The Moody Blues – U.K. SACD Imports
PCM 2.0 Stereo: B
DSD 2.0 Stereo: DSD 5.1: Music (including Bonus tracks):
Days Of Future Passed (1967) B+/A-/B+
In Search Of the Lost Chord
(1968) B+/not available/B+
On The Threshold Of A Dream (1969) A-/A/B+
To Our Children’s Children’s Children
(1969) A-/A/B+
A Question Of Balance (1970) A-/A/A-
The one Progressive Rock band that stayed as such without
going into another direction (ELO doing with The Beatles what Brian De Palma
did with Alfred Hitchcock, for instance) to maintain commercial viability is
The Moody Blues. One of the greatest of
all British Rock bands, they first gained attention in 1965 with their great
Pop/Rock hit Go Now! However,
instead of just settling for status as a one hit wonder, British Invasion
tag-along or singles act, they eventually reorganized into a much bolder group
and in 1967 began one of the most prolific periods any band ever had.
Universal Music in the United Kingdom has exclusively
issued the first five key albums of that period, where they distinguished
themselves from their very talented competitors. That they came up with Days Of Future
Passed in 1967, the same year as The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band is amazing. Days
has been as celebrated as it has been derided, but has endured as a creative,
unique work that has remained an audiophile favorite for nearly 40 years. This review will cover each album, including
its extra tracks, than conclude with the audio section. “Deluxe Edition” indicates SACD/CD set. The tracks of each album are:
DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED - DELUXE EDITION
Disc One
The Original Album Digitally Remastered
from the Original Master Tapes by Justin Hayward.
01: The Day Begins (5.51)
02: Dawn (Dawn Is A Feeling) (3.49)
03: The Morning (Another Morning) (3.56)
04: Lunch Break (Peak Hour) (5.29)
05: The Afternoon
a) Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?)
b) (Evening) Time To Get Away (8.23)
06: Evening
a) The Sun Set
b) Twilight Time (6.40)
07: The Night (Nights In White Satin) (7.26)
Disc Two
Alternate Versions, Singles and BBC Sessions
01: Tuesday Afternoon - Alternate Mix
(4.19) *
02: Dawn Is A Feeling - Alternate Version (2.19)*
03: The Sun Set - Alternate Version (2.48) *
04: Twilight Time - Alternate Vocal Mix (2.27) *
05: Nights In White Satin - Mono Single Version (4.26)
06: Fly Me High - Mono Single - Version (2.54)
07: I Really Haven’t Got The Time - Mono Single Version (3.07)
08: Love and Beauty - Mono Single Version (2.23)
09: Leave This Man Alone - Mono Single Version (2.58)
10: Cities - Mono - Single Version (2.23)
11: Long Summer Days - Stereo Version (3.12)
12: Please Think About It - Stereo Version (3.40)
13: Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood - BBC Saturday Club Session 9/5/67 (2.22)*
14: Love and Beauty - BBC Easybeat Session 20/9/67 (2.11)*
15: Leave This Man Alone - BBC Easybeat Session 20/9/67 (2.51)*
16: Peak Hour - BBC Easybeat Session 20/9/67 (3.21) *
17: Nights In White Satin - BBC Dave Symonds Session 1/1/68 (3.48)*
18: Fly Me High - BBC Dave Symonds Session 1/1/68 (2.44)*
19: Twilight Time - Live BBC Dave Symonds Session 1/1/68 (2.08)*
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
Though Tuesday Afternoon was the
early big hit, made a single despite the way it is interwoven into the album, Nights
In White Satin actually became a hit single in 1972 after years of being a
favorite vinyl record album cut and these albums were issued in Quadraphonic
editions. The idea of an album trying to
be about nature (outside of the Classical or Jazz genres) was part of the Summer
of Love, partly psychedelic, partly abstract art, partly about expanding what
music and an album could be and partly about the album being more than just a
singles collection. Perhaps this is why
the first Moody Blues album is not being reissued as part of this SACD series.
The interesting thing about this album,
which was the second-ever for the band, is that you have to hear it with the
best possible fidelity playback possible.
It was a hit because this was a time when people really had the attention
span and desire to listen to something new and different. Though Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club
Band was the first concept album, this is widely acknowledged
as the first Art Rock album and beginning of the Progressive Rock
movement. Now referred to as Prog Rock,
this was not like later albums by the likes of Yes, King Crimson, Gentle Giant,
Pink Floyd or Emersion, Lake & Palmer.
