I pretty much agree with your rankings. But I would rank 'Strange Times' above the 80's techno albums. There was a lot of strings, but it sounds more like the earlier albums than the 3 previous albums.
I just posted a video of finally becoming a huge fan and I pinned this video... I'll be doing my ranking in a few weeks but for now I'll enjoy watching your thoughts.
Great list man. I saw the Moody Blues 3 times..I find their pre-80s fairly deep, great meditation music. Prog enough for me. For anyone that hasnt listened to them, This Is The Moody Blues is a great introductory 2 LP record. 🎸🎸
Great video, Scot. RIP to Pinder; he just passed away :(. I remember reading somewhere that Moraz was never acknowledged as a full member of the band; just a side man. His contribution on those albums was exceptional. Also, I remember seeing them on the tour for Octave. I thought it was weird that Pinder was completely written out of the program.
I was in Vietnam 71/72 when I first heard of the Moody Blues. The album was, "Every good boy deserves favor" and I've been hooked ever since. I saw them at Summerfest, in Milwaukee, in the late 70s. When they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018 (about damn time!!!), I just KNEW the song they were going to play - "I'm just a singer in a rock and roll band".
When I first stumbled upon your channel, I didn't think I'd find someone who loved Yes as much as I do and had exactly the same favourite Pink Floyd and Marillion album as me. Now you've ranked The Moodies albums in exactly the same order as I do. I think I might have found a kindred spirit. Rock on brother. 😎😎
That was a great ranking, I can't see where I'd change anything. Prog or not the Moodies are certainly loved by most prog fans and that's good enough for me.
Totally. Every protoprogressive I ever knew owned and loved themselves some Moody Blues, and spoke of them in the same context as Crimson, Yes, Floyd, Zappa, VDGG, Strawbs, Gryphon, and others progressing the form of rock music mostly. Mellotron was also a panprogressive tool of choice.
@@MisterWondrous Weirdly, some prog snobs look down on the Moody Blues in the same way ELO and Queen are scorned. To me, they all produced remarkable albums at times along with (admittedly) some turds. I'd argue the MBs prog album sequence is up there with any bands and the other two produced a couple of classic prog albums early on.
In Search of the Lost Chord will always be my true love, but you've reminded me how great Question of Balance is too. Last month my daughter and I got to see John Lodge and his excellent band play Days of Future Passed at the Royal Oak Music Theatre in Michigan. It far exceeded expectations. Yes' Jon Davison sang on Tuesday Afternoon, Nights in White Satin, and a raucous, rockin' encore of Ride My See Saw. In 46 years of going to rock concerts, I'd number this show among the best. Your videos are always entertaining and informative. Keep up the good work!
My 2nd favorite band just behind The Beatles My 3 favorite moody Blues songs are Melancholy Man, Lost in a Lost World and My Song 1. Question of Balance 2. Days of Future past 3. Seventh Soujourn 4. In Search of the Lost Chord 5. To our Childrens Children's Children 6. On the Threshhold of a Dream 7. Every Good Boy Deserrves a Favor 8. Long Distance Voyager 9. Keys of the Kingdom 10. The Present 11. Octave 12. The Other Side of Life
Love the Moody Blues! Thanks for doing this one, Great to hear your enthusiasm for them. The Moodies just don't get enough love and respect from the prog community. And yes, they definitely are prog, one of its true originators. And you're right, those top 8 albums are all fantastic! After that, yes, it does drop off quite a bit, but there are still some gems from throughout their catalog (Justin Hayward, in particular, is such a great singer and songwriter). My list has a bit different order from yours, my personal preferences (but all the same albums in the top ten, and all really good). It's too bad they sunk to that cheesy synthpop and sappy eighties production and arrangements in the later albums, as the songwriting still remained quite good. One of the all-time greats. Here's my ranking list (the top 3 are almost interchangeable): 16. Sur La Mer (1988 - the absolute worst of their cheesy synthpop era) 15. December (2003 - EZ listening Xmas tunes) 14. The Magnificent Moodies (1965 - Standard, competent blues-rock of the times, just nothing like what they would become) 13. Keys to the Kingdom (1991 - Some better songs, but still drowning in the synthpop nonsense arrangements) 12. The Other Side of Life (1986 - More good songs, a mix of styles) 11. Strange Times (1999 - more of a singer-songwrieter album, stripped-down arrangements, nice songs, actually a refreshing change from the synthpop style) 10. Octave (1978 - Return from extended break. Can't match earlier classics, but several really good songs) 9. The Present (1983 - Follow-up to Long Distance, not quite as strong, but still really good) 8. Long Distance Voyager (1981 - Great return to form, correct issues from Octave. several classic tracks) 7. Seventh Sojourn (1972 - My least fave from the classic period, but still great) 6. Days of Future Passed (1967 - Monumentally important album merging classical and rock, 'Nights' and 'Tuesday' are all-time classics, but orchestral sections other than on 'Nights' are not that well-arranged (arrangements out of the '40's and '50's instead of more contemporary) or well-incorporated into the rock songs. Certainly a classic, but not quite among their very best overall) 5. A Question of Balance (1970 - Several undisputed classics, not quite as cohesive as some others 4. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1971 - Fantastic concept, execution, contains my favorite, Story in Your Eyes 3. To Our Children's Children;s Children (1969 - Masterful, fully immersive album) 2. On the Threshold of a Dream (1969 - First Moodies album I heard, loved it immediately. The Have You Heard-Voyage suite is masterful vintage prog) 1. In Search of the Lost Chord (1968 - Certainly one of the very first true prog albums, absolutely brilliant)
@@John-fc7wc thanks John, and you’re right, I keep going back and forth with those top 2 as which is my favorite as well. Every time I hear either one, I think, oh yeah, this is my favorite. Just fantastic.
l reckon the magnificent 7 from the classic era can be listed any which way, they are all that great. But if pushed for a top 10 , 1) To Or Children's Children's Children. 2) In Search Of The Lost Chord. 3) Seventh Sojourn, 4) Days Of Future Past 5) 0n The Threshold Of A Dream 6) Every Good Boy Deserves Favor 7) A Question Of Balance 8) Long Distance Voyager ( easily their best post classic era) 9) The Magnificent Moodies ( very underrated 1st album , R&B, pre Justin & John), 10) (Captain's choice) Caught Live + Five. (A live album , we know, but although the live versions are quite good , the album is included because of the 5 previously unreleased tracks . This shows the quality of that classic run of 7 albums , when they omitted these great songs from that period.
I have never been able to rank the classic seven because they are all so good! Congratulations on tackling that, Scot… and I think it’s very cool that you put To Our Children’s Children’s Children at number 1; I think I would have done the same.
LOVE me some Moody Blues! I don't know if I would consider the Moodies true prog rock either, I just always considered them in a class of their own, no other band is like The Moody Blues.
I love the Moody Blues, superb ranking, the band was lacking for me after Mike Pinder left. The band was missing its heart i felt. Still some great material thereafter, not a huge fan of the 80s stuff. For me the classic 7 run is the Moodies best work 1 Threshold of a dream 2 To our Children's children's children 3 Days of future past 4 In search of the lost chord 5 Question of balance 6 seventh sojourn 7 Every good boy deserves favour Every one of those albums is a work of art, love them all
TOCCC and OtToaD are my two favorite Moody albums. I think The Present is far and away their best album of the post-hiatus era. And I like it way more than Long Distance Voyager. The melodies are much stronger.
I like your enthusiasm. Agree with your rankings for the most part. I need to expand my horizons a bit. Still stuck in the classic prog period. But it’s not a bad place to be. Will subscribe.
The Moody Blues had one of the longest periods of high creativity. From 1967 to 1972, they put out 7 albums which were near perfect. I started getting into the Moodies with Long Distance Voyager. While Mike Pinder was missed, Patrick Moraz did a wonderful job on it. Not comparing them since they are 2 different styles, able to share their own special contributions. Well, now only Patrick since we also lost Mike. RIP, Mr. Pinder, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge, Denny Laine and Clint Warwick.
Thanks for the energy and passion you put into this deep dive of my favorite band, The Moody Blues! My ranking lines up pretty closely with yours: 16. The Magnificent Moodies 15. December 14. Strange Times 13. Keys of the Kingdom 12. Sur la Mer 11. The Other Side of Life 10. The Present 9. Octave the following top 8 are all great albums and my ranking of these often changes with my mood ... 8. Long Distance Voyager 7. Days of Future Passed 6. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour 5. A Question of Balance 4. On The Threshold of a Dream 3. In Search of the Lost Chord 2. To Our Children's Children's Children 1. Seventh Sojourn Oh and just as you mentioned, the Hayward/Lodge Blue Jays album is also an outstanding record. Cheers!
