Classical Composer Reacts to Question (The Moody Blues) | The Daily Doug (Episode 233)

74,556
0
Published 2021-10-05
#TheMoodyBlues #Question

In this episode of #TheDailyDoug, I'm reacting to Question by The Moody Blues. It was written and recorded 51 years ago. And, sadly, it is still just as timely and poignant as ever. Here's to staying curious and asking questions!

Reference Video:    • The Moody Blues- Question  

MY PATREON IS NOW ACTIVE!
JOIN THE NEW EXCLUSIVE DAILY DOUG COMMUNITY!
Patreon: www.patreon.com/doughelvering
Instagram: www.instagram.com/doug.helvering
Facebook: www.facebook.com/helvering
Twitter: www.twitter.com/helvering

All Comments (21)
  • How interesting. The Moody Blues causes Doug to wax philosophical. In my opinion that is a lot of what the music of my generation was all about. It was musical and creative but looked into the depths of the human spirit. I am 67 years old.
  • No strings at all!...Mellotron...played by its maestro, Mike Pinder.
  • @8044868
    Thank you for helping us understand that the Moodies are even better than we thought they were.
  • @NashvilleKat1
    The line you mentioned, "And if you could see what it's done to me, To lose the the love I knew could safely lead me through" is a reference to the loss of his dad not too long before. He was very close to both of his parents.
  • @danellwein8679
    1965 to 1975 is the greatest 10 year period in the history of music .... and yes ... i lived my teen years through this time ... thank you for doing this Doug ..
  • @metablue4454
    Dude, the answer to "Question" is the last song on the album - "The Balance" Some of us, even 50 years ago, appreciated this band for largely introducing serious philosophy, as in so many of their albums, into rock music. for numerous reasons, they stood alone. They were their own genre, and we knew it.
  • @jstdrv
    Question is a masterpiece. Crank up the volume and it really packs a punch too. Love from Norway
  • @joyis9638
    I feel so lucky to have been 11 years old in 1970 because my youth was exposed to such brilliant rock bands such as The Moody Blues. And their music is so timely to the current issues.
  • @marcanglin7127
    Justin Hayward's gorgeous voice singing that great melody in the center section........with that perfectly-written Mellotron orchestration playing behind him......haunting, soaring, bittersweet. Some of the most beautiful music this generation and this genre has ever produced.
  • @MrDiddyDee
    Justin was under pressure to come in with a new song for a booked Decca recording session but only had two part finished songs. It was 2 am that very morning and Justin decided, (although they were in very different tempos, they were both in the same key) the solution was to combine the two contrasting songs together. The band took to the song very quickly in just a few takes, with no overdubs needed.
  • The Moodys were my Zen place in high school. Threshold of a Dream was my first album, I had my parents buy me the ones before for Christmas. I went to their concerts once a year, no matter what state I lived in, or what I was doing.
  • One of my favorite Moodies songs. Hearing thousands of people sing this with them in concert is almost a religious experience. Very moving. Lyrics still apply today.
  • You could do a whole video on John Lodge's melodic bass lines. He's so underrated & never comes up in discussions of great rock or prog bassists. But in most Moody Blues songs (and his own solo songs) he's playing countermelodies to everything else going in in the song. I find him a very unique & creative player.
  • @tensor131
    my mum was a classically trained musician and I was 16 when this album came out ... I was exploring prog, led zep etc. at the time most of which she couldn't abide but on the Moodies we were unanimous .. she knew good music when she heard it!!
  • @MrWheeler715
    Fun fact: Nancy Wilson of Heart based the acoustic intro to "Crazy on You" on "Question."
  • The Moody Blues? Pure musical brilliance! Will love their songs for the rest of my life! Their live performance I saw on PBS (Public Broadcasting System) was nothing short of breathtaking. All you had to do was look at the audience to see how loved they are.
  • @johnvender
    RIP Moody Blues founding member and drummer Graeme Edge.
  • @tobytanzer
    These guys invented the concept album. Days of Future Past was about a day in the life of Everyman. In Search of the Lost Chord was about inner awareness, through hallucinogens, meditation, Eastern philosophy, etc. To Our Children's Children Children was about the wonder of childhood and the endless possibilities that the future held, eg through the exploration of space. A Question of Balance is a philosophical discussion about our place in universe, on a personal and a cosmic scale. On the Threshhold of a Dream was about dreams. D'uh. Every Good Boy Deserves Favour was a more personal album about individual development, loves won and lost, and music (the mnemonic). Most of these songs blend from one to the next without a pause, so the albums are meant to be heard in one go. Seventh Sojourn has themes from the 6 previous albums all wrapped up together as a sort of lyrical summary of the preceding works, but ends with their rocking-est song - I'm Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band. Enjoy the trip!
  • The Moodys were my gateway into Yes, Genesis, etc. back in the 70s. To Our Children's... is my very favorite album by them. DoFP blew my mind.
  • @827dusty
    The Moody Blues started in 1965. They morphed into a sort of Group that every Hippie and Flower child I ever knew, simply adored. They were cosmic, Earthy, all the stuff of the late 1960s culture. I was never into the Hippie scene during that time, but I was in the midst of that whole era. Lots of fun, and great music came out of the 60s and 70s. Thanks