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In Search of the Lost Chord (Remastered)

The Moody Blues

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from The Moody Blues

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Departure The Moody Blues 0:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Ride My See-Saw The Moody Blues 3:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Dr. Livingstone, I Presume? The Moody Blues 2:58 $0.69 View In iTunes
4 House of Four Doors The Moody Blues 4:13 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 Legend of a Mind The Moody Blues 6:36 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 House of Four Doors, Pt. 2 The Moody Blues 1:47 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 Voices in the Sky The Moody Blues 3:28 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 The Best Way to Travel The Moody Blues 3:14 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Visions of Paradise The Moody Blues 4:15 $0.69 View In iTunes
10 The Actor (Full Version) The Moody Blues 4:39 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 The Word The Moody Blues 0:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
12 Om The Moody Blues 5:50 $0.99 View In iTunes

iTunes Review

One of psychedelic rock’s truly seminal albums, In Search Of The Lost Chord (1968) caught the Moody Blues at their most mind-expansive. After the lush romanticism of Days Of Future Past, the quintet channeled their creativity towards inner exploration and came up with this immaculately-crafted, mystically-slanted song-cycle. The sonic landscapes here are delineated by Justin Hayward’s layered guitars, Ray Thomas’ billowing flute and the eerie orchestral textures of Mike Pindar’s mellotrone. Tracks like “Visions of Paradise” and “Voices In The Sky” invoke scenes of astral glory, while “House Of Four Doors” speaks to the psychic sojourner in every listener. Chemical inspiration is strongly implied in “Ride My See-Saw” and the quirky mini-suite “Legend Of A Mind” (known for its refrain “Timothy Leary’s dead…”). The Moodys end their journey with “Om,” marrying Indian raga motifs with an exalted vocal arrangement. Overall, the album is sonically ambitious, lyrically earnest and almost completely irony-free. If its kaleidoscope-eyed idealism has faded with time, the grandeur of its music has not. In Search Of The Lost Chord is a gorgeous artifact of its era, whatever the condition of your consciousness.

Recent Customer Reviews

Seminal
     
by Willyfantoy

This is what I call a "First Listen Album."
One listen and it's unbelievable.
usually I have to listen to an album several times before it unveils it's greatness.
There is just something about the harmonies and the, Not-so-out-there, riffs that pulls you in.
I can't explain why I think it's so good or why it's soo good. You'll just have to listen for yourself

Moody Blues In Search of the Lost Chord
     
by Lost Chord

What a wonderful blast from my past! The album was one of the first to be be composed as an entire work, not just a "playlist" collection of songs. While the work is clearly a "trippy" piece in keeping with the drug-oriented aesthetic of the day, it opens the notion that meditation, contemplation, and music can reach the same transcendent end. Best of all, it does so without preachiness.
Bruce Barrett

Great Trip
     
by Jack 'O Lantern

1970 -- One night about 25 of us at a little faraway college in the deep forest decided to drop an assortment of hallucenogenics and get off together -- but what album to do it with? I came up with SLC: Departure/ segue to Ride My Seesaw, on a truly monster set of speakers. I still remember the looks on everyone's faces as it took hold of us -- Homeric!

Biography

Formed: 1964 in Birmingham, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Although they're best known today for their lush, lyrically and musically profound (some would say bombastic) psychedelic-era albums, the Moody Blues started out as one of the better R&B-based combos of the British Invasion. The group's history began in Birmingham, England with Ray Thomas (harmonica,...
Full Bio