It’s hard to go wrong with “ Days “ and “ Lost Chord,” definitely my #1 and 2 favorites. I could listen to the “ Legend of a Mind “ song for days on end. And “ Gypsy “ from TOCCC is easily one of their finest ever. Great list Scot from this magical, iconic band.
1--Days of Future Passed '68 2--On the Threshold of a Dream '69 3--In Search of the Lost Chord '68 4--A Question of Balance '70 5--Seventh Sojourn '72 6--To Our Children's Children's Children '70 7--Prelude '66 8--Long Distance Voyager '81 9--December '03 10-Sur La Mer '88 11-The Present '83 12-Every Good Boy Deserves Favour '71 13-Keys of the Kingdom '91 14-Strange Times '99 ***************************************** 15-The Other Side of Life '86
Really level headed rankings scot, agree with most if not all you stated, so glad you got around to doin' these rankings, thank you, would love to see the solo rankings of the moody blues members at some point scot, something to consider? Regards, 😊👍🙏
Good idea!!! And there are a couple I haven’t heard so that could be a lot of fun. What a band. Man, I always loved The Moody Blues and not one thing has changed!!!! ❤️
The Core 7 and LDV are all fantastic .Later on Wildest dreams and I Know your out there somewhere are great singles . Moodies are the best no doubt .Mike and Justin''s song i like best though ray's twilight time is magic too and so is John's just a singer ..and so on !! Lol
Perfect list Scot! You are a plethora of Moody Blues info. They're Prog enough for me too. The Moody Blues are not quite but almost as important as YES was to me growng up. They are tied for second place with Pink Floyd and Led Zepplin as my favorite bands of all time. YES of course being number 1 over and above any other band in history! Enjoyed that very much Scot!🤩
I was listening to them for years before I discovered YES and ELP. They prepared my ears for all that came later. I will always love The Moody Blues!!!! And Justin’s voice. OMG.
I know. I discovered them both around the same time. As a teenager I was in heaven, musically. Listen to 'TOCCC' over and over again... Every song on that album is great! Blasting off with 'Higher and Higher and then coming down back to Earth with 'Watching and Waiting', what trip!🤩@@TheProgCorner
I have taken the time to listen to all of them over again and I feel that your rankings are solid oak. Especially that first one, Scot! Our Children's, Children's, Children! Talking about The Moody Blues is high up on my Utopia pole. 🦓
My ranking: 1 Seventh Sojourn 1972 2 On the Threshold of a Dream 1969 3 A Question of Balance 1970 4 Every Good Boy Deserves Favour 1971 5 Long Distance Voyager 1981 6 In Search of the Lost Chord 1968 7 Octave 1978 8 To Our Children's Children's Children 1969 9 Days of Future Past 1967 10 The Present 1983
Very accurate review. The 7 absolute classics from Days of Future Passed to Seventh Sojourn constitute a solid block of work which raised the tone of the 20th century.- and beyond.
Itwas s was a Charity concert that Bev Bevan put together loads of bands including UB40 Robert Plant and the Honeydrippers The Move then Roy wood on his own ELO Moody Blues and George Harrison came out at the end not a bad gig lol
The Moody Blues seven album streak is hard to beat. My preferences differ a little from yours: 1. In Search Of The Lost Chord (Fav songs: Ride My See Saw, Legend Of A Mind, Voices In The Sky, The Best Way To Travel, The Actor, Om, A Simple Game, What Am I Doing Here) 2. A Question Of Balance (Question, How Is It, And The Tide Rushes In, Don't You Feel Small, Minstrel's Song, Dawning Is The Day, Melancholy Man) 3. To Our Children's Children's Children (Higher And Higher, Eyes Of A Child, Floating, Out And In, Gypsy, Candle Of Life, Watching And Waiting) 4. Seventh Sojourn (Lost In A Lost World, New Horizons, For My Lady, Isn't Life Strange, The Land Of Make Believe, I'm Just A Singer) 5. Days Of Future Passed (The Afternoon, Evening, The Night) 6. On The Threshold Of A Dream (Lovely To See You, Dear Diary, So Deep Within You, Never Comes The Day, Have You Heard) 7. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (The Story In Your Eyes, Our Guessing Game, One More Time To Live, My Song) 8. Long Distance Voyager (The Voice, Talking Out Of Turn, Gemini Dream, In My World, 22000 Days, Veteran Cosmic Rocker) 9. Mid to late 80's (Your Wildest Dreams, I Know You're Out There Somewhere, The Other Side Of Life)
Their early work before the break is their best in my opinion, and I love your top 3 choices. Their late 60s, early 70s music was definitely prog - no doubt about it! Their late 70s, 80s and on, not so much. Long distance voyager was an ok pop album, but didn’t really sound original or unique - It sounded like them imitating others. Nevertheless I’m glad they scored some hits with it. Great video! 👍🌞
Ignored them apart from one album in the 70s but now I've rediscovered them. What's not to love. Now in the process of acquiring all the 70s outputs. Saw them live in 2004ish and they were great.
Luckily live, they concentrated on the late 60s/70s material and they certainly put in a show but then having played together for so long and to huge stadiums....My favourite band King Crimson were helped along the way by the Moodys who sold them a damaged mellotron. They almost shared a manage/producer but luckily Crimso went down their own special and unique rabbit hole. The rest as they say is history. Love your videos and the new haircut has a touch of the Kurt Cobain don't you think?
Thought Strange Times was harking back to their 70s work and considered better than their previous 3. Also could make the case that there's more distinction between their 70s and 80s work than that of Genesis.
After high school in '73, I took some time off to hitch around the country, to look for America, like a lot of other hippies and flower children at the time. I was so dumb, that I carried a boom box, surely one of the first, and had one cassette: To Our Children's Children's Children. I figured I was travelling eternity road. What would i find there, carrying that heavy load, hoping to find some peace of mind? As an aside...on my first rest stop at a hippie house along the way, what would be playing for me, but It's a Beautiful Day's beautiful song of peace. A great send off before full flight. Heady times. Hearty times. RIP David LaFlamme, for whom I shed this tear. Perfect ranking, btw. The Moody Blues were prog on those perfect 10s, but not before or after.
My first girlfriend in high school carried a Best Of The Moody Blues cassette in her pocket at all times. I only knew a couple of their hits and I was obsessed with more energetic Prog like VdGG, ELP ect. Still am of course! Turning each other on to our taste in music was quite a revelation. Thank you Marian and thank you Moody Blues! Still love you both💖 Too tough for me to pick a number one. Good job as usual Scot!
Word of advice, if you want to listen to the Moody Blues for the first time, I urge you to go out and buy the double album " This is the Moody Blues". It's possibly the best compilation album ever made. It's an almost seamless blending of their greatest moments.👍
Agreed. This is a great mix of their best songs. The 'mixes' are also superior to the originals....Question, The Actor, Melancholy Man and many more. The only other box set worth having is 'Time Traveller'. No point having any other albums after Seventh Sojourn. Maybe 'Long Distance Voyager'.
In search of the lost chord changed my musical taste 50 years ago when I into Slade,Sweet and T.Rex. Since then they've been my favourite band and I love Prog and Art rock
Yeah love this band to the moon and back. I totally agree, my top 2 are your top 2. Question Of Balance got me through 2020. That last song The Balance tears me up pretty hard. Are you coming down for the Dayton Geebz shows next weekend?
Yeah the wife and I barely got in, ticketmaster really made it difficult. I'm playing that Thursday night at Yellow Cab, we are doing a whole Bob record that has never been played live before. I guess Paddy Considine will be there.
The Present was my first Moody Blues album in 1983. I still think it's an underrated classic... Blue World, Meet Me Halfway, Sorry, etc... Brilliant. I saw them live in 1984, again, a brilliant experience. Thus far, I'd say that Lost Chord is probably my favourite, but Children is a close second. Long Distance Voyager is another favourite. Waiting for Octave to arrive as I write this...
Ranking Moody Blues' albums : Seventh Sojourn (1972) A Question of Balance (1970) On the Threshold of a Dream (1969) In Search of the Lost Chord (1968) Days of Future Passed (1967) To Our Children's Children's Children (1969) Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1971) Blue Jays (Hayward & Lodge) (1975) Octave (1978) On Boulevard De La Madeleine (1967) compilation from Netherland of singles from 1965 to 1967 Sur la Mer (1988) Long Distance Voyager (1981) The Present (1983) The Other Side of Life (1986) Strange Times (1999) December (2003) Keys of the Kingdom (1991) The Magnificent Moodies (1965)
So i have seen them probably 12 times, when talking about The Moodies its all about the " Classic 7 " albums ,these are the Moodies. Frw after that we're still good, Seventh S,The Present ... Children's Children is my favorite by them ..i have all the Solo albums too and i mean ALL of the ,Bluejays, Edges albums with his band and with Adrian Gurvitz....
Great ranking. Pretty close to how I'd rank them, but I'd have to put Days of Future Past at #1, simply because it blew me away as a kid. I know Nights in White Satin is an iconic "hit," but it also is just one of those amazing songs ever, that transcends time and is like, "Where did THAT come from?" Not this planet. Glad you mentioned the Blue Jays album, I'd stick it up against the Moody's Top 8 as well.
Seventh Sojourn and To Our Children's Children's Children are the Moody's finest records (amongst many). 1. Seventh Sojourn 2. To Our Children's Children's Children 3. In Search of the Lost Chord 4. A Question of Balance 5. Days of Future Passed 6. Long Distance Voyager 7. The Present 8. Octave 9. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour 10. On the Other Side of Life 11. Sur la Mer
Yes, Moody Blues from Day's of Future Past, In Search of the lost cord, Thershold of a dream, To our Children Children's Children, Ouestion of Balance, Every Good Boy Deserves favor, Seventh sojourn. When you go through each of the 7 albums, each one leading you too the other next one and the 7th album talks of Father God and his loving Son. These 7 albums our the seven Thunders that other their voices in Revelation chapter 10. I put my book out in 2019 "Seventh Messenger" and tell how Father God Spirit reviled this to me in 1973.
I have them all.I recently bought the Polgram Years boxset It's very cool.I saw them in concert 3 times in the last 21 years .This was a great band live too.
Amazing Scott. You have top 2 Question Of Balance and To Our Childrens Children's Children that I always thought f for ever end ever! TOCCC is no 1 for me no 3 probably Every Good Boy Deserves Favour. Then Days Of Future Passed at 4. At no 5 Seventh Sojourn. There is my Top 5 - In Search Of The Lost Chord I love so it could move up some day. TC
Love the energy and enthusiasm...my list: #1. every good boy deserves a favor Sorry Days fans, but it's got 2 out of 3 of justin's greatest songs with story in your eyes and you can never go home (his deepest and most profoundly beautiful song, even better than Nights (IMHO) #2. Days of Future Past - great songs by the band, needed less orchestra between the songs, that was just muzak #3. Seventh Sojourn - I don't know why everybody thinks it's the bottom of the core 7, every song it a winner and it's got 2 out of 3 of John's greatest songs. #4. To Our Children's Children - Not one bad song, consistently great all the way through #5. Question of Balance - Great songwriting with Question, It's Up to You etc. Melancholy Man, great track but seems a little out of place with the brighter sound of this lp. #6. Search of the Lost Chord - John's greatest rocker, Justin's wonderful Voices in the Sky, absolutely essential #7. Threshhold of a Dream - their "prog rock" masterpiece. I know most have this higher in the core 7 but it's not a knock, all these albums are great, I just find the others a bit more compelling #8. Long Distance Voyager - Justin's hit The Voice, his best post classic period hit. Gemini Dream, insane synthesizer drive classic and packed with good songs #9. The Present - underrated classic, highly melodic and solid all the way through. #10. Strange Times - Chock full of good melodies and none of that synth pop crap, why people give this one the short thrift, I don't understand. That top 10 are all their great albums, below are the not so great ones, but most have something good in them. #11. Keys to the Kingdom - two great tracks Lean on Me and Celtic Sonant and some decent ones) #12. Other Side of Life (two great tracks Wildest Dreams and It may be a Fire and a lot of horrible stuff) #13. Octave (1 great song, Mike's swan song: One step into the Light and one good one, John's Survival) #14. December (I don't consider Christmas albums to be real albums but this one interestingly has a lot of originals which kind of makes it more an authentic MB's album, unfortunately the originals aren't so great) #15. Sur La Mer (not even one good song, horrible) Magnificent Moodies...no Justin, no John so not a Moody Blues album. It's english R&B, blues based pop much like the Small Faces or one of the other innumerable skiffle type bands that emerged from Britain...how many of them do we even need? Thankfully, the Moody Blues morphed into something different and unique. For what it is, I give it 3 stars but don't think it should be ranked with the others.
I agree so much with your number one! It is my favorite album of all time, and I don't think that will ever change. My ordering is a little different otherwise, I'd probably rank them: Sur La Mer The Other Side of Life Keys of the Kingdom Octave Strange Times Every Good Boy Deserves Favour Long Distance Voyager The Present In Search of the Lost Chord On The Threshold of a Dream Seventh Sojourn A Question of Balance Days of Future Passed To Our Children's Children's Children Not sure where I'd put Magnificent Moodies or December, definitely near the bottom.
Rough justice but question was kept off number one slot in the uk by the England World Cup squad Mexico 1970 (soccer to you outside of the uk lol )a song called back home ,
WELL beam me up Scotty, been waiting for this one ! MB was the very first band where I tried to buy all of their studio albums (up until the 80s) on vinyl. As a teenager and new collector, MB records are cheap in used shops and they were everywhere. My old man had the Days of Future past LP and u wanted to know way more. I have their first 7 albums and spin them regularly. I will say the Hayward and Lodge album "Blue Jays" is fantastic and is basically the lost MB album (trumps most of the MB output that came out after their golden Era and rivals some of their finest albums👌) criminally "under-listened" by my millennial peers, long live the Moody Blues !! ❤ P.S RIP to Graeme Edge, his band made 2 good albums that I also have on wax !
Imagine Blue Jays with Mike, Graeme and Ray on it. It’s already a 9/10 album as is!!! I love The Moody Blues. I don’t remember a time they WEREN’T in my life!!!
@@TheProgCornerthat's awesome man haha I think my dad (64) is the same way, always had them handy on the shelf. Moody Blues were one of those bands just below superstardom but as you said their influence was beyond any fame or sales they could have achieved. It is apparent in my used shop diggs that I frequently go on that they sold plenty of albums as I basically cannot enter a used shop without seeing 3 or 5 dollar copies of long distance and beat up copies of dofp/threshold. They'll always be on my rotation and damn yeah 😅 that Blue Jay album could have been an 11/10 the eh, still happy to have heard it for the first time maybe 2 years ago. Blew me away, talk about thay vocal emotion and poetry you get, this time on every track.
To Our Children's Children's Children In Search of the Lost Chord On the Threshold of a Dream Days of Future Passed A Question of Balance TOCCC is in the same category as Abbey Road or Sgt Pepper. Yes, it's that good and better than anything ever done by Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes or any of the other prog bands.
Thank you for all that history! Very interesting. AQOB is a stark departure from TOCCC. Like the Beatles, the Moodies figured out that live music and stadium-sized concerts were the future. Their previous albums, like TOCCC would be very difficult to recreate on stage. And just like the Beatles, they were best in the studio, as opposed to being live performers. The Beatles, broke up. The Moodies changed their music to fit this new paradigm. While their post 70s stuff was good, their psychedelic/spiritual offerings of the 60s were unmatched! BTW, I saw them live on Thanksgiving Day, 1969, 5 days after the release of TOCCC. They opened with Gypsy. The venue? A large byzantine church in downtown Grand Rapids!@@TheProgCorner
We have different taste in the Moodies! SEVENTH SOJOURN and DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED are my two favorite albums. QUESTION OF BALANCE is my least favorite. There are some great songs on some of the albums you didn't seem to like at all. THE PRESENT is terrific. And DECEMBER is one of my favorite holiday albums of all-time. Justin's "December Snow" is one of the loveliest songs he's ever written. Although they didn't write "A Winter's Day," good gracious -- it's incredibly beautiful. Lodge's "On This Christmas Day" another keeper.
Funny, I just listened to Strange Times today for the first time and I also really like English Sunset. Another song on it that's worth a listen is The Swallow.
I gotta agree with most of your rankings here. TOCCC has been my personal favorite for decades...it has some of their best moments of focused energy but also beautiful moments of tranquility. "Watching and Waiting" is one of my favorite songs that rarely gets mentioned by reviewers, but it's a great ending to a great album. I consider the Bluejays album to be a MB album, kinda like I consider the ABWH album to be part of the Yes catalogue. I also like Justin and John's solo albums from this period, but didn't care for the other member's solo output. I was somewhat disappointed in Octave when it came out, it just seemed too different, but I did get to see the band for the first time on that tour. I started losing interest with later releases, with The Present being the last MB album I bought upon release. But that early 7 album run was an amazing feat that very few other bands could match. And it was definitely prog ;)
Watching and Waiting, whilst being a brilliant song, is the one Moody Blues song that I cannot listen to. It is just too sad. Not sure if it's the lyrics or the key it's in, those mournful chords, but I have to switch the album off just before it starts. As I say, just too sad. Too much for me. And I've thought this for about 40 years.
