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The Moody Blues - Seventh Sojourn CD (album) cover

SEVENTH SOJOURN

The Moody Blues

 

Crossover Prog

3.75 | 337 ratings

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ken_scrbrgh
5 stars In November of 1978, while an undergraduate at the University of Notre Dame, I had the opportunity to attend a lecture at Washington Hall on the campus by Dr. Timothy Leary. His topic was "Avoiding the Pitfalls of Terminal Adulthood" (or something along those lines given my present, 45 plus year removal from the event.) During his presentation, Dr. Leary had Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" playing in the background. A young boy (perhaps his grandson?) frolicked on the stage.

The following day, I found myself in the South Bend airport, preparing to fly home for Thanksgiving. At the same time, roughly, Dr. Leary arrived to head to the next location on his tour. I couldn't resist the opportunity to shake his hand, and remark, "Dr. Leary, the Moody Blues were wrong, you're not dead . . . !" Not particularly amused, Leary responded, "Nice Suit."

Six years earlier, Mike Pinder, Ray Thomas, Graeme Edge, John Lodge, and Justin Hayward had issued forth their second musical deliberation regarding Dr. Leary, "When You're a Free Man" on "Seventh Sojourn." Their earlier "Legend of a Mind" on 1968's "In Search of the Lost Chord" contained a certain amount of satiric, but reverential treatment of Leary's propagation of LSD and psychedelics as a "shortcut" to spiritual, mystical insight.

In 1972, as Mike Pinder and The Moody Blues' "When You're a Free Man" emerged, Dr. Leary had endured any number of incarcerations for his advocacy of and promulgation of psychedelics and other prohibited pharmacological substances. Through the recent scientific studies of the efficacy of psychedelics, under carefully controlled situations, in the treatment of depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, some aspects of Leary's cause may be subject to reconsideration. Pinder's "When You're a Free Man" pays tribute to the once and future, "Give Peace a Chance" Leary, symbol, for Pinder and The Moody Blues, of a "love that will last an eternity."

I would also like to suggest that Mike Pinder's role on "Seventh Sojourn," not only in his two compositions, "When You're a Free Man" and "Lost in a Lost World," but also in his instrumental contributions bears recognition.

Since 1967's "Days of Future Passed," Pinder has fashioned a lead, almost mystical role for the Mellotron. On "Seventh Sojourn," with the addition of the Chamberlin, this function has intensified. In support, accompaniment, and accentuation, Pinder's Mellotron and Chamberlin dominate the proceedings, not only in his two compositions, but also in "You and Me" and "I'm Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band." Hayward and Edge's "You and Me," with its layered vocals of Hayward, Thomas, and Pinder, corresponds to Yes' contemporaