An Introduction To The Moody Blues

Rate It! Avg: 3.0 (73 ratings)
An Introduction To The Moody Blues album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 49:31

Write a Review 7 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

no way

davezep

I'm sorry i just don't believe there is a place called clitoris falls

user avatar

A bit of history

clubbaker

Forgotten in the mists of time is the fact that Just Heyward was not involved in really early MB. Lead by Denny Laine, the MB's attempted to be another British blue band, with mixed results. I find early works inconsistent.

user avatar

this was the moody blues

WVMMRH

before the 1967 release of days of future passed.i'm surprised how many people are ignorant of the fact that there was a pre- nights in white satin/tuesday afternoon moody blues.

user avatar

Nice Dennis

fatanky

Nice one Dennis, The Edge..now that is funny!

user avatar

had it not been for this lineup?

harpyrec

there simply would never have been a moody blues with justin and john.nevermnind the genius of mike pinder.while you say thats the only moody blues to you,i agree because yes that was the band i was into in the late 60s and early 70s. mike pinder"s lead vocals on"it aint nesesarrily so" is a gem! some of these songs are wonderfull.greame edge plays his ass off and denny laine was a true buddy holly fan.the only reason they split up was a lack of an american audience or you never would have had justin hayward of john lodge.i dont know about clint walker but he shines on his bass on this album. theres simply no reason not to have this and if you think its a fake lp /cd of any sort then you dont know the band as well as you think you may.buy it and give it a chance.'stop" alone is worth the money!!

user avatar

An Introduction To The Moody Blues

triman

I know and love "The Moody Blues". The 2 albums that come up under "Moody Blues" are not they. I do have all of their GREAT albums and will never let go of them, let alone tire of listening to them. Whether it be "TO OUR CHILDRENS CHILDREN", THRESHOLD, QUESTION, GOOD BOY, SOJURN or SEARCH - these were just some that defined the MOODY BLUES. These songs/Albums allowed the listener to go to that place that was for themselves given to them by the MOODY BLUES, that secret, safe, loving, warm and carefree beautified place, that only you could find with them, the MOODY BLUES. Anyway - THAT IS AND ALWAYS WILL BE THE TRUE MOODY BLUES - NOT THE ONES I MENTIONED ABOVE. Triman-From the West - East Coast to West Coast...

user avatar

Blues rock

MusicalGenius

Primitive, piano driven, blues rock at its prime. While groups like the Stones and Yardbirds started with the blues, the early Moody Blues was a firestorm of gutsy plaintive blues. Standouts are: Go Now, I'll Go Crazy, and Bye Bye Bird for rockin blues and From the Bottom of My Heart and Aint Necessarily So for rockin' gospel blues. Denny lives in Vegas now and appears at Beatlefests. He recently made amends with Paul McCartney. Check out Denny Laine solo albums for more of his bluesy voice.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

As a band, the Moody Blues had two careers. There was the rockin’ “Go Now!” Denny Laine-fronted version, and then there was the mystical easy listening/prog/psychedelia that came with Days of Future Passed and the Justin Hayward years. Obviously, the most influential and familiar Moody Blues work came from that later period (and the current band hardly acknowledges the earlier formative years), but there is merit in that early incarnation. Denny Laine had an amazing voice and a gutsy delivery that suited the Moodies’ early bluesier material well, and the band was on par with that of any of the British Invasion groups of the time. Although Laine made his biggest mark during his long stint with Paul McCartney’s Wings, his Moodies contributions deserve more than a mere backward glance, and there’s probably no better place to get more of the story than Fuel’s 2006 collection An Introduction to the Moody Blues. From the obvious inclusion of “Go Now!” to the not so obvious (and rare, rare, rare) Laine and Pinder-penned single “People Gotta Go,” An Introduction offers up a complete picture of the pre-Days days and gives Laine a little more credit than the Moodies themselves currently do. – J. Scott McClintock

more »