The Moodys (as some fans call them) were in a class by themselves and
carved out this philosophical mix of British Western and general Eastern
philosophies that meshed well enough to make them distinctive auteurs few even
tried to imitate. For the most part, you
can tell a Moody Blues song by the vocals, smoothness of the combination of
Classical and Blues influences with a Rock edge. John Lodge (bass, vocals) and Justin Hayward
(lead vocals, lead guitar) had replaced Clint Warwick and Denny Laine in 1966
and their replacements eclipsed them. They
would be core insiders from now on and the future of the band was assured.
The attempt here was to do a sort of fantasy tale of
adults and they succeeded very well, needless to say.
The band greenlighted the excavating of
extra tracks for all five releases and that includes obvious alternative
tracks, including alternate mixes. The
tracks here are all interesting, good and make for interesting comparisons to
original versions where applicable. The
only strange misfire here is a live cover of The Animals’ Don’t Let Me Be
Misunderstood, which is just too light and soft to be effective. It also lacks their signature sound and feel,
meaning they unsuccessfully made the song their own.
The second album with the new line-up
was:
IN SEARCH OF THE LOST CHORD - DELUXE
EDITION
Disc One
The Original Album Remastered from the
Original Master Tapes
01: Departure (0.45)
02: Ride My See Saw (3.39)
03: Dr. Livingstone, I Presume (2.58)
04: House of Four Doors - Part One (4.13)
05: Legend Of A Mind (6.36)
06: House of Four Doors - Part Two (1.47)
07: Voices In The Sky (3.28)
08: The Best Way To Travel (3.14)
09: Visions of Paradise (4.15)
10: The Actor (4.39)
11: The Word (0.48)
12: Om (5.50)
Disc Two
Previously Unreleased Demos and BBC
Radio 1 Sessions
01: Departure - Alternate Mix (0.55)*
02: The Best Way To Travel - Additional Vocal Mix (4.03)*
03: Legend Of A Mind - Alternate Mix (6.43) *
04: Visions Of Paradise - Sitar Mix (4.30) *
05: What Am I Doing Here? - Alternate Mix (3.53) *
06: The Word - Mellotron Mix (1.01)*
07: Om - Full Version (6.07) *
08: Simple Game - Justin Hayward Vocal Mix (3.26) *
09: King and Queen (3.53)
10: Dr Livingstone, I Presume - BBC Top Gear Session 16/7/68 (2.57) *
11: Voices In The Sky - BBC Top Gear Session 16/7/68 (3.52) *
12: Thinking Is The Best Way - BBC Top Gear Session 16/7/68 (3.38) *
13: Ride My See Saw - BBC Top Gear Session 16/7/68 (3.49) *
14: Tuesday Afternoon - BBC Afternoon Pop Show 7/10/68 (3.23) *
15: Simple Game - Single Version (3.44)
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
There are so many good tracks here, but
Ride My See-Saw is always one of the most striking to me and the
alternate version is very paired down as compared to the studio version being
live and all. This can also be said for
the performance of Tuesday Afternoon that follows. It also shows what a great live band they
always were.
ON THE THRESHOLD OF A DREAM
The Original Album Remastered from the
Original Quad Masters plus Bonus Tracks
01: In The Beginning (2.08)
02: Lovely To See You (2.34)
03: Dear Diary (3.56)
04: Send Me No Wine (2.20)
05: To Share Our Love (2.54)
06: So Deep Within You (3.07)
07: Never Comes The Day (4.43)
08: Lazy Day (2.43)
09: Are You Sitting Comfortably (3.29)
10: The Dream (0.58)
11: Have You Heard - Part One (1.28)
12: The Voyage (4.11)
13: Have You Heard - Part Two (2.26)
Bonus Tracks
14: In The Beginning - Full Version (3.26)*
15: So Deep Within You - Full Version (3.28)*
16: Dear Diary - Alternate Mix (4.02) *
17: Have You Heard - Original Take (3.50)*
18: The Voyage - Original Take (4.17)*
19: Lovely To See You - BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69 (2.24) *
20: Send Me No Wine - BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69 (2.38) *
21: So Deep Within You - BBC Tony Brandon Session - Mono 2/4/69 (3.05)*
22: Are You Sitting Comfortably - Mono Version (3.38) *
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
There are not as many bonus tracks on
this single disc, but these are pretty good, but the original versions are king
in this case.
TO OUR CHILDREN’S CHILDREN’S CHILDREN -
DELUXE EDITION
Disc One
The Original Album Remastered from the
Original Quad Masters
01: Higher and Higher (4.06)
02: Eyes Of A Child - Part One (3.23)
03: Floating (2.58)
04: Eyes Of A Child - Part Two (1.23)
05: I Never Thought I’d Live To Be A Hundred (1.05)
06: Beyond (2.58)
07: Out And In (3.47)
08: Gypsy (3.33)
09: Eternity Road (4.19)
10: Candle Of Life (4.14)
11: Sun Is Still Shining (3.39)
12:1 Never Thought I’d Live To Be A Million (0.33)
13: Watching And Waiting (4.16)
Disc Two
01: Gypsy - Full Version (4.16) *
02: Candle of Life - Full Version (4.55) *
03: Sun Is Still Shining - Alternate Mix (4.03) *
04: Gypsy - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (3.15) *
05: Sunset - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (3.43) *
06: Never Comes The Day - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (4.17) *
07: Are You Sifting Comfortably - Radio Concert 17/12/69 (2.53) *
08: The Dream - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (0.57) *
09: Have You Heard - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (5.50) *
10: Nights In White Satin - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (2.58) *
11: Legend Of A Mind - BBC Radio Concert 17/12/69 (4.33) *
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
Once again, the alternate versions are
interesting, but the originals work best.
This proves the band had really found itself and was in a confident
artistic position rare for Rock bands.
No wonder they were on a roll!
Even the live version of Nights In White Satin has the band in
rare form that brings out a new power and nuance in the classic not possible
when they just reformed into this version of the band.
A QUESTION OF BALANCE
The Original Album Remastered from the
Original Quad Masters
Plus Bonus Tracks
01: Question (5.44)
02: How Is It (We Are Here) (2.45)
03: And The Tide Rushes In (2.55)
04: Don’t You Feel Small (2.38)
05: Tortoise and the Hare (3.19)
06: It’s Up To You (3.11)
07: Minstrel’s Song (4.27)
08: Dawning is the Day (4.21)
09: Melancholy Man (5.45)
10: The Balance (3.27)
Bonus Tracks
11: Mike’s Number One (3.36) *
12: Question - Alternate Version (6.08) *
13: Minstrel’s Song - Original Mix (4.35) *
14: It’s Up To You - Original Mix (3.19) *
15: Don’t You Feel Small - Original Mix (3.02) *
16: Dawning Is The Day - Full Original Mix (4.36) *
PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED
Without any doubt, the vocal performance on Question
is one of the most empathetic Hayward ever cut, even less restricted than
before. No wonder it was the big hit,
but once again, the album offers so much more.
It is the summation of an album that is a summation of this period. The band takes all this time the long way to
explore tons of ins and outs, then gets to the point with their most powerful
songs. This is their most solid, self-contained
work and has aged well. The alternate
version of Question proves the song works paired down very well, but the
original is one of the most well-crafted singles of their career and as layered
that the 5.1 is a standout artistically and sonically.
Having laid out their thoughts and
ideas on the previous albums very thoroughly, they really go for it here in a
way that each song seamlessly goes from place to place in a way that builds up
the complete album concept better than they had before. Many bash the concept album idea, but this
one is one of the hardest to argue again.
This is my favorite of these five, which says something,
because they are all so exceptional.
Now for the sound quality:
These five albums were previously issued in long out of
print Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab 24K Gold Ultradiscs, which were still the
definitive CD editions until these versions arrived. All bonus tracks are in 16bit/44.1kHz and
sound very good, especially since they were kept so well in a vault all this
time and debut in many cases here for the first time. The regular CD tracks for each of the actual
album tracks can compete with the Gold CDs noted. Now for the audio performance on all five
albums:
The first two albums were early stereophonic releases,
with the albums boasting “Deramic Sound System” to show off the fact that they
were true stereo recordings with even deeper separation. At the time, many record companies were
caught off guard when stereo took over and did not have many true stereo albums
in their vaults. Atlantic Records was
ahead of the rest of the labels in this respect, but Deram (a subdivision of
Decca) was ready to catch up fast. Days
Of Future Passed was a simple stereo recording and those master tapes were
remixed later for Quadraphonic sound by Tony Clarke and Derek Varnals for a
1972 reissue. Of these five, Days
was reissued a few years ago by the music label arm of the DTS sound company
known as DTS Entertainment. That mix was
not bad, but not great. The 5.1 here is
much clearer, revealing details that even the 20bit/48kHz 1,509 kbps DTS tracks
could not.
