Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

On the Threshold of a Dream

 
Album Review: On the Threshold of a Dream

  • Artist: The Moody Blues
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1969
  • Total Time: 36:55
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

On the Threshold of a Dream was the first album that the Moody Blues had a chance to record and prepare in a situation of relative calm, without juggling tour schedules and stealing time in the studio between gigs -- indeed, it was a product of what were almost ideal circumstances, though it might not have seemed that way to some observers. The Moodies had mostly exhausted the best parts of the song bag from which their two preceding albums, Days of Future Passed and In Search of the Lost Chord, had been drawn, and as it turned out, even the leftover tracks from those sessions wouldn't pass muster for their next long-player project -- but those albums had both been hits, and charted well in America as well as England, and had overlapped with a pair of hit singles, "Nights in White Satin" and "Tuesday Afternoon," on both sides of the Atlantic. Their success had earned them enough consideration from Decca Records that they could work at their leisure in the studio through all of January and most of February of 1969; what's more, with two LPs under their belt, they now had a much better idea of what they could accomplish in the studio, and write songs with that capability in mind. Equally important, they'd just come off of an extensive U.S. tour (opening for Cream) and had learned a lot in the course of concertizing over the previous year, achieving a much bolder yet tighter sound instrumentally as well as vocally, and they could now write to and for that sound as well. So this album is oozing with bright, splashy creative flourishes in two seemingly contradictory directions that somehow come together as a valid whole. On the original LP's first side (which was the more rock-oriented side), the songs "Lovely to See You," "Send Me No Wine," "To Share Our Love," and "So Deep Within You" all featured killer guitar hooks (electric and acoustic) and fills by Justin Hayward; beautiful, muscular bass from John Lodge; and vocal hooks everywhere. It's also a surprisingly hard-rocking album considering the amount of overdubbing that went into perfecting the songs, including cellos, wind and reed instruments, and lots of vocal layers -- yet it even found room to display a pop-soul edge on "So Deep Within You" (a number that the Four Tops later recorded).

Side two was the more overtly ambitious of the two halves -- after a pair of songs dominated by acoustic guitar and heavy Mellotron, "Never Comes the Day" and "Lazy Day" (the latter a piece of social commentary showing that Ray Thomas, at least, still remembered his roots in Birmingham), the remainder of the record was devoted to the most challenging body of music in the group's history. Justin Hayward's deliberately archaic "Are You Sitting Comfortably?," a piece that sounds almost 400 years out of its own time, evokes images out of medieval and Renaissance history laced with magic and mysticism, all set to Hayward's acoustic guitar and Thomas' flute, leading into Graeme Edge's poetic contribution, "The Dream," accompanied by Mike Pinder's Mellotrons in their most exposed appearance to date on a record. And all of that flows into Pinder's three-part suite, "Have You Heard, Pt. 1"/"The Voyage"/"Have You Heard, Pt. 2," a tour de force for the band -- check out Edge's and Lodge's rock-solid playing on "Have You Heard" -- and for Pinder, whose Mellotrons, in conjunction with Thomas' flute and supported by some overdubbed orchestral instruments, push the group almost prematurely into the realm of progressive rock. This synthesis of psychedelia and classical music, including a section featuring Pinder on grand piano, may sound overblown and pretentious today, but in 1969 this was envelope-ripping, genre-busting music, scaling established boundaries into unknown territory, not only "outside the box" but outside of any musical box that had been conceived at that moment -- perhaps it can be considered rock's flirtation with the territory covered by works such as Alexander Scriabin's Mysterium, and if it overreached (as did Scriabin), well, so did a lot of other people at the time, including Jimi Hendrix, the Doors, the Who, et al. To show the difference in the times, the Moodies even brought this extended suite successfully to their concert repertory, and audiences devoured it at the time. Amazingly, On the Threshold of a Dream was their first chart-topping LP in England, and remained on the charts for an astonishing 70 weeks, a feat made all the more remarkable by the fact that the accompanying single, "Never Comes the Day" b/w "So Deep Within You," never charted at all. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
In the Beginning (Lyrics) Graeme Edge The Moody Blues (2:08)
Lovely to See You Justin Hayward The Moody Blues (2:34)
Dear Diary (Lyrics) Ray Thomas The Moody Blues (3:56)
Send Me No Wine (Lyrics) John Lodge The Moody Blues (2:21)
To Share Our Love (Lyrics) John Lodge The Moody Blues (2:53)
So Deep Within You Michael Pinder The Moody Blues (3:10)
Never Comes the Day Justin Hayward The Moody Blues (4:43)
Lazy Day (Lyrics) Ray Thomas The Moody Blues (2:43)
Are You Sitting Comfortably? Justin Hayward, Ray Thomas The Moody Blues (3:30)
The Dream Graeme Edge The Moody Blues (0:57)
Have You Heard, Pt. 1 Michael Pinder The Moody Blues (1:28)
The Voyage Michael Pinder The Moody Blues (4:10)
Have You Heard, Pt. 2 Michael Pinder The Moody Blues (2:26)

Credits

Justin Hayward (Guitar), Justin Hayward (Vocals), Justin Hayward (?), John Lodge (Bass), John Lodge (Guitar), John Lodge (Vocals), John Lodge (?), The Moody Blues (Main Performer), The Moody Blues (Instrumentation), Michael Pinder (Keyboards), Michael Pinder (Vocals), Michael Pinder (?), Ray Thomas (Bass), Ray Thomas (Flute), Ray Thomas (Horn), Ray Thomas (Vocals), Graeme Edge (Drums), Graeme Edge (?), Tony Clarke (Producer), Adrian Martins (Assistant Engineer), John Reed (Liner Notes), John Reed (Interviewer), Derek Varnals (Engineer), Steven Fallone (Remastering), Steven Fallone (Digital Remastering), Phil Travers (Cover Design), Phil Travers (Cover Painting), David Wedgbury (Photography), Terence Abbott (Photography)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: On the Threshold of a Dream
Top
On the Threshold of a Dream
Studio album by The Moody Blues
Released 25 April 1969
Recorded January 12 - 31, 1969
Decca Studios
West Hampstead, London
Genre Progressive rock
Length 36:59 (album)
68:17 (reissue)
Label Deram Records
Producer Tony Clarke
Professional reviews
The Moody Blues chronology
In Search of the Lost Chord
(1968)
On the Threshold of a Dream
(1969)
To Our Children's Children's Children
(1969)

On the Threshold of a Dream is the third album by The Moody Blues' psychedelic era line-up and was released on the Deram label in 1969. It was their last album to be released by the band before they formed their own record label, Threshold, to be distributed by Decca Records.

Like the band's preceding two albums, On the Threshold of a Dream follows a concept. The album explores dreams, especially on the second side, which climaxes with the "Voyage" suite, inspired in part by Strauss' Also sprach Zarathrustra. The piece, by Mike Pinder, features mellotron orchestration and flute. The album begins with a poem accompanied by electronic sounds, and similar sounds finish the album in the run-out groove of the disc, something CDs cannot re-create.[clarification needed]

On The Threshold of a Dream provided The Moody Blues with their first UK #1 album, and also increased their American fortunes by becoming their first Top 20 album there. The album also enjoyed lengthy stays in both album charts. Ironically, its one and only single, "Never Comes the Day", was a commercial flop.

In March 2006 the album was completely remastered into SACD format and repackaged with nine extra tracks.

In 2008 a remaster for standard audio CD was issued with the same bonus tracks

Contents

Original Track Listing

Side One

  1. "In the Beginning" (Graeme Edge) – 2:08
  2. "Lovely to See You" (Justin Hayward) – 2:34
  3. "Dear Diary" (Ray Thomas) – 3:56
  4. "Send Me No Wine" (John Lodge) – 2:21
  5. "To Share Our Love" (Lodge) – 2:53
  6. "So Deep Within You" (Mike Pinder) – 3:10

Side Two

  1. "Never Comes the Day" (Hayward) – 4:43
  2. "Lazy Day" (Thomas) – 2:43
  3. "Are You Sitting Comfortably?" (Hayward, Thomas) – 3:30
  4. "The Dream" (Edge) – 0:57
  5. "Have You Heard (Part 1)" (Pinder) – 1:28
  6. "The Voyage" (Pinder) – 4:10
  7. "Have You Heard (Part 2)" (Pinder) – 2:26

2006 SACD Expanded Edition Tracks (also 2008 remaster)

Bonus tracks on the SACD version:

  1. "In The Beginning (Full Version)" (Edge) - 3:28
  2. "So Deep Within You (Extended Version)" (Pinder) - 3:30
  3. "Dear Diary (Alternate Vocal Mix)" (Thomas) - 4:05
  4. "Have You Heard (Original Take)" (Pinder) - 3:53
  5. "The Voyage (Original Take)" (Pinder) - 4:20
  6. "Lovely To See You (BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69)" (Hayward) - 2:26
  7. "Send Me No Wine (BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69)" (Lodge) - 2:40
  8. "So Deep Within You (BBC Tony Brandon Session 2/4/69)" (Pinder) - 3:08
  9. "Are You Sitting Comfortably (BBC Tony Brandon Session 2/4/69)" (Hayward, Thomas) - 3:39

Chart positions

Album

Year Chart Position
1969 UK Albums Chart 1
1969 Billboard 200 20

Singles

Year Single Chart Position
1969 "Never Comes the Day" Billboard Hot 100 91

Personnel

  • Justin Hayward: vocals, guitar
  • John Lodge: vocals, bass, cello
  • Ray Thomas: vocals, harmonica, flute, tambourine
  • Graeme Edge: drums, percussion, vocals
  • Mike Pinder: vocals, mellotron, organ, cello

 
 
Learn More
Chronicles (2005 Album by The Moody Blues)
Graeme Edge (Rock Artist, '70s)
Ocean (1977 Album by Eloy)

What is the fragmentation threshold? Read answer...
What is threshold braking? Read answer...
What is our threshold of hearing? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What is a critical threshold?
What is a threshold population?
Threshold population?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "On the Threshold of a Dream" Read more

 

Mentioned in