Lovely to See You: Live from the Greek

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ALBUM INFORMATION
LIVE

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 104:22

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Must Have for a Moody

argo176

A great supplement to the Live at Red Rocks concert disc! This contains rare performances of tunes, such as Forever Autumn from the War of the Worlds soundtrack and December Snow. Sound quality is just like any other convert disc, but it still captures the experience of a Moody Blues concert.

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Nights in White Satin

richard_tully2

Bring back lots of good memory, thanks for having these like it.

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The Best British group of all time.

psrowe

You either love them or hate them,for me I would rather have three hours of the Moodies than five minutes of the Stones or Beatles.Every album tells a story.I have been listening to, "On the Threshold of a Dream" for truthfully forty years plus and it still sounds fresh and absolutely MAGIC! Don't tell me this is NOT the greatest Pop band of all time.LISTEN and you will hear the same.

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Dennis Must be Joking?

fatanky

Well Dennis, looks like YOU have taken the lubricant.."they produce their best work since Hammill left them"..err do you mean Pete Hammill ex-Van der Graaf Generator?.., "even since the heady days of 'Fragile'" ..errr that was Yes..."one of their best-known choons, theirs is no disgrace" ..errr that was Yes also "and The Move (Questions)"..err that is a Moody Blues original.."Joe Feliciano chestnut '(K)nights in White Satin'"...now I know you must be kiddding..in which case lol..if not then yikes, you are a dope!

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Not Genesis, Not Tull, But Good Moody Blues

alapoet7

Dennis, as pointed out already, Peter Gabriel was with Genesis. And as hasn't been pointed out, "Aqualung" was Jethro Tull. Both of those bands are British art rock, but that's about all either has in common with the Moody Blues. As for this set, it's a credible live document of a remarkably well-preserved band.

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Mistaken identity

bsk

Dennis, Gabriel was with an all-together better group - Genesis. Even though I grew up on & love the Moodies, this is just vaguely nostalgic at best. Worth getting, but not essential.

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Thurston Moore and chums have fun

Dennis_Scotchbrook

Thurston Moore takes a sabbatical from Sonic Youth to produce a parody of pomp-rock kitsch. The problem is that this kind of stuff is a soft target, and it parodies itself anyway. For all that, it is hard to keep a straight face through Mr Moore's mogadon reading of the Dickies' classic "Nights in White Satin".

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not really very good

piggypoo

It sounds like the Moody Blues all have hangovers on these mixes. Why can't you get real studio versions here on e-music? this site is nothing but a collection of fakes and lousy mixes

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Ever Better

lgant3

I've listened to them since the early 70s. I have heard some cuts that were not up to the standard that they set for themselves. However, I've only heard one that I can truly say was bad, that being "Cities". This is a group that, even when they don't achieve their pinnacle, are so far above everyone else, that it doesn't really matter.

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good

moonerpapa

check out "Forever Autumn", I wish they had the original studio version.

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They Say All Media Guide

This concert album contains several surprises, not the least of which is its existence — it’s the third issued by the Moody Blues since the late 1980s. But it’s also unique, featuring the band by itself, unaccompanied; all of their concert recordings since the 1979 issue of Caught Live + 5 — which contained a 1960s concert — have offered the group backed up by orchestras of varying sizes, which made for impressive sonics but reduced the spontaneity and raw excitement that should be inherent in a rock concert. The group, now a core trio of guitarist/singer Justin Hayward, bassist/guitarist/singer John Lodge, and drummer/singer Graeme Edge, with second percussionist Gordon Marshall, keyboardist Paul Bliss, keyboard player/backing singer Bernie Barlow, and flautist Norda Mullen (replacing retired founding member Ray Thomas). It’s nice to know that Hayward and Lodge still have powerful and expressive voices, and the band still has a good, cohesive pop/rock sound, which holds things together even when the newer material isn’t quite as strong or as memorable as their older songs. So “Lean on Me (Tonight)” holds up, even in the company of pieces like “The Story in Your Eyes” and “Tuesday Afternoon.” The other major treat for longtime fans will be the embrace of some songs going back as far as four decades which haven’t been in their repertory in many years, including “The Actor” and “Are You Sitting Comfortably?”; Edge’s “Higher and Higher” is nicely stretched out into something of a jam by the band, with some impressive guitar pyrotechnics, and “Ride My See-Saw” is also given a leaner, longer treatment than it has received in the past. The presence of this material makes up for the absence of “Legend of a Mind,” which seems to have been dropped from their repertory with the departure of author Thomas — indeed, “The Actor” is a highlight of this set, as one of the group’s prettiest songs and one that Hayward embraces with a mix of passion and virtuosity, and gorgeous support from Mullen’s flute; “Question” also gets a fresh and spirited treatment, though it’s been a staple of their shows for so long that it’s less notable. The leaner, punchier sound generated by the group also gives some freshness and a bracing immediacy of their harder rocking songs, such as “Steppin’ in a Slide Zone”; Lodge’s bass work on the latter is a treat, pushing the song hard and yet also subtly melodic beneath the more prominent guitar, keyboard, and flute parts. And “The Voice” gets a tense, spirited rendition as well, with a gorgeous solo by Hayward and the two drummers’ work so closely interlocked that it’s impossible to separate them. An additional new feature to their concerts is the rendition, by Hayward, Bliss, and Marshall, of Hayward’s late-’70s hit “Forever Autumn” from Jeff Wayne’s War of the Worlds concept album — this is the first time that a solo number by any of the bandmembers has turned up on one of their concert albums, and it’s even more impressive thanks to the pleasingly dramatic rendition that Hayward gives the piece. He also deserves credit for being able to bring immediacy and involvement to “Nights in White Satin,” for what must be something like the three- or four-thousandth time he’s sung it. The audio quality is exceptionally good as well, and the annotation is reasonably thorough, right down to identifying every instrument used by the musicians, including their amplifiers. – Bruce Eder

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