They are my favorite band of all time, and I must say The Moody Blues 80s period is criminally underrated IMO, just as Rush's "synth era" is underrated and unfairly maligned by many of their fans. I'd actually rate most of the 80s work, especially "Long Distance Voyager", as being equal or better than some of the 60s, 70s era classics. Dismissing a whole decade of the band as "synth pop" is very lazy.The writing was still top notch and they generally kept one foot in the traditional space of guitars, big harmony vocals and melodic, beautiful songwriting, while wrapping it deep in the latest synth and production technology, and it sounded great to me, and not like a band resting on the past glories only...Had the Moodies not updated their sound with the help of Moraz, Pip Williams & Tony Visconti, it could have easily turned into the art rock version of AC/DC - cranking out one album after another of the same exact formula that had worked in decades past. Had they done that, their reunion would have burned out very quickly because it would have been boring for them as musicians and creative people. Remember, the band's original run ended because the band felt the old familiar formula was getting stale when they tried to make a follow-up to "Seventh Sojourn".
Congratulations on selecting the correct album as Number 1 It deserves to be talked about as elite psych/rock with bands who the UK press actually accepted as the same. We were a bit snobby about them over here for some reason. Not cool enough or something, I don't know.
Not exactly the way I'd rank them but near enough, Scot. The 'blues' era and much of the post-prog pop is sub-par but what a run of progressive albums from 67-81 they produced. Even the pretentious Graeme Edge poems fit in with Mike Pinder's Mellotron-tinged groovyness. Hawkwind pulled off the same trick with Moorcock's poems on their Warrior on the Edge of Time masterpiece. Had to be the 70's, man.
Just starting to appreciate the Moodies. I have Every Good Boy...on vinyl and it was one of those 'got it for the cover' purchases. From what I've heard so far they're definitely worth investigating further and could change my PROG BIG FOUR to a Big Five. Speaking of things worth investigating further, I heard something off of 'H to He' (Vandergraaf) a while ago and could have easily mistaken it for a Nursery Cryme outtake.
@@TheProgCorner Anywho, as for the Moodies themselves, Future Passed, Lost Chord, and To Our Children's seem to be coming out on top. Polar opposite from my last Queen album ranking - my top 3 for the Moodies are in the early stretches of their career, whereas my top 3 for Queen are the last three. And as usual with all prog bands - I like the pop stuff too.
I'd rank the 80s era albums much higher. This might be the contrarian/unpopular view, but the albums that I play most often are not the first 7 (though those are all great, too), the ones that have stuck with me the most over the years are "Long Distance Voyager", "The Present", "Sur La Mer" & "The Other Side of Life".
@@TheProgCorner I get it. Honestly all their album are great in my opinion, and it's cool that they had a few differebnt phases. The Christmas album would the only weak link to me, but then songs like "December Snow" and "The Spirit of Christmas" make it worthwhile, too.
Don't know all the albums and I only know four of the "core seven," but of those four, Seventh Sojourn is my favorite by far. The Pinder tracks alone...but really every song on here is awesome! However, I totally concur on Sur la Mer: that synth-pop stuff is just not for me.
Are they prog? According to Edward Macan in the book "Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture," bands like the Moody Blues, etc., were "proto-prog." The author considers In the Court of the Crimson King to be the first true prog album. Irrespective of whether you consider it prog or not, their stuff from the late 60s/early 70s was excellent and fit in well with the emerging prog zeitgeist.
TOCCC number 1 but its a toughie Those 1st 7 albums are all at a consistently high level. I should say 2nd till 8th but 1st album sounds like a different band.
To our Childrens in search of...Question of Balance y on a treshold of a dream son los 4. Muy buenos y cada uno en su estilo o + pop + psicológico...oscuro o + directo y menos orquestado
Hard to rank them. Heres mine. And i would say they are prog 100%. 1. A question of balance 2. To our childrens childrens 3. On the threshold of a dream children 4. In search of the lost chord 5. Seventh Sojourn
The Rolling Stone Album Guide book from the '90s gave _The Magnificent Moodies_ the highest rating...go figure. TOCCC is my favorite, also. I always found DOFP overrated...the band and the orchestra don't mesh very well (the Beatles and Brian Wilson did "chamber pop" much better), and aside from the two big hits, most of the songs are pretty forgettable.
I never truly got into The Moody Blues, but i figured out anything 1967-1972 is worth listening to !
Exactly!!!!!!
Some MB prog albums post-1972 are really good too.
Yes it’s the golden rule.
I saw them with Moraz. He was the best part of the show.
@Hartley_Taylor Moraz always delivers!!!!
Thanks for this ! Every Good Band Deserves a Review ! Tony Clarke did an amazing job as their producer, never more so than on To Our Children's...
Tony Clarke was the sixth member of the band!!!!
Seventh Sojourn is always no. 1 for me. The moods, the mellotron, and Hayward's underrated fantastic electric guitar sound and playing.
The core seven are all perfect so ranking them is ridiculous. So I did it anyway!!!
Same here.
I pretty much agree with your rankings. But I would rank 'Strange Times' above the 80's techno albums. There was a lot of strings, but it sounds more like the earlier albums than the 3 previous albums.
I just posted a video of finally becoming a huge fan and I pinned this video... I'll be doing my ranking in a few weeks but for now I'll enjoy watching your thoughts.
Nice!!!! Thanks, Larry!!!! U Da Man!!!
Great list man. I saw the Moody Blues 3 times..I find their pre-80s fairly deep, great meditation music. Prog enough for me. For anyone that hasnt listened to them, This Is The Moody Blues is a great introductory 2 LP record. 🎸🎸
A great compilation album!!!!
R.I.P. Mike Pinder ! Left 7 LPs ... 7 wonders of the Earth ! No more .. No less ..!
Seven masterpieces!!!
Justin also appeared on Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds . Now there is an album cover.
And the song was huge in the UK!!! Not here…
Great video, Scot. RIP to Pinder; he just passed away :(. I remember reading somewhere that Moraz was never acknowledged as a full member of the band; just a side man. His contribution on those albums was exceptional.
Also, I remember seeing them on the tour for Octave. I thought it was weird that Pinder was completely written out of the program.
Moraz was never given his due - with Yes or The Moody Blues!!!
Another great episode, Scot. One of my favorite bands. But for me, I feel they weren't the same after Mike Pinder departed.
For sure!!!! Moraz did a fine job but…
I was in Vietnam 71/72 when I first heard of the Moody Blues. The album was, "Every good boy deserves favor" and I've been hooked ever since. I saw them at Summerfest, in Milwaukee, in the late 70s. When they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2018 (about damn time!!!), I just KNEW the song they were going to play - "I'm just a singer in a rock and roll band".
My first concert was at Summerfest: Sky & the Family Stone in 1970!!! Amazing.
Lost Chord and Future Passed are my 1 and 2, but, otherwise agree. The Mike Pinder era was the best
Yeah, my top two haven’t changed in 50 years. But all those early records were just incredible!!! What a cool and unique band…
YES! TO OUR CHILDRENS CHILDRENS CHILDREN IS MY FAVORITE ALL-TIME ALBUM.
So good!!!!
When I first stumbled upon your channel, I didn't think I'd find someone who loved Yes as much as I do and had exactly the same favourite Pink Floyd and Marillion album as me. Now you've ranked The Moodies albums in exactly the same order as I do. I think I might have found a kindred spirit. Rock on brother. 😎😎
No way!!! That’s so freaky!!!! 👍👍👍
That was a great ranking, I can't see where I'd change anything. Prog or not the Moodies are certainly loved by most prog fans and that's good enough for me.
Me too!!! Been a fan since 1968!!!!
Totally. Every protoprogressive I ever knew owned and loved themselves some Moody Blues, and spoke of them in the same context as Crimson, Yes, Floyd, Zappa, VDGG, Strawbs, Gryphon, and others progressing the form of rock music mostly. Mellotron was also a panprogressive tool of choice.
@MisterWondrous As they should!!!!
@@MisterWondrous Weirdly, some prog snobs look down on the Moody Blues in the same way ELO and Queen are scorned. To me, they all produced remarkable albums at times along with (admittedly) some turds. I'd argue the MBs prog album sequence is up there with any bands and the other two produced a couple of classic prog albums early on.
Great music is great music!!!
In Search of the Lost Chord will always be my true love, but you've reminded me how great Question of Balance is too.
Last month my daughter and I got to see John Lodge and his excellent band play Days of Future Passed at the Royal Oak Music Theatre in Michigan. It far exceeded expectations. Yes' Jon Davison sang on Tuesday Afternoon, Nights in White Satin, and a raucous, rockin' encore of Ride My See Saw. In 46 years of going to rock concerts, I'd number this show among the best.
Your videos are always entertaining and informative. Keep up the good work!
You know Jon Davison is engaged to Emily Lodge. That makes me so happy (for some reason!)
My 2nd favorite band just behind The Beatles
My 3 favorite moody Blues songs are Melancholy Man, Lost in a Lost World and My Song
1. Question of Balance
2. Days of Future past
3. Seventh Soujourn
4. In Search of the Lost Chord
5. To our Childrens Children's Children
6. On the Threshhold of a Dream
7. Every Good Boy Deserrves a Favor
8. Long Distance Voyager
9. Keys of the Kingdom
10. The Present
11. Octave
12. The Other Side of Life
Awesome!!!!
