The Moody Blues Are Ready To Fly Me High - New Interview with John Lodge
Musicnewsnashville.com
There is an old saying, “Adapt or Die.” The Moody Blues did neither and are celebrating their 50thAnniversary.
The group has stuck to its core principles when writing and recording music they felt driven to create and the industry seemed to adapt around them. They are radio format spoilers; The “Moody’s” can be heard at any time, on any frequency and not seem out of place. Best known for their orchestral, atmospheric rock, iconic songs like “Nights In white Satin” are equally at home on a classic rock station or being heard in a dentist’s office tuned to an AC format.
There is another saying, “Numbers don’t lie.” The group has sold over 70 million albums, (18 platinum) and received the Golden Ticket Award for the sale of 100,000 tickets at Madison Square Garden.
I caught up with their legendary bassist, John Lodge from his hotel room in Nashville. The group will launch their 50th anniversary 23-city “Fly Me High” tour on March 3.
You’ve said your music has never been part of any fad or fashion, yet you have charted everywhere from classic rock to Adult Contemporary. Do you at least feel part of a genre?
When we started with (1967’s) ”Days Of Future Passed,” people tried to put the Moody Blues in a nice little drawer so they could safely pull it open and say that’s where the group lived. They didn’t know whether we were progressive, psychedelic, underground or classic rock. Our take is we’re all of those and none of those. We’re not just the Moody Blues, If we want to write a slow song or explore psychedelia or classic rock, we do all of that. That’s the secret of The Moody Blues. It stops people from saying they’re part of a specific movement.
For having little to no classical training, the band is synonymous with orchestral rock. How do you explain that?
I grew up in Birmingham and my school used to have a quiet period where they put a classical record on in the afternoon and we would listen to it. Birmingham has one of the best classical orchestras in the world. I was eight or nine at the time and I never really thought about what I was listening to. Subconsciously, though, the harmonies of orchestral music were going into my head because when I started writing music that’s what came to the forefront. I always understood what the different parts were and what different instruments and the orchestra were doing. I could hear it in my head.
The band split up for a little while near the height of its success what prompted that and why did you get back together?
When we restarted in 60s, it was just the five of us and road manager. By 1974, we had a string of record shops across the south of England, a touring company, a record company, and a publishing company. We had so many people working for us that we stopped communicating. We thought it would be a great idea to take a break. By the title of the album, we should have realized what we were going to do, because the album was called “Seventh Sojourn”, and sojourn means to take a rest.
We didn’t know it at the time, but that was going to be our last album for four years. We decided to go back into the world in our own private roles and become independent again and try to get more influences back the way we came together in the first place. It worked well because we came back together in the time of punk and recorded an album “Octave”, which went platinum for us.
How do you remain relevant over five decades and continue to appeal to new generations of fans?
If you write things you are sincere about and you believe in people can always to relate to it and it comes across to every age group. People have same hopes and frustrations, if you can relate what you’re feeling to what’s happening you can reach people. The Moody Blues are not stuck in in 60s, 70s or 80s. We’re living in the 21st century like everyone else.
What is your take on the industry in the digital age?
I think there’s actually a lack of music right now. We’re in need of songs that everyone can sing and join in on, If you write great songs and the world will vibrate with you. People need to relate to the material and to each other. We’re a media driven culture and what’s been going on in the world now has always been going on, maybe just on a bigger scale.
