Track Listing 1. In the Beginning 2. Lovely to See You 3. Dear Diary 4. Send Me No Wine 5. To Share Our Love 6. So Deep Within You 7. Never Comes the Day 8. Lazy Day 9. Are You Sitting Comfortably 10. Dream, The 11. Have You Heard (Part 1) 12. Voyage, The 13. Have You Heard (Part 2) 14. In the Beginning - (previously unreleased, full version) 15. So Deep Within You - (previously unreleased, full version) 16. Dear Diary - (alternate mix, previously unreleased) 17. Have You Heard - (previously unreleased, original take) 18. Voyage, The - (previously unreleased, original take) 19. Lovely to See You - (previously unreleased, BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69) 20. Send Me No Wine - (previously unreleased, BBC Top Gear Session 18/2/69) 21. So Deep Within You (previously unreleased, BBC Tony Brandon Session - Mono 2/4/69) 22. Are You Sitting Comfortably - (previously unreleased, mono version)
| Details | | Producer: | Tony Clarke | | Distributor: | Fontana Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Mixed | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes The Moody Blues: Mike Pinder, Justin Hayward, Ray Thomas, John Lodge, Graeme Edge. Additional personnel: Pete Jackson (triangle). Originally released on Deram (1035). Includes liner notes by John Reed. Digitally remastered by Steve Fallone (PolyGram Studios). This is a hybrid Super Audio CD playable on both regular and Super Audio CD players. Where this album's predecessor IN SEARCH OF THE LOST CHORD dipped deeply into Eastern-flavored psychedelia, THRESHOLD is more of a straightforward rock record. Things open up experimentally enough, with a spoken-word vignette over electronic drones, but this leads straight into one of the Moodies' poppiest, most up-tempo songs, "Lovely to see You," which would remain a concert favorite for decades. Even notoriously theatrical flautist/vocalist Ray Thomas keeps his eccentricities in check on his effective ballad "Dear Diary." Keyboardist Mike Pinder takes a surprisingly lascivious vocal turn on the anomalous, leering rocker "So Deep Within You." Justin Hayward provides the lion's share of ear-tickling moments with pretty folk-rock tunes such as "Never Comes the Day" and "Are you Sitting Comfortably," while the most adventurous piece "Have you Heard/The Voyage" extends over three discrete tracks, featuring complex instrumental passages and lush harmonies. THRESHOLD doesn't come off as an attempt to cater to the mainstream, it's just a more song-based, less exotic recording than its predecessors.
Editorial Reviews ...They Gregorian chanted as well as the Yardbirds, they structured their song cycles wonderfully, they made better use of the Mellotron than anyone, and nobody sang daft lyrics more beautifully... Mojo (09/01/2000)
4 stars out of 5 -- [The album deserves] a prominent place in the pantheon of British prog/pscyh classics. Uncut
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