Love the Moody Blues! Thanks for doing this one, Great to hear your enthusiasm for them. The Moodies just don't get enough love and respect from the prog community. And yes, they definitely are prog, one of its true originators. And you're right, those top 8 albums are all fantastic! After that, yes, it does drop off quite a bit, but there are still some gems from throughout their catalog (Justin Hayward, in particular, is such a great singer and songwriter). My list has a bit different order from yours, my personal preferences (but all the same albums in the top ten, and all really good). It's too bad they sunk to that cheesy synthpop and sappy eighties production and arrangements in the later albums, as the songwriting still remained quite good. One of the all-time greats. Here's my ranking list (the top 3 are almost interchangeable):
16. Sur La Mer (1988 - the absolute worst of their cheesy synthpop era)
15. December (2003 - EZ listening Xmas tunes)
14. The Magnificent Moodies (1965 - Standard, competent blues-rock of the times, just nothing like what they would become)
13. Keys to the Kingdom (1991 - Some better songs, but still drowning in the synthpop nonsense arrangements)
12. The Other Side of Life (1986 - More good songs, a mix of styles)
11. Strange Times (1999 - more of a singer-songwrieter album, stripped-down arrangements, nice songs, actually a refreshing change from the synthpop style)
10. Octave (1978 - Return from extended break. Can't match earlier classics, but several really good songs)
9. The Present (1983 - Follow-up to Long Distance, not quite as strong, but still really good)
8. Long Distance Voyager (1981 - Great return to form, correct issues from Octave. several classic tracks)
7. Seventh Sojourn (1972 - My least fave from the classic period, but still great)
6. Days of Future Passed (1967 - Monumentally important album merging classical and rock, 'Nights' and 'Tuesday' are all-time classics, but orchestral sections other than on 'Nights' are not that well-arranged (arrangements out of the '40's and '50's instead of more contemporary) or well-incorporated into the rock songs. Certainly a classic, but not quite among their very best overall)
5. A Question of Balance (1970 - Several undisputed classics, not quite as cohesive as some others
4. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1971 - Fantastic concept, execution, contains my favorite, Story in Your Eyes
3. To Our Children's Children;s Children (1969 - Masterful, fully immersive album)
2. On the Threshold of a Dream (1969 - First Moodies album I heard, loved it immediately. The Have You Heard-Voyage suite is masterful vintage prog)
1. In Search of the Lost Chord (1968 - Certainly one of the very first true prog albums, absolutely brilliant)
What a great ranking!!!!!
I love your ranking. My top two frequently replace each other, I cannot make up my mind: Threshold and Chord.
@@John-fc7wc thanks John, and you’re right, I keep going back and forth with those top 2 as which is my favorite as well. Every time I hear either one, I think, oh yeah, this is my favorite. Just fantastic.
l reckon the magnificent 7 from the classic era can be listed any which way, they are all that great. But if pushed for a top 10 , 1) To Or Children's Children's Children. 2) In Search Of The Lost Chord. 3) Seventh Sojourn, 4) Days Of Future Past 5) 0n The Threshold Of A Dream 6) Every Good Boy Deserves Favor 7) A Question Of Balance 8) Long Distance Voyager ( easily their best post classic era) 9) The Magnificent Moodies ( very underrated 1st album , R&B, pre Justin & John), 10) (Captain's choice) Caught Live + Five. (A live album , we know, but although the live versions are quite good , the album is included because of the 5 previously unreleased tracks . This shows the quality of that classic run of 7 albums , when they omitted these great songs from that period.
I have never been able to rank the classic seven because they are all so good! Congratulations on tackling that, Scot… and I think it’s very cool that you put To Our Children’s Children’s Children at number 1; I think I would have done the same.
It’s an impossible task but in the end it’s TOCCC that i return to most!!!
LOVE me some Moody Blues! I don't know if I would consider the Moodies true prog rock either, I just always considered them in a class of their own, no other band is like The Moody Blues.
Good point. They are their own genre!!!
I love the Moody Blues, superb ranking, the band was lacking for me after Mike Pinder left. The band was missing its heart i felt. Still some great material thereafter, not a huge fan of the 80s stuff. For me the classic 7 run is the Moodies best work
1 Threshold of a dream
2 To our Children's children's children
3 Days of future past
4 In search of the lost chord
5 Question of balance
6 seventh sojourn
7 Every good boy deserves favour
Every one of those albums is a work of art, love them all
True, like many bands the 80s 'popped' them.
Those seven, man. Unreal.
@@TheProgCorner absolutely beautiful records all 7, those harmonies and that Mellotron, gets me everytime
@alfietomkins7829 Amazing!!!
TOCCC and OtToaD are my two favorite Moody albums.
I think The Present is far and away their best album of the post-hiatus era. And I like it way more than Long Distance Voyager. The melodies are much stronger.
I like them both!!! What a great band.
I like your enthusiasm. Agree with your rankings for the most part. I need to expand my horizons a bit. Still stuck in the classic prog period. But it’s not a bad place to be. Will subscribe.
Thank you for your support!!!!
The Moody Blues had one of the longest periods of high creativity. From 1967 to 1972, they put out 7 albums which were near perfect. I started getting into the Moodies with Long Distance Voyager. While Mike Pinder was missed, Patrick Moraz did a wonderful job on it. Not comparing them since they are 2 different styles, able to share their own special contributions. Well, now only Patrick since we also lost Mike.
RIP, Mr. Pinder, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge, Denny Laine and Clint Warwick.
At least we still have Justin and John!!!!
I had a heart attack during the intro; the energy was... unexpected!
It didn’t last….
Thanks for the energy and passion you put into this deep dive of my favorite band, The Moody Blues! My ranking lines up pretty closely with yours:
16. The Magnificent Moodies
15. December
14. Strange Times
13. Keys of the Kingdom
12. Sur la Mer
11. The Other Side of Life
10. The Present
9. Octave
the following top 8 are all great albums and my ranking of these often changes with my mood ...
8. Long Distance Voyager
7. Days of Future Passed
6. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour
5. A Question of Balance
4. On The Threshold of a Dream
3. In Search of the Lost Chord
2. To Our Children's Children's Children
1. Seventh Sojourn
Oh and just as you mentioned, the Hayward/Lodge Blue Jays album is also an outstanding record.
Cheers!
Those eight albums are so great!!! And Octave has grown on me a bit!!!
I agree. To our Children is my favorite also.
👍👍👍
It’s hard to go wrong with “ Days “ and “ Lost Chord,” definitely my #1 and 2 favorites. I could listen to the “ Legend of a Mind “ song for days on end. And “ Gypsy “ from TOCCC is easily one of their finest ever. Great list Scot from this magical, iconic band.
Amazing band!!!!
1--Days of Future Passed '68
2--On the Threshold of a Dream '69
3--In Search of the Lost Chord '68
4--A Question of Balance '70
5--Seventh Sojourn '72
6--To Our Children's Children's Children '70
7--Prelude '66
8--Long Distance Voyager '81
9--December '03
10-Sur La Mer '88
11-The Present '83
12-Every Good Boy Deserves Favour '71
13-Keys of the Kingdom '91
14-Strange Times '99
*****************************************
15-The Other Side of Life '86
EGBDF so low?
@@TheProgCorner That's what the numbers came out to be. "Our Guessing Game" & "Nice To Be Here" drag the album down.
@@TheProgCorner MB are still my #3 artist of all-time. Saw them 3 times. Moline, Champaign & Peoria.
@@TheProgCorner My bad! Put "Octave at #15 & "The Other Side of Life #16.
Really level headed rankings scot, agree with most if not all you stated, so glad you got around to doin' these rankings, thank you, would love to see the solo rankings of the moody blues members at some point scot, something to consider? Regards, 😊👍🙏
Good idea!!! And there are a couple I haven’t heard so that could be a lot of fun. What a band. Man, I always loved The Moody Blues and not one thing has changed!!!! ❤️
The Core 7 and LDV are all fantastic .Later on Wildest dreams and I Know your out there somewhere are great singles . Moodies are the best no doubt .Mike and Justin''s song i like best though ray's twilight time is magic too and so is John's just a singer ..and so on !! Lol
Big Moodies fan. I've actually been playing some of their stuff lately (last night I played TOCCC).
Great minds think alike!!!!
Perfect list Scot! You are a plethora of Moody Blues info. They're Prog enough for me too. The Moody Blues are not quite but almost as important as YES was to me growng up. They are tied for second place with Pink Floyd and Led Zepplin as my favorite bands of all time. YES of course being number 1 over and above any other band in history! Enjoyed that very much Scot!🤩
I was listening to them for years before I discovered YES and ELP. They prepared my ears for all that came later. I will always love The Moody Blues!!!! And Justin’s voice. OMG.
