... In similar vein there is a short spoken verse which collapses into a bout of maniacal laughter.
2. Ride My See-Saw ****
This is a rock standard that has become one of the fixtures of the Moodys stage shows. They start their 2003 concert season in March and you bet this will be on the ... Read review
Departure Ride My See Saw Dr. Livingstone I Presume House Of Four Doors Legend Of A Mind ... more
House Of Four Doors Voices In The Sky Best Way To Travel Visions Of Paradise Actor Word Om Simple Game Best Way To Travel Visions Of Paradise What Am I Doing Here Word Om Dr. Livingstone I Presume Thinking Is The Best Way To Travel Simple Game
Postage & Packaging:£0.00 Availability:3-5 working days
Disc 1 Departure Ride My See Saw Dr. Livingstone I Presume House of Four Doors - Part ... more
One Legend Of A Mind House of Four Doors - Part Two Voices In The Sky The Best Way To Travel Visions of Paradise The Actor The Word Om Disc 2 Departure - Alternate Mix The Best Way To Travel - Additional Vocal Mix Legend Of A Mind - Alternate Mix Visions Of Paradise - Sitar Mix What Am I Doing Here ? - Alternate Mix The Word - Mellotron Mix Om - Full Version Simple Game - Justin Hayward Vocal Mix King and Queen Dr Livingstone I Presume -BBC Top Gear Session 16/ 7 / 68 Voices In The Sky -BBC Top Gear Session 16/ 7 / 68 Thinking Is The Best Way - BBC Top Gear Session 16/ 7 / 68 Ride My See Saw - BBC Top Gear Session 16/ 7 / 68 Tuesday Afternoon -BBC Afternoon Pop Show 7 / 10/ 68 Simple Game - Single Version
Postage & Packaging:£0.00 Availability:3-5 working days
Advantages: Original, psychedelic, distinctive Moodys sound Disadvantages: Quite short
...a synthetic sound that climbs in pitch and grows in volume - a throw back to the start of 'Days'. In similar vein there is a short spoken verse which collapses into a bout of maniacal laughter.
2. Ride My See-Saw ****
This is a rock standard that has become one of the fixtures of the Moodys stage shows. They start their 2003 concert season in March and you bet this will be on the play list. It has a driving beat with ... ...used as extra instruments in the non vocal sections - another hallmark of the Moody Blues sound.
3. Dr Livingstone I Presume. ***
This is a light upbeat song by Ray Thomas. It is lyrical but has fairly non-consequential words. There are good harmonies between the guitars and Mellotrons.
4. House of Four Doors *****
This mystical almost ghostly song starts with synthesisers and drums telling ... more
This album was the second produced by the Moody Blues for the Decca Record label but strictly speaking it is the group's first solo album.
This disc was on the edge of flower power and the acid culture. The songs are a pastiche of the eastern, psychedelic and mystical. The words are used as auditory colours - and often the meaning may be somewhat obscure. All members of the band achieve this but the greatest exponent is Justin Hayward who can shade words and music to paint any mood. The line up is Justin Hayward, John Lodge, Mike Pinder, Ray Thomas and Graeme Edge. The range of instruments played by the band is prodigious: guitars (electric, acoustic, 12 string, bass), sitar, tables, piano, Mellotrons, harpsichord, cello, auto-harp, drums, snare drum, timpani, tambourine, flute, saxophone.
Uncharacteristic of later albums, 'Lost Chord' features only two songs written by Justin Hayward (and one further collaboration with John Lodge)
'Lost Chord' is quite a short album by modern standards (42 minutes). This is play list and my own personal assessment of each song (marked out of five)
1. Departure. ***
The album opens with a synthetic sound that climbs in pitch and grows in volume - a throw back to the start of 'Days'. In similar vein there is a short spoken verse which collapses into a bout of maniacal laughter.
2. Ride My See-Saw ****
This is a rock standard that has become one of the fixtures of the Moodys stage shows. They start their 2003 concert season in March and you bet this will be on the play list. It has a driving beat with voices in unison in the verses. The voices are also used as extra instruments in the non vocal sections - another hallmark of the Moody Blues sound.
3. Dr Livingstone I Presume. ***
This is a light upbeat song by Ray Thomas. It is lyrical but has fairly non-consequential words. There are good harmonies between the guitars and Mellotrons.
4. House of Four Doors *****
This mystical almost ghostly song starts with synthesisers and drums telling the story of an enchanted house in the midst of a forgotten land (?Lost in a Lost World). The choruses are sung falsetto with a regular verse counterpoint. There is a musical continuum between the verses that varies from an Elizabethan to a Rachmaninov feel. Listen to the stereo sound effects - especially the creaking doors. After the last door opens, the song blends into …
5. Legend Of A Mind. *****
This is a much more serious Ray Thomas opus and is a tribute to Professor Timothy Leary (the father of LSD). He has taken to using this as his 'solo spot' in the Moody Blues concert tours - usually achieving a standing ovation for it.
The pace is upbeat and it is a pronounced acid sound ('He'll fly his astral plane, take you trips around the bay, bring you back the same day … '). There is a change of tempo for each of the verses where plucked guitars, tympani and flutes accompany the voices. As the track nears a climax there is further evidence of the sound engineering of the album with ethereal sounds of swaying Mellotrons changing channels. This builds up to an intense wall of sound before the verse is repeated once more and the song blends back into …
6. House Of Four Doors (Part 2) *****
The same themes predominate accompanied by muted percussion, vocals in unison in the verse and in descant in the chorus. These three tracks occupied the second half of Side 1 of the album.
7. Voices In The Sky *****
This is a lyrical Justin Hayward composition with fine optimistic words and flute and string accompaniment. There is a more upbeat middle section.
8. The Best Way To Travel *****
Another psychedelic sound. This track has incredible stereo channel engineering. Listen if you can with the volume up high through headphones. There is a rhythmic guitar part with drum counterpoint. The Mellotron is a dynamic addition to the instrumental section.
9. Visions of Paradise ****
This is a much slower paced song. Again the lyrics are mystical in nature 'Visions of Paradise, cloudless skies I see, Rainbows on the hill, Blue onyx on the sea… ' The combination of sitar and flute is melodically pleasing.
10. The Actor. ****
A slow ballad from Justin Hayward using many instruments in a variety of combinations in the accompaniment. The words are much more lyrical and languid in feel. The instrumental section builds to a typical Moodys wall of sound.
11. The Word ***
Graeme Edge delivers the seminal verse of the album 'Between the eyes and ears there lie the sounds of colours and the light of a sigh … And to name this chord is important to some. So they give it a word and the word is "OM"'
12. OM *****
A track of eastern sounds, subtle mysticism and acid sound ('The rain is on the roof, hurry high butterfly'.) Much of the verses are chanted with flute, sitar and table accompaniment. The choruses are in unison. There is a sitar solo. The track builds up to a 'wall of sound' climax before fading to its conclusion.
The CD insert is a reproduction of the old album cover. There is a bizarre painting by Philip Travers (who painted many of their early covers) featuring a skull and foetus either side of the parting of the waves made up of the letters of the title. Above this there is the sun (or is it God), ahnds outstretched in greeting or blessing, with hair made up of the Moody Blues. The words of the songs are not given. Inside there is a tantric diagram. On the back are photographs of the members of the band.
Overall this is a more substantial and deeper album than 'Days'. Perhaps it should feel dated given its age and influences but in many ways it does not. It deserves an audience and will repay you with an understanding of the roots of the group.
IN SEARCH OF THE LOST CHORD - The Moody Blues (1968) DERAM 820168-2 £7.99
Chart statistics from "The Great Rock Discography" 6th edition. Strong M.C
Newfloridian 25.01.2003 (25.01.2003)
Ciao members have rated this review on average:
very helpful
Review of In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The)
Advantages: Fantastic music Disadvantages: Eventually, it stops...
...I got a copy of In Search of the Lost Chord.
Did it change my life, for ever? Mmmm. Tough question. Because I think that the answer is, yes, it probably did. The Moody Blues was yet another of those fantastically innovative and inventive groups that came out of Birmingham. In fact, I would go out on a limb and say that, from the point of innovative, interesting music the hierarchy would be: Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool. Can I prove this? ... ...But back to the review. In Search of the Lost Chord was originally released in July of 1968 on the Deram label. It reached 5 in the UK charts and 23 in the USA. An d it was released on one of those funny round black disks, that we called Long playing records, or LPs.
It starts with Departure, and then goes into Ride my See Saw. This song is, indeed, a stirring anthemic song. Forget The Beatles! Never mind The Who! This song is all about leaving ...
Martinscholes 29.10.2005
· Read full review
Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The)
Originality
Lyrics
Quality and consistency...
How does it compare to ...
Value for Money
Similar reviews »
Reviews which might be of interest for "In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The)"
Advantages: Original, psychedelic, distinctive Moodys sound, an extra hour of music Disadvantages: The album without the extras is rather short
an indication of the source of the tracks on the bonus disc.
