In Search of the Lost Chord

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In Search of the Lost Chord
CD on Amazon.com
Released: 1968, 26 July
Labels: Deram / Polydor
Average rating: Based on DM and site visitor ratings
Previous / Next by The Moody Blues
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Tracks

Average song rating Departure (Graeme Edge) - 0:48 Lyrics
Average song rating Ride My See-Saw (John Lodge) - 3:37 Lyrics
Average song rating Dr. Livingstone, I Presume (Ray Thomas) - 2:58 Lyrics
Average song rating House of Four Doors (Lodge) - 4:11 Lyrics
Average song rating Legend of a Mind (Thomas) - 6:40 Lyrics
Average song rating House of Four Doors Pt. 2 (Lodge) - 1:43 Lyrics
Average song rating Voices in the Sky (Justin Hayward) - 3:32 Lyrics
Average song rating The Best Way to Travel (Mike Pinder) - 3:12 Lyrics
Average song rating Visions of Paradise (Hayward, Thomas) - 4:15 Lyrics
Average song rating 10  The Actor (Hayward) - 4:38 Lyrics
Average song rating 11  The Word (Edge) - 0:49 Lyrics
Average song rating 12  OM (Pinder) - 5:27 Lyrics
Album preview
All album lyrics on one page 

Credits

Recorded: January - June 1968

Justin Hayward - Vocals, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, 12-string guitar, sitar, harpsichord, piano, mellotron, bass guitar, percussion, tablas
John Lodge - Vocals, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, cello, tambourine, snare drum
Graeme Edge - Drums, piano, timpani, tambourine, tablas
Ray Thomas - Vocals, C flute, alto flute, soprano saxophone
Mike Pinder - Vocals, mellotron, piano, harpsichord, acoustic guitar, cello, autoharp, bass guitar

Tony Clarke - Producer, Liner Notes
Derek Varnals - Engineer
Adrian Martins - Assistant Engineer
Phil Travers - Artwork, Illustrations, Cover Art
Steven Fallone - Remastering, Digital Remastering

Reviews

Site visitor reviews
10/10 Bruce Beatlefan (October 15, 2011)
The Moody Blues achieved a sort of "accidental" success with the unique Days of Future Passed, but it is with In Search of the Lost Chord, this superb follow-up where they launch a true "Moody Blues" sound which is to carry them through the rest of their career.

Explanations for this album's excellence usually centers around the metaphysical searching, or Eastern themes of many of the songs. This is supposed to a wonderful album to get high to, to burn incense, or dream of higher realities. Well, I've never really done those things; I've never used drugs, and the only time I've ever said "Om" was in singing along with the final song on this album...yet In Search of the Lost Chord remains a true masterwork for me as well.

Beginning with this album, the glory of the Moody Blues is studying they way maintain an ensemble sound through the distinct expressions and personalities of the five members. Each member's song is treated respectfully by the group as a whole--there is no "White Album" treatment with these guys, and this album serves as a nearly perfect template for the styles which the members were to make their own, a great starting point for learning about them:

John Lodge, bass guitar, primarily alternates between upbeat British Invasion rock and roll and songs which were stately, slow, and sometimes (dare I use the word) a little stodgy. "Ride Me See-Saw" and "House of Four Doors", respectively, provide fine examples of these two styles.

Michael Pinder, keyboardist, is the strongest proselyte of the alternative, meditative life-style, expressing these songs in his deep, gruff voice, frequently going off into fluid mellotron tangents when lyrics cannot sufficiently expess his yearnings. In this album he is amusing with "The Best Way to Travel" and magnificent with "Om".

Ordinarily, Ray Thomas (flute, woodwinds, percussion) is the fey child of the group, with melodies of nursery-rhyme simplicity. "Dr. Livingstone I Presume" fits this description nicely, but overshadowing Dr. Livingstone is the magnificent "Legend of a Mind", a lengthy and complex masterwork that has thrilled concertgoers for more than forty years.

Graeme Edge, drummer, contributes his unique spoken-word passages which are dramatically delivered and often on the very tipping point of collapsing into farcical humor ("Lonely man cries for love and has none!!"). Here Mr. Edge gets the album off the ground--literally!--with "Departure", the manic lead-in to "Ride My See Saw", and then provides a lovely link between the final two musical tracks with his pensive "The Word".

Justin Hayward, lead guitarist and primary hitmaker, already has a well-developed melodic gift and hence relies far less on lengthy instrumental passages than his mates. "Voices in the Sky" is the lovely sort of melody that takes advantage of his soaring voice that has established his career. With "The Actor" he knits together a suite of melodies that he was to do much more expertly in later songs ("The Land of Make Believe", or "I Dreamed Last Night"), and establishes his special gift of expressing a subtle sense of pain and loss in a way that makes the listener ecstatic in sympathy.

We also have the special bonus sound of Hayward and Thomas combined with the song "Visions of Paradise". These combined jewels were to grace the next two albums as well with superb songs that unfortunately didn't remain.

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