I know. I discovered them both around the same time. As a teenager I was in heaven, musically. Listen to 'TOCCC' over and over again... Every song on that album is great! Blasting off with 'Higher and Higher and then coming down back to Earth with 'Watching and Waiting', what trip!🤩@@TheProgCorner
I think I put the right album at #1.
@@TheProgCorner You absolutely did!🤩
👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️
Great job ranking their albums but I probably rate Seventh Sojourn a bit higher. I absolutely dig the Moody Blues.
Love them!!!!
Days of Future Past is just so incredible and so underrated.
Glad you’re a fan.
Oh yeah!!!
I have taken the time to listen to all of them over again and I feel that your rankings are solid oak.
Especially that first one, Scot!
Our Children's, Children's, Children!
Talking about The Moody Blues is high up on my Utopia pole.
🦓
Solid. Like oak!!! 👍👍👍👍
@@TheProgCorner 🐐 🐐 🐐 🐐!!!!
My ranking:
1 Seventh Sojourn 1972
2 On the Threshold of a Dream 1969
3 A Question of Balance 1970
4 Every Good Boy Deserves Favour 1971
5 Long Distance Voyager 1981
6 In Search of the Lost Chord 1968
7 Octave 1978
8 To Our Children's Children's Children 1969
9 Days of Future Past 1967
10 The Present 1983
Good to see Octave so high!!!
Wonderful...a superb group!!Thank you for your beautiful enthusiasm!!Have a great Sunday!!🌟🌟🌟🇬🇧
Thank you!!!! 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇺🇸🇺🇸
Very accurate review. The 7 absolute classics from Days of Future Passed to Seventh Sojourn constitute a solid block of work which raised the tone of the 20th century.- and beyond.
One of the most important bands ever.
A great band Scott was lucky enough to have seen them in 1986
I bet that was awesome!!!!
Itwas s was a Charity concert that Bev Bevan put together loads of bands including UB40 Robert Plant and the Honeydrippers The Move then Roy wood on his own ELO Moody Blues and George Harrison came out at the end not a bad gig lol
Not too shabby!!!!!
What a wonderful band. Thanks for the ranking!
💙23 concerts (together and solo gigs) for me💙
The Moody Blues seven album streak is hard to beat. My preferences differ a little from yours:
1. In Search Of The Lost Chord (Fav songs: Ride My See Saw, Legend Of A Mind, Voices In The Sky, The Best Way To Travel, The Actor, Om, A Simple Game, What Am I Doing Here)
2. A Question Of Balance (Question, How Is It, And The Tide Rushes In, Don't You Feel Small, Minstrel's Song, Dawning Is The Day, Melancholy Man)
3. To Our Children's Children's Children (Higher And Higher, Eyes Of A Child, Floating, Out And In, Gypsy, Candle Of Life, Watching And Waiting)
4. Seventh Sojourn (Lost In A Lost World, New Horizons, For My Lady, Isn't Life Strange, The Land Of Make Believe, I'm Just A Singer)
5. Days Of Future Passed (The Afternoon, Evening, The Night)
6. On The Threshold Of A Dream (Lovely To See You, Dear Diary, So Deep Within You, Never Comes The Day, Have You Heard)
7. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (The Story In Your Eyes, Our Guessing Game, One More Time To Live, My Song)
8. Long Distance Voyager (The Voice, Talking Out Of Turn, Gemini Dream, In My World, 22000 Days, Veteran Cosmic Rocker)
9. Mid to late 80's (Your Wildest Dreams, I Know You're Out There Somewhere, The Other Side Of Life)
Yeah, ranking those seven is a fool’s errand!!!
You forgot ‘Prelude’ a proper studio album from 1968. The first half released on ‘Live +5’ and the full work in 1987.
Their early work before the break is their best in my opinion, and I love your top 3 choices. Their late 60s, early 70s music was definitely prog - no doubt about it! Their late 70s, 80s and on, not so much. Long distance voyager was an ok pop album, but didn’t really sound original or unique - It sounded like them imitating others. Nevertheless I’m glad they scored some hits with it. Great video! 👍🌞
Ignored them apart from one album in the 70s but now I've rediscovered them. What's not to love. Now in the process of acquiring all the 70s outputs. Saw them live in 2004ish and they were great.
I love them so much!!!!
Me too now!
Awesome!!!! I never got to see them live. What a shame…
Luckily live, they concentrated on the late 60s/70s material and they certainly put in a show but then having played together for so long and to huge stadiums....My favourite band King Crimson were helped along the way by the Moodys who sold them a damaged mellotron. They almost shared a manage/producer but luckily Crimso went down their own special and unique rabbit hole. The rest as they say is history. Love your videos and the new haircut has a touch of the Kurt Cobain don't you think?
Thought Strange Times was harking back to their 70s work and considered better than their previous 3. Also could make the case that there's more distinction between their 70s and 80s work than that of Genesis.
Absolutely!!!! It’s like a whole different band!!!!
Our children's children....
The best
💯
After high school in '73, I took some time off to hitch around the country, to look for America, like a lot of other hippies and flower children at the time. I was so dumb, that I carried a boom box, surely one of the first, and had one cassette: To Our Children's Children's Children. I figured I was travelling eternity road. What would i find there, carrying that heavy load, hoping to find some peace of mind? As an aside...on my first rest stop at a hippie house along the way, what would be playing for me, but It's a Beautiful Day's beautiful song of peace. A great send off before full flight. Heady times. Hearty times. RIP David LaFlamme, for whom I shed this tear. Perfect ranking, btw. The Moody Blues were prog on those perfect 10s, but not before or after.
Yeah, RIP Dave LaFlamme!!! The Eternity Road, indeed!!! It’s A Beautiful Day. Just gorgeous…
My first girlfriend in high school carried a Best Of The Moody Blues cassette in her pocket at all times. I only knew a couple of their hits and I was obsessed with more energetic Prog like VdGG, ELP ect. Still am of course! Turning each other on to our taste in music was quite a revelation. Thank you Marian and thank you Moody Blues! Still love you both💖
Too tough for me to pick a number one. Good job as usual Scot!
Great story!!! My Dad must have been a fan because we had all of the Classic Seven. But I don’t remember anyone but me playing those records…
@@TheProgCorner Music is such a great way to bond and understand people!
Word of advice, if you want to listen to the Moody Blues for the first time, I urge you to go out and buy the double album " This is the Moody Blues".
It's possibly the best compilation album ever made. It's an almost seamless blending of their greatest moments.👍
A great call!!! I have that album and I 100% agree!!!
Agreed. This is a great mix of their best songs. The 'mixes' are also superior to the originals....Question, The Actor, Melancholy Man and many more. The only other box set worth having is 'Time Traveller'. No point having any other albums after Seventh Sojourn. Maybe 'Long Distance Voyager'.
In search of the lost chord changed my musical taste 50 years ago when I into Slade,Sweet and T.Rex. Since then they've been my favourite band and I love Prog and Art rock
Awesome!!! I love them so much!!!
My older brother is a big fan so they have always been in my life. Have come to really enjoy those late 60s -70s records.
Thank God for older siblings!!!
Favorite all time. So many firsts.
Yeah love this band to the moon and back. I totally agree, my top 2 are your top 2. Question Of Balance got me through 2020. That last song The Balance tears me up pretty hard. Are you coming down for the Dayton Geebz shows next weekend?
That's another thing about The Moodies, they probably make me cry more than any other band haha.
Uncle Bob didn’t put me on the guest list so I guess I’m staying home. 😢😢😢
Yeah the wife and I barely got in, ticketmaster really made it difficult. I'm playing that Thursday night at Yellow Cab, we are doing a whole Bob record that has never been played live before. I guess Paddy Considine will be there.
There may be other surprise guests there, I bet. Sounds like fun!!! 👍👍👍
The Present was my first Moody Blues album in 1983. I still think it's an underrated classic... Blue World, Meet Me Halfway, Sorry, etc... Brilliant. I saw them live in 1984, again, a brilliant experience. Thus far, I'd say that Lost Chord is probably my favourite, but Children is a close second. Long Distance Voyager is another favourite. Waiting for Octave to arrive as I write this...
I love The Moody Blues!!!
I love The Moody Blues!!!
The Present is a GREAT album! I’ll never understand why it always gets ranked so low.
Ranking Moody Blues' albums :
Seventh Sojourn (1972)
A Question of Balance (1970)
On the Threshold of a Dream (1969)
In Search of the Lost Chord (1968)
Days of Future Passed (1967)
To Our Children's Children's Children (1969)
Every Good Boy Deserves Favour (1971)
Blue Jays (Hayward & Lodge) (1975)
Octave (1978)
On Boulevard De La Madeleine (1967) compilation from Netherland of singles from 1965 to 1967
Sur la Mer (1988)
Long Distance Voyager (1981)
The Present (1983)
The Other Side of Life (1986)
Strange Times (1999)
December (2003)
Keys of the Kingdom (1991)
The Magnificent Moodies (1965)
Blue Jays!!!!!
Loved the video as usual
Have you listened to any wishbone ash. some really fun prog to listen to
I have only really delved into Argus and the debut. But I love them both!!!!
Oh that’s awesome keep making your great videos@@TheProgCorner
So i have seen them probably 12 times, when talking about The Moodies its all about the " Classic 7 " albums ,these are the Moodies. Frw after that we're still good, Seventh S,The Present ... Children's Children is my favorite by them ..i have all the Solo albums too and i mean ALL of the ,Bluejays, Edges albums with his band and with Adrian Gurvitz....
Beautiful!!!! 👍👍👍👍
You put STRANGE DAYS instead STRANGE TIMES when you discuss it . Strange Days from The Doors is a good record though . Keep up the great work 👍
At least I said it right!!!!!! My mistake. Must have had The Doors on my mind when I was typing it out…
@@TheProgCorner Good ranking by the way 👏
Great ranking. Pretty close to how I'd rank them, but I'd have to put Days of Future Past at #1, simply because it blew me away as a kid. I know Nights in White Satin is an iconic "hit," but it also is just one of those amazing songs ever, that transcends time and is like, "Where did THAT come from?" Not this planet. Glad you mentioned the Blue Jays album, I'd stick it up against the Moody's Top 8 as well.
I always wonder how that record would have turned out if Pinder had been interested…
That would be Passed, not Past. We'll forgive ya on that one.
Nights in white WHAT?!
@@Sammeep02 LOL...oops! Fixed.
Eagle eyes watching all…
Seventh Sojourn and To Our Children's Children's Children are the Moody's finest records (amongst many).
1. Seventh Sojourn
2. To Our Children's Children's Children
3. In Search of the Lost Chord
4. A Question of Balance
5. Days of Future Passed
6. Long Distance Voyager
7. The Present
8. Octave
9. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour
10. On the Other Side of Life
11. Sur la Mer
LDV!!! Such a great 80s record!!!
Yes, Moody Blues from
Day's of Future Past, In Search of the lost cord, Thershold of a dream, To our Children Children's Children, Ouestion of Balance, Every Good Boy Deserves favor, Seventh sojourn. When you go through each of the 7 albums, each one leading you too the other next one and the 7th album talks of Father God and his loving Son. These 7 albums our the seven Thunders that other their voices in Revelation chapter 10. I put my book out in 2019 "Seventh Messenger" and tell how Father God Spirit reviled this to me in 1973.
I love it!!!!
I have them all.I recently bought the Polgram Years boxset
It's very cool.I saw them in concert 3 times in the last 21 years .This was a great band live too.
I never got to see them. 😢
Amazing Scott. You have top 2 Question Of Balance and To Our Childrens Children's Children that I always thought f for ever end ever! TOCCC is no 1 for me no 3 probably Every Good Boy Deserves Favour. Then Days Of Future Passed at 4. At no 5 Seventh Sojourn. There is my Top 5 - In Search Of The Lost Chord I love so it could move up some day. TC
What an amazing body of work!!!
Passed, not Past. Get with it!
@@cosmo1eleven855 K you are right corrected it thanks,
Great ranking Scott!
Thank you!!!
Love the energy and enthusiasm...my list:
#1. every good boy deserves a favor Sorry Days fans, but it's got 2 out of 3 of justin's greatest songs with story in your eyes and you can never go home (his deepest and most profoundly beautiful song, even better than Nights (IMHO)
#2. Days of Future Past - great songs by the band, needed less orchestra between the songs, that was just muzak
#3. Seventh Sojourn - I don't know why everybody thinks it's the bottom of the core 7, every song it a winner and it's got 2 out of 3 of John's greatest songs.
#4. To Our Children's Children - Not one bad song, consistently great all the way through
#5. Question of Balance - Great songwriting with Question, It's Up to You etc. Melancholy Man, great track but seems a little out of place with the brighter sound of this lp.
#6. Search of the Lost Chord - John's greatest rocker, Justin's wonderful Voices in the Sky, absolutely essential
#7. Threshhold of a Dream - their "prog rock" masterpiece. I know most have this higher in the core 7 but it's not a knock, all these albums are great, I just find the others a bit more compelling
#8. Long Distance Voyager - Justin's hit The Voice, his best post classic period hit. Gemini Dream, insane synthesizer drive classic and packed with good songs
#9. The Present - underrated classic, highly melodic and solid all the way through.
#10. Strange Times - Chock full of good melodies and none of that synth pop crap, why people give this one the short thrift, I don't understand.
That top 10 are all their great albums, below are the not so great ones, but most have something good in them.
#11. Keys to the Kingdom - two great tracks Lean on Me and Celtic Sonant and some decent ones)
#12. Other Side of Life (two great tracks Wildest Dreams and It may be a Fire and a lot of horrible stuff)
#13. Octave (1 great song, Mike's swan song: One step into the Light and one good one, John's Survival)
#14. December (I don't consider Christmas albums to be real albums but this one interestingly has a lot of originals which kind of makes it more an authentic MB's album, unfortunately the originals aren't so great)
#15. Sur La Mer (not even one good song, horrible)
Magnificent Moodies...no Justin, no John so not a Moody Blues album. It's english R&B, blues based pop much like the Small Faces or one of the other innumerable skiffle type bands that emerged from Britain...how many of them do we even need? Thankfully, the Moody Blues morphed into something different and unique. For what it is, I give it 3 stars but don't think it should be ranked with the others.
Excellent breakdown!!! Man, I love those seven core albums!!!!
I agree so much with your number one! It is my favorite album of all time, and I don't think that will ever change. My ordering is a little different otherwise, I'd probably rank them:
Sur La Mer
The Other Side of Life
Keys of the Kingdom
Octave
Strange Times
Every Good Boy Deserves Favour
Long Distance Voyager
The Present
In Search of the Lost Chord
On The Threshold of a Dream
Seventh Sojourn
A Question of Balance
Days of Future Passed
To Our Children's Children's Children
Not sure where I'd put Magnificent Moodies or December, definitely near the bottom.
EGBDF??? A little surprised at that…
Rough justice but question was kept off number one slot in the uk by the England World Cup squad Mexico 1970 (soccer to you outside of the uk lol )a song called back home ,
Interesting!!!!
WELL beam me up Scotty, been waiting for this one ! MB was the very first band where I tried to buy all of their studio albums (up until the 80s) on vinyl. As a teenager and new collector, MB records are cheap in used shops and they were everywhere. My old man had the Days of Future past LP and u wanted to know way more. I have their first 7 albums and spin them regularly. I will say the Hayward and Lodge album "Blue Jays" is fantastic and is basically the lost MB album (trumps most of the MB output that came out after their golden Era and rivals some of their finest albums👌) criminally "under-listened" by my millennial peers, long live the Moody Blues !! ❤ P.S RIP to Graeme Edge, his band made 2 good albums that I also have on wax !
Imagine Blue Jays with Mike, Graeme and Ray on it. It’s already a 9/10 album as is!!! I love The Moody Blues. I don’t remember a time they WEREN’T in my life!!!
@@TheProgCornerthat's awesome man haha I think my dad (64) is the same way, always had them handy on the shelf. Moody Blues were one of those bands just below superstardom but as you said their influence was beyond any fame or sales they could have achieved. It is apparent in my used shop diggs that I frequently go on that they sold plenty of albums as I basically cannot enter a used shop without seeing 3 or 5 dollar copies of long distance and beat up copies of dofp/threshold. They'll always be on my rotation and damn yeah 😅 that Blue Jay album could have been an 11/10 the eh, still happy to have heard it for the first time maybe 2 years ago. Blew me away, talk about thay vocal emotion and poetry you get, this time on every track.
I think Justin has one of the best voices ever.
@@TheProgCorner agreed. Big part of the reason many of those songs are so memorable 🤟
💯
To Our Children's Children's Children
In Search of the Lost Chord
On the Threshold of a Dream
Days of Future Passed
A Question of Balance
TOCCC is in the same category as Abbey Road or Sgt Pepper. Yes, it's that good and better than anything ever done by Pink Floyd, Genesis, Yes or any of the other prog bands.
I put it and AQOB on a pedestal!!!
Thank you for all that history! Very interesting. AQOB is a stark departure from TOCCC. Like the Beatles, the Moodies figured out that live music and stadium-sized concerts were the future. Their previous albums, like TOCCC would be very difficult to recreate on stage. And just like the Beatles, they were best in the studio, as opposed to being live performers. The Beatles, broke up. The Moodies changed their music to fit this new paradigm.
While their post 70s stuff was good, their psychedelic/spiritual offerings of the 60s were unmatched!
BTW, I saw them live on Thanksgiving Day, 1969, 5 days after the release of TOCCC. They opened with Gypsy. The venue? A large byzantine church in downtown Grand Rapids!@@TheProgCorner
Wow!!! Gypsy and the Moodies? Awesome gig.
We have different taste in the Moodies! SEVENTH SOJOURN and DAYS OF FUTURE PASSED are my two favorite albums. QUESTION OF BALANCE is my least favorite. There are some great songs on some of the albums you didn't seem to like at all. THE PRESENT is terrific. And DECEMBER is one of my favorite holiday albums of all-time. Justin's "December Snow" is one of the loveliest songs he's ever written. Although they didn't write "A Winter's Day," good gracious -- it's incredibly beautiful. Lodge's "On This Christmas Day" another keeper.
What a band!!!!!
Funny, I just listened to Strange Times today for the first time and I also really like English Sunset. Another song on it that's worth a listen is The Swallow.
It’s a great album. Every song is good.
I gotta agree with most of your rankings here. TOCCC has been my personal favorite for decades...it has some of their best moments of focused energy but also beautiful moments of tranquility. "Watching and Waiting" is one of my favorite songs that rarely gets mentioned by reviewers, but it's a great ending to a great album.
I consider the Bluejays album to be a MB album, kinda like I consider the ABWH album to be part of the Yes catalogue. I also like Justin and John's solo albums from this period, but didn't care for the other member's solo output. I was somewhat disappointed in Octave when it came out, it just seemed too different, but I did get to see the band for the first time on that tour. I started losing interest with later releases, with The Present being the last MB album I bought upon release. But that early 7 album run was an amazing feat that very few other bands could match. And it was definitely prog ;)
Watching and Waiting, whilst being a brilliant song, is the one Moody Blues song that I cannot listen to. It is just too sad. Not sure if it's the lyrics or the key it's in, those mournful chords, but I have to switch the album off just before it starts. As I say, just too sad. Too much for me. And I've thought this for about 40 years.
We all have songs like that!!! Just too much emotion…
A little too mellow for Some prog heads but I loved Seventh sojourn, every song so melodic.
Great band!!!
They are my favorite band of all time, and I must say The Moody Blues 80s period is criminally underrated IMO, just as Rush's "synth era" is underrated and unfairly maligned by many of their fans. I'd actually rate most of the 80s work, especially "Long Distance Voyager", as being equal or better than some of the 60s, 70s era classics. Dismissing a whole decade of the band as "synth pop" is very lazy.The writing was still top notch and they generally kept one foot in the traditional space of guitars, big harmony vocals and melodic, beautiful songwriting, while wrapping it deep in the latest synth and production technology, and it sounded great to me, and not like a band resting on the past glories only...Had the Moodies not updated their sound with the help of Moraz, Pip Williams & Tony Visconti, it could have easily turned into the art rock version of AC/DC - cranking out one album after another of the same exact formula that had worked in decades past. Had they done that, their reunion would have burned out very quickly because it would have been boring for them as musicians and creative people. Remember, the band's original run ended because the band felt the old familiar formula was getting stale when they tried to make a follow-up to "Seventh Sojourn".
I called Long Distance Voyager a perfect album!!!! Almost as good as the core seven!!!
Oh yes excuse me Mike's on 'Driftwood'/Octave
Congratulations on selecting the correct album as Number 1
It deserves to be talked about as elite psych/rock with bands who the UK press actually accepted as the same. We were a bit snobby about them over here for some reason. Not cool enough or something, I don't know.
Sweet!!! What a great band they were.
I meant them in 1994 very nice guys
Awesome!!!! I met Moraz once…
Not exactly the way I'd rank them but near enough, Scot. The 'blues' era and much of the post-prog pop is sub-par but what a run of progressive albums from 67-81 they produced. Even the pretentious Graeme Edge poems fit in with Mike Pinder's Mellotron-tinged groovyness. Hawkwind pulled off the same trick with Moorcock's poems on their Warrior on the Edge of Time masterpiece. Had to be the 70's, man.
Exactly. And I love it all!!!!
Roy wood Bev began in the move before elo , 10 hits before change to elo a number one in blackberry way as well 👍
The Move were awesome!!! And so was ELO!!!
bang on, perfect order
Thank you!!!! It was actually pretty hard to decide between my Top Two but I think I got it right!!! 👍👍👍
Just starting to appreciate the Moodies. I have Every Good Boy...on vinyl and it was one of those 'got it for the cover' purchases. From what I've heard so far they're definitely worth investigating further and could change my PROG BIG FOUR to a Big Five.
Speaking of things worth investigating further, I heard something off of 'H to He' (Vandergraaf) a while ago and could have easily mistaken it for a Nursery Cryme outtake.
Definitely!!!! They had the same label and played together a bunch so I can hear it too…
@@TheProgCorner Anywho, as for the Moodies themselves, Future Passed, Lost Chord, and To Our Children's seem to be coming out on top. Polar opposite from my last Queen album ranking - my top 3 for the Moodies are in the early stretches of their career, whereas my top 3 for Queen are the last three.
And as usual with all prog bands - I like the pop stuff too.
Of course you do!!!!
Hahaaaa. It's expected at this point. In that case Sur La Mer stands out to me as well.
Love the Moody blues
Me too!!! I’m listening to Every Good Boy Deserves Favour right now!!!!!
Such a Historic band!
For sure!!!!
I wonder if there was a guy in Birmingham that wasn’t in a band ?
Nope!!!!
I'd rank the 80s era albums much higher. This might be the contrarian/unpopular view, but the albums that I play most often are not the first 7 (though those are all great, too), the ones that have stuck with me the most over the years are "Long Distance Voyager", "The Present", "Sur La Mer" & "The Other Side of Life".
I love those records!!! But those core seven are part of my childhood…
@@TheProgCorner I get it. Honestly all their album are great in my opinion, and it's cool that they had a few differebnt phases. The Christmas album would the only weak link to me, but then songs like "December Snow" and "The Spirit of Christmas" make it worthwhile, too.
I love them!!! They really don’t get enough credit.
Excelente.
Don't know all the albums and I only know four of the "core seven," but of those four, Seventh Sojourn is my favorite by far. The Pinder tracks alone...but really every song on here is awesome! However, I totally concur on Sur la Mer: that synth-pop stuff is just not for me.
It was fine. It wasn’t The Moody Blues!!!!
they were so into philosophy
They really were!!!
Such a great band, love this guys!
❤️❤️❤️
Are they prog? According to Edward Macan in the book "Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture," bands like the Moody Blues, etc., were "proto-prog." The author considers In the Court of the Crimson King to be the first true prog album. Irrespective of whether you consider it prog or not, their stuff from the late 60s/early 70s was excellent and fit in well with the emerging prog zeitgeist.
Proto Prog is accurate!!!
Proto Prog. But it counts, id say they're mainly psychedelic rock (on some albums) but i also like to call them Symphonic Prog.
Seventh Sojourn for me at no.1
Great album.
TOCCC number 1 but its a toughie
Those 1st 7 albums are all at a consistently high level.
I should say 2nd till 8th but 1st album sounds like a different band.
Yeah, that first album is a relic…
Hey Scot! Busy day. I think I have 2 albums. Enough said, sorry.😎
But that’s okay!!!
@@TheProgCorner With my mouth? Lol!😎
To our Childrens in search of...Question of Balance y on a treshold of a dream son los 4. Muy buenos y cada uno en su estilo o + pop + psicológico...oscuro o + directo y menos orquestado
My favorite albums are "Every Good Boy Deserves a Favour" and "A Question of Balance" their less "progresive" more pop/rock oriented álbum
I love those two!!!
Hard to rank them. Heres mine. And i would say they are prog 100%.
1. A question of balance
2. To our childrens childrens
3. On the threshold of a dream
children
4. In search of the lost chord
5. Seventh Sojourn
Love your top two!!! 👍👍
@TheProgCorner could have slipped Sojourn up to three. But it isn't as diverse as Chord or On the Threshold. Chord is simply amazing.
The classic seven. Oh my!!! So good.
Too bad The Other Side of Life is so low on your list. I like it better than Keys To The Kingdom for sure. Oh well. We all like what we like. ;)
You know how it goes!!!! 👍👍👍
The Rolling Stone Album Guide book from the '90s gave _The Magnificent Moodies_ the highest rating...go figure.
TOCCC is my favorite, also. I always found DOFP overrated...the band and the orchestra don't mesh very well (the Beatles and Brian Wilson did "chamber pop" much better), and aside from the two big hits, most of the songs are pretty forgettable.
I think it was the concept and the year…
Threshold of a Dream is their Best, then Lost Chord, Children, and Future Passed. Question is OK.
I love all of those classic seven!!!