AVAILABILITY
INSEARCH OF THE LOSTCHORD - The MoodyBlues (1968)
Deluxe Edition (2006) - Two disc set Hybrid SACD DERAM 983214-7 Amazon.co.uk £12.99
CONCLUSIONS
I have to admit that the Moody's have been one of my favourite two bands since the 1960s but I hadn't listened to these early releases for many years. Overall this is a more substantial and deeper album than 'Days'. Perhaps it should feel dated given its age and influences but in many ways I was pleasantly surprised it does not. It deserves an audience and will repay you with an understanding of the roots of the group.
If you haven't listened to the MoodyBlues then this is an ideal place to start. Is the new version worth the extra money (the old CD is still available)? Yes it is. Funnily enough (having ...
Advantages: Music to take you on a magic carpet ride Disadvantages: Nothing (unless you hate sitars)
album in instrumental form!
Anybody who already knows this album and is wondering whether to buy it again, the answer is a great big 'YES!' The new mastering makes this the best CD version so far, revealing loads of little details which were lost on the previous, rather muddy version. That, plus the amount of rarities on disc 2 make it an essential purchase for anybody who's already a Moody fan.
And if you're not, well you ought to be and this is a perfect place to start (well, actually, start with 'Days of Future Past' and then buy this). ...
Product Information for "In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The)" »
Product details
Title
In Search Of The Lost Chord
Performer
Moody Blues (The)
Genre
Rock & Pop
Sub Genre
Art Rock
Release Date
03/04/2000
Recomended Retail Price
8.99 GBP
Original Release Year
1968
Label / Distributor
Deram / Universal Music
Producer
Tony Clarke
Pieces in Set
1
Studio / Live
Studio
Stereo
Stereo
Format
Performer
EAN
42284476829
Catalogue Number
8447682
Additional notes
Album Notes
Also available on cassette with ON THE THRESHOLD OF A DREAM. NOTES: Moody Blues: Justin Hayward (vocals, acoustic & electric guitars, 12-string guitar, sitar, harpsichord, piano, Mellotron, bass, percussion, tablas); Mike Pinder (acoustic guitar, cello, autoharp, harpsichord, Mellotron, piano, bass); John Lodge (acoustic guitar, cello, bass, tambourine, snare drum, background vocals); Ray Thomas (C flute, alto flute, soprano saxophone, background vocals); Graeme Edge (piano, drums, timpani, tambourine, tablas). Originally released on Deram (711). Includes liner notes by John Reed. After helping lay the groundwork for concept albums and progressive rock with 1967's orchestra-enhanced suite DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED, the Moodies retrenched for the follow-up. They abandoned the orchestra but kept their sound as rich as before by playing a multitude of instruments themselves, including everything from sitar to cello to oboe. At the time, it was remarkable enough for these instruments to appear on a rock record, much less to be played by the band itself. The string-laden conceptual pieces of DAYS were replaced by shorter, more concise songs that leaned more toward Beatlesque pop and displayed a pronounced Eastern influence. Graham Edge's short spoken-word pieces provide a properly arty framework for the Moodies' blend of swooping mellotron, haunting flute, and rich, multi-tracked harmonies. The slightly Hollies-ish "Ride my Seesaw," one of the band's strongest rockers, is a highlight. Flutist/vocalist Ray Thomas provides the quirky Britishness so essential to '60s UK pop-rock with his music-hall-on-acid number "Dr. Livingstone I Presume." The soaring harmonies of "Legend of a Mind" work in praise of Timothy Leary and his "trips to astral planes." IN SEARCH OF THE LOST CHORD is the most exotic, trippy album in the Moodies' catalog.
Album Reviews
Mojo (3/01, p.54) - "...Finds the band in confident mood....33 instruments were used, none more prominently than the mighty Mellotron....[the album] yielded 2 singles, 'Ride My See-Saw' and the gentle 'Voices In The Sky'..."
Titles on disc 1
1.
Departure
2.
Ride My See Saw
3.
Dr Livingstone I Presume
4.
House Of Four Doors
5.
Legend Of A Mind
6.
House Of Four Doors (Part 2)
7.
Voices In The Sky
8.
Best Way To Travel
9.
Visions Of Paradise
10.
Actor
11.
Word
12.
Om
Ciao
Listed on Ciao since
25/01/2003
Compare In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The) to other similar Rock & Pop »
Similar products and search queries by other users »
In Chord, In Search Chord, In Of Chord, In The Chord, In Lost Chord, In Search Of Chord, In Search The Chord, In Search Lost Chord, In Of The Chord, In Of Lost Chord, In The Lost Chord, In Search Of The Chord, In Search Of Lost Chord, In Search The Lost Chord, In Of The Lost Chord
Are you the manufacturer / provider of In Search Of The Lost Chord - Moody Blues (The)? Click here