Blues - The Voice
09. Moody Blues - Steppin In A Slide Zone
10. Moody Blues - Gemini Dream

2004 - December

01. Moody Blues - Don't Need A Reindeer
02. Moody Blues - December Snow
03. Moody Blues - In The Quiet Of Christmas Morning
04. Moody Blues - On This Christmas Day
05. Moody Blues - Happy Xmas (War Is Over)
06. Moody Blues - A Winter's Tale
07. Moody Blues - The Spirit Of Christmas
08. Moody Blues - Yes I Believe
09. Moody Blues - When A Child Is Born
10. Moody Blues - White Christmas
11. Moody Blues - In The Bleak Midwinter

1997 - Question of Balance

01. Moody Blues - Question
02. Moody Blues - How Is It (We Are Here)
03. Moody Blues - And The Tide Rushes In
04. Moody Blues - Don't You Feel Small
05. Moody Blues - Tortoise And The Hare
06. Moody Blues - It's Up To You
07. Moody Blues - Minstrel's Song
08. Moody Blues - Dawning Is The Day
09. Moody Blues - Melancholy Man
10. Moody Blues - The Balance

1996 - The Very Best Of

01. Moody Blues - Go Now
02. Moody Blues - Tuesday Afternoon
03. Moody Blues - Nights In White Satin
04. Moody Blues - Ride My See-Saw
05. Moody Blues - Voices In The Sky
06. Moody Blues - Question
07. Moody Blues - The Story In Your Eyes
08. Moody Blues - Isn't Life Strange
09. Moody Blues - I'm Just A Singer (In A Rock And Roll Band)
10. Moody Blues - Blue Guitar
11. Moody Blues - Steppin' In A Slide Zone
12. Moody Blues - Forever Autumn feat. Justin Hayward
13. Moody Blues - The Voice
14. Moody Blues - Gemini Dream
15. Moody Blues - Blue World
16. Moody Blues - Your Wildest Dream
17. Moody Blues - I Know You're Out There Somewhere

1990 - Days of Future Passed

01. Moody Blues - Day Begins
02. Moody Blues - Dawn: Dawn Is a Feeling
03. Moody Blues - Morning: Another Morning
04. Moody Blues - Lunch Break: Peak Hour
05. Moody Blues - Afternoon: Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?)/Time to Get Away
06. Moody Blues - Evening: The Sun Set/Twilight Time
07. Moody Blues - Night: Nights in White Satin

1986 - Long Distance Voyager

01. Moody Blues - Voice
02. Moody Blues - Talking Out Of Turn
03. Moody Blues - Gemini Dream
04. Moody Blues - In My World
05. Moody Blues - Meanwhile
06. Moody Blues - 22000 Days
07. Moody Blues - Nervous
08. Moody Blues - Painted Smile
09. Moody Blues - Reflective Smile
10. Moody Blues - Veteran Cosmic Rocker

1972 - Seventh Sojourn

01. Moody Blues - Lost In A Lost World
02. Moody Blues - New Horizons
03. Moody Blues - For My Lady
04. Moody Blues - Isn't Life Strange
05. Moody Blues - You And Me
06. Moody Blues - The Land Of Make-Believe
07. Moody Blues - When You're A Free Man
08. Moody Blues - I'm Just A Singer (In A Rock And Roll Band)

1972 - Seventh Sojourn (Remastered, 2007)

01. Moody Blues - Lost In A Lost World
02. Moody Blues - New Horizons
03. Moody Blues - For My Lady
04. Moody Blues - Isn't Life Strange (Full Version)
05. Moody Blues - You And Me
06. Moody Blues - The Land Of Make Believe
07. Moody Blues - When You're A Free Man
08. Moody Blues - I'm Just A Singer (In A Rock And Roll Band)
09. Moody Blues - Isn't Life Strange (Original Version)
10. Moody Blues - You And Me (Beckthorns Backing Track)
11. Moody Blues - Lost In A Lost World (Instrumental Demo)
12. Moody Blues - Island

1971 - Every Good Boy Deserves Favour

01. Moody Blues - Procession
02. Moody Blues - The Story In Your Eyes
03. Moody Blues - Our Guessing Game
04. Moody Blues - Emily's Song
05. Moody Blues - After You Came
06. Moody Blues - One More Time To Live
07. Moody Blues - Nice To Be Here
08. Moody Blues - You Can Never Go Home
09. Moody Blues - My Song

1971 - Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (Remastered, 2007)

01. Moody Blues - Procession
02. Moody Blues - The Story In Your Eyes
03. Moody Blues - Our Guessing Game
04. Moody Blues - Emily's Song
05. Moody Blues - After You Came
06. Moody Blues - One More Time To Live
07. Moody Blues - Nice To Be Here
08. Moody Blues - You Can Never Go Home
09. Moody Blues - My Song
10. Moody Blues - The Story In Your Eyes (Original Version)
11. Moody Blues - The Dreamer

1970 - A Question Of Balance

01. Moody Blues - Question
02. Moody Blues - How Is It (We Are Here)
03. Moody Blues - And The Tide Rushes In
04. Moody Blues - Don't You Feel Small
05. Moody Blues - Tortoise And The Hare
06. Moody Blues - It's Up To You
07. Moody Blues - Minstrel's Song
08. Moody Blues - Dawning Is The Day
09. Moody Blues - Melancholy Man
10. Moody Blues - The Balance

1969 - On The Threshold Of A Dream

01. Moody Blues - In The Beginning
02. Moody Blues - Lovely To See You
03. Moody Blues - Dear Diary
04. Moody Blues - Send Me No Wine
05. Moody Blues - To Share Our Love
06. Moody Blues - So Deep Within You
07. Moody Blues - Never Comes The Day
08. Moody Blues - Lazy Day
09. Moody Blues - Are You Sitting Comfortably
10. Moody Blues - The Dream
11. Moody Blues - Have You Heard (Part I)
12. Moody Blues - The Voyage
13. Moody Blues - Have You Heard (Part Ii)

1969 - To Our Children's Children's Children

01. Moody Blues - Higher And Higher
02. Moody Blues - Eyes Of A Child I
03. Moody Blues - Floating
04. Moody Blues - Eyes Of A Child II
05. Moody Blues - I Never Thought I'd Live To Be
06. Moody Blues - Beyond
07. Moody Blues - Out And In
08. Moody Blues - Gypsy
09. Moody Blues - Eternity Road
10. Moody Blues - Candle Of Life
11. Moody Blues - Sun Is Still Shining
12. Moody Blues - I Never Thought I'd Live To Be
13. Moody Blues - Watching And Waiting

1968 - In Search Of The Lost Chord

01. Moody Blues - Departure
02. Moody Blues - Ride My See-Saw
03. Moody Blues - Dr. Livingstone, I Presume
04. Moody Blues - House Of Four Doors
05. Moody Blues - Legend Of A Mind
06. Moody Blues - House Of Four Doors (Part 2)
07. Moody Blues - Voices In The Sky
08. Moody Blues - The Best Way To Travel
09. Moody Blues - Visions Of Paradise
10. Moody Blues - The Actor
11. Moody Blues - The Word
12. Moody Blues - Om

1967 - Days Of Future Passed

01. Moody Blues - The Day Begins
02. Moody Blues - Dawn: Dawn Is A Feeling
03. Moody Blues - The Morning: Another Morning
04. Moody Blues - Lunch Break: Peak Hour
05. Moody Blues - The Afternoon: A) Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?) B) (Evening) Time To Get Away
06. Moody Blues - Evening: A) The Sunset B) Twilight Time
07. Moody Blues - The Night: Nights In White Satin