To create the symphonic like sounds, the electronic
Mellotron was implemented (Led Zeppelin’s The Rain Song is another
famous example) throughout the album.
Though the sound field is decent for the 5.1 mix, some may still prefer
the DSD 2.0 Stereo of the actual album tracks.
The tracks show their age and the Quad mix is an older one; so don’t
expect the soundfield of the 5.1 SACD of Tommy, also from Universal
reviewed elsewhere on this site. Plus,
some of the sounds are supposed to sound distant and muffled, so enjoy it in
the spirit in which it was made and you’ll get the most out of it.
In Search Of The Lost Chord was the
next album in the same mode, Mellotron in tact, also was reissued in 1972 in a
new Quad mix used for this SACD. At
first, this was supposed to also be a 5.1 SACD and when originally reviewed, we
thought it was, but the receiver used was bouncing the 2.0 DSD around, so it is
no wonder this critic was somewhat disappointed by the 5.1 saying: “Though good and solid, they still show their
age. As expected, Ride My See Saw
is the best of the 5.1 tracks and the alternate version is very paired down as
compared to the studio version on an audio level.” They were not true 5.1 and I still cannot
believe the receiver did that or could do that was an SACD signal. Nevertheless, it sounds good and should not
be skipped despite no 5.1, though why no 5.1 when the LP was once available in
Quad?
On The Threshold Of A Dream was
made as a Quadraphonic recording moiré effectively than the previous albums and
the leap forward in fidelity is instantly noticed, especially in the 5.1 mix
where that has been cleaned up and expanded.
Even when and where fidelity is limited, including some portions because
of the way sound is purposely manipulated as part of the recording, but this
one includes dialogue instead of the voiceovers of Days. This also translates into more interesting
articulation in the alternate mixes.
To Our Children’s Children’s Children was
their first release on the Threshold label and thus was the launch of their own
label. This once again uses the Quad mix
and the improved results are clear in 5.1 SACD playback. Again, the band is ahead of its time in the
use of multi-channel playback for music and is another sonic treat, give or
take some portions purposely not meant to be crystal clear. The live Nights In
White Satin has some harmonic distortion, but is a
great take on the classic.
A Question Of Balance is also another one of the great Quad albums from that brief
period where the format was tried out.
The mixes continued to be as clever as the band’s reputation was known
for, but has some subtle articulation the previous albums do not have, and that
is not just because it is the newest of the five releases. Though the recording can still show its age,
it is still designed very cleverly, but then all five mixes are bound to become
favorites of audiophiles everywhere.
The .1 bass is also not bad on the 5.1 mixes, but the
latter three are marginally better. In
all but the first case, this is the first time any multi-channel versions of
these recording have been issued since 1972!
Those lucky enough to have the Quad vinyl, reel-to-reel or Quad 8-tracks
are small in number and players to play them back very rare. The band, its producers and engineers where
creating more than just animated radio of some sort, but aural worlds. Like other Art Rock/Progressive Rock, these
were meant as landscapes for thinkers to enjoy no matter what level of
attention they paid it. To compare, the
DVD-Audio of Yes’ classic Fragile and SACD of Pink Floyd’s Dark Side
Of The Moon both have some remarkable 5.1 mixes, but other tracks have some
major remix troubles. Every track on all
five albums here are problem-free, something we have not encountered initially
in either format, making this the most consistent 5.1 series since the Elton
John SACDs arrived. The Moody Blues do
not always get the respect it deserves, but these SACDs put the band in a new
perspective long overdue.
These are the kinds of reissues that will bring them new
fans as well as appreciation by a new generation of music lovers who are not
shallow and willing to try out real music they may not have heard before. These same listeners may have heard a few
singles, but not entire albums. The
great thing is that they have more albums of this caliber, more of which have
also been Gold CDs and Seventh Sojourn was a 5.1 DTS CD as well. The reproduction of the original cover art
(not seen in a while) and some great booklets with rare stills and rich text is
up to Universal’s high standards. Let’s
hope Universal U.K. gets to issue those with the same high quality attention
and richness they have given these volumes.
- Nicholas
Sheffo