Moody Blues Making Music On The Other Side Of Life
LongIslandWeekly.com
F. Scott Fitzgerald once famously said that there are no second acts. Apparently, the erstwhile Great Gatsby author never crossed paths with The Moody Blues, who are currently touring and playing long after their 1964 founding. Emerging out of Swinging London in the late ‘60s, the fivesome were known for recording symphonic conceptual albums like Days of Future Passed, In Search of the Lost Chord and A Question of Balance. Within the grooves of these albums, classical music arrangements were married to accessible songs that yielded a boatload of hits that included “Nights In White Satin,” “The Story In Your Eyes,” “Ride My See-Saw” and “I’m Just a Singer (In a Rock and Roll Band).” And while the band’s star dimmed somewhat in the early ‘80s, the band did enjoy that second act thanks to the success of 1986’s Tony Visconti-produced , which introduced this Baby Boomer favorite to a new generation of fans through some memorable music videos and hit songs like “Your Wildest Dream” and the title track. And all throughout, the band’s loyal fan base has ensured demand for live shows year in and year out. It’s all a fact that Moody’s frontman Justin Hayward is well aware of when he’s asked about the band’s ‘80s comeback.
“It was a time when Polydor and Polygram had taken over Decca and all the old masters and they had a very different kind of ethic. It was very whizzy where they wanted to go That kind of ardor for what The Moody Blues have been doing all these years extends to Hayward’s work as a solo artist whose 1977 debutSongwriter came out two years after Blue Jays, a project he recorded with band mate John Lodge during a Moody Blues hiatus. Fast forward to 2015 and PBS is currently airing Justin Hayward’s Spirits…Live, a special that finds him mixing his own material with classics from his musical day job, with help from guitarist Mike Dawes and keyboardist Julie Ragins. Approached by the public television network after a solo acoustic show he did in Minneapolis, Hayward was thrilled to jump aboard the fundraising train when asked.
“I’ve always been a fan of Austin City Limits and live music programs like that. I also like the fact that these shows don’t involve massive production and it’s usually something quite intimate. It rolled on from there and the next thing I know, they’d given me this great gift of this PBS show, which is absolutely wonderful. I’m really impressed with them. Their production has been really great,” he explained. “It’s based on a DVD that I did last year called Spirits Live. So it’s a lot of the material from the solo album of new songs that I had out called Spirits of the Western Sky. There’s a bonus DVD that PBS is using for their pledge drive of another concert where I do a whole different load of songs that are interesting too. So