Quotes:
"Just what you want to be, you will be in the end."
| Quotes By: Justin Hayward |
Quotes:
"Just what you want to be, you will be in the end."
| Artist: Justin Hayward |
Similar Artists:
Influenced By:
Performed Songs By:
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| Discography: Justin Hayward |
| Wikipedia: Justin Hayward |
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This biography of a living person does not cite any references or sources. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately. (September 2008) Find sources: (Justin Hayward – news, books, scholar) |
| Justin Hayward | |
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Justin Hayward in 2007
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| Background information | |
| Birth name | David Justin Hayward |
| Born | 14 October 1946 Swindon, Wiltshire, England |
| Genres | Rock |
| Occupations | Musician, songwriter |
| Instruments | Guitar, vocals |
| Years active | 1965 - present |
| Labels | Pye Records Parlophone Threshold Records Deram Records Polydor CMC International Trax Records Towerbell Records Armou Records |
| Associated acts | The Moody Blues |
| Notable instruments | |
| Gibson ES-335 | |
David Justin Hayward (born 14 October 1946, in Swindon, Wiltshire) is an English musician, best known as a singer, guitarist and composer in the rock band The Moody Blues. From a few days after his birth he was known by all his family as Justin and he has been so known since.
Hayward attended The Commonweal School, in Swindon, Wiltshire.[1]
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When Hayward was fifteen years old he was able to afford a Gibson guitar and a Vox amplifier through playing with local Swindon groups in clubs and dance halls playing mostly Buddy Holly songs. One of Hayward's early groups was All Things Bright which opened for The Hollies and Brian Poole and the Tremeloes. In 1965 he answered an advertisement in The Melody Maker and auditioned as guitarist for Marty Wilde and he went on to work with Wilde and his wife in The Wilde Three. At age 17, he signed a publishing contract as a songwriter with the skiffle artist and record producer, Lonnie Donegan, a move that Hayward later regretted as it meant that the rights to all his songs written before 1974 would always be owned by Donegan's Tyler Music. He lives in France and Cornwall. His hobbies are horse riding and strolling along the Cornish Coast.
In 1966, after answering another advertisement in The Melody Maker, this time placed by Eric Burdon of The Animals, Hayward was contacted by Mike Pinder of The Moody Blues after Burdon had passed Hayward's letter and demo discs to Pinder. Within a few days Hayward had replaced Moody Blues departing vocalist and guitarist, Denny Laine. Bassist John Lodge replaced Clint Warwick at the same time.
Hayward and Lodge's integration into the Moody Blues along with Pinder's use of the Mellotron, sparked greater commercial success and recognition for the band transforming them into one of the biggest-selling acts. Hayward says of Pinder: "Mike and the Mellotron made my songs work".
The 1967 album, Days of Future Passed, one of the first and most influential symphonic rock albums, spawned the Hayward-penned singles, "Tuesday Afternoon" and "Nights in White Satin". The latter record went on to sell over two million copies and has been covered by many other recording artists.
Hayward wrote the band's UK #2 hit, "Question", as well as most of the group's other singles including "Voices in the Sky", "Driftwood", "The Voice", "Blue World" "Your Wildest Dreams", "I Know You're Out There Somewhere", "English Sunset" and "December Snow".
Their album sales from 1978 to the present are over 60 million. This is the regularly quoted total of their album sales as the total sales of their albums prior to 1978 is disputed due to erroneous record company data.
In 1974, the Moody Blues decided to take what ended up being a four-year break from performing and recording. Hayward, however, continued working with John Lodge and producer Tony Clarke, using musicians from the Moody Blues label, Threshold, and sounding very much like the mother group. Together, they had a hit in 1975 with "Blue Guitar" (a Hayward recording with the band, 10cc ) and released an album entitled Blue Jays. Hayward wrote four prominent songs with Moodies' flautist, Ray Thomas.
Hayward had international solo success in 1978 when he appeared on the Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds concept album, which yielded his hits "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War". Wayne later contributed to Hayward's 1980 album, Night Flight.
During the 1980s, Hayward composed and performed for film and television, including the theme song, "It Won't Be Easy" for the 1987 BBC2 science fiction series Star Cops, "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film Howling IV: The Original Nightmare, "Eternal Woman" for She and music for The Shoe People.
In 1989, with producer-arranger Mike Batt, Hayward released Classic Blue, an album of pop standards written by other composers, set to orchestration arranged by Batt. Classic Blue included a cover version of Led Zeppelin's hit song "Stairway to Heaven." His most recent solo album, The View from the Hill, was released in 1996, and a live recording, Live in San Juan Capistrano followed in 1998.
Hayward contributed vocals to a song on Rick Wakeman's 1999 album, Return to the Centre of the Earth.
In 2003 he sang along with other rock singers on another orchestral album, consisting of Moody Blues songs with the Frankfurt Rock Orchestra, Justin Hayward and Friends Perform the Hits of the Moody Blues (alternatively titled Sing The Moody Blues Classic Hits). Hayward, however, was later involved in a legal dispute, now resolved, as he was not being paid for his participation on the album.
In April 2006, Hayward took part in the stage tour of Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds, reprised his role in Autumn 2007 in Australia and in the UK in December 2007, and will do so again in the UK in June 2009 and in November and December 2010.
The Moody Blues, with Hayward, Edge and Lodge, continue to tour extensively and in a recent BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they have no plans to stop working and regard it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music industry. In an interview, in 2005, Edge stated that he, if good health served him, could go on for another 10 years.
For the most part, Hayward has used a red Gibson ES-335 ("main axe"), though he also uses other guitars in both performing and recording, including a 1955 Martin D-28 "Dreadnought", a James Olson 6 string acoustic, Black Guild acoustic, (mock) Squier Stratocaster, Fender Telecaster, a blonde Guild open-tuned (Open C Major - CCGGCCGGCCEE) 12-string acoustic and a 12 string Gibson acoustic (for "Question"), and in 1967 a black Les Paul. Between 1965 and 1968 he was without his Gibson 335 and relied on other instruments most notably a 1964 Fender Telecaster and a hand built 12 string guitar that he had renovated for Lonnie Donegan (he eventually purchased this guitar from Donegan's widow). However, in an interview that is included on the "Lovely to See You Concert" DVD (2005), Hayward says that the 1963 Gibson 335 has been with him since 1967. Recently he has played a Collings D3 on stage and on recordings . Among other instruments, Hayward also played the mandolin on A Question of Balance and the sitar on "In Search Of The Lost Chord".
Hayward was awarded the first of numerous ASCAP awards for songwriting in 1974. In 1985, the Moody Blues picked up the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, and in 1988 Hayward received the Ivor Novello Award, among other honours, for Composer of the Year (for "I Know You're Out There Somewhere"). In 2000, he was one of a handful of British artists to receive the "Golden Note" award for lifetime achievement by the American Society of Songwriters, Composers and Publishers. In 2004, Hayward was awarded the "Gold Badge" for lifetime achievement by the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors.
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