Product Code: | 602567226383 |
Artist: | Moody Blues The |
Origin: | EU |
Label: | Threshold (2018) |
Format: | LP |
Availability: | In Stock |
Condition: |
Cover: M
Record: M
|
Genre: | Pop N |
Brand new sealed LP, Album, Reissue, Stereo, 180 Gram vinyl.
Housed in a gatefold cover.
Contains a 2-paged sheet with lyrics.
Includes a download card from "The Sound Of Vinyl".
Sticker on shrink wrap with photo and text:
"180 gram facsimile of this classic album cut at Abbey Road Studios"
"All aspects of the original LP artwork faithfully reproduced"
"Includes download card"
"672 263-8"
Every Good Boy Deserves Favour is the seventh album by The Moody Blues, released in 1971. The album was the last to feature only the Mellotron, as it would be assisted by the Chamberlin (another device that uses recorded tape to generate sound) on the Moody Blues' next studio album, 1972's Seventh Sojourn.
This album featured the only track to be written by all five members of the band. The opening "Procession" was a piece that was intended to describe the history of music from the beginning of time up until the album's recording. The only three words heard in this track – "desolation," "creation," and "communication" – were similarly used (along with many other "-ation" words) in "One More Time to Live."
The album reached #1 on the British album charts, in addition to a three week stay at #2 in the United States, and produced one top-40 single, "The Story in Your Eyes." The track "Emily's Song" was written by John Lodge for his newborn daughter. Mike Pinder wrote and sang the album's concluding track "My Song", which showcased his abilities on the mellotron and piano.
The title is taken from the student mnemonic for the lines of the treble clef: E-G-B-D-F. These notes are heard played on piano during "Procession."
The album was mixed and released in both stereo and quadraphonic. In April 2007 the album was remastered into SACD format and repackaged with the two extra tracks.
In 2008 a remaster for standard audio CD was issued with the same bonus tracks.
The front cover has been imitated by the leader of the dark progressive band Current 93, David Tibet, with a drawing he has made up in order that it could appear on the cover of Halo, a live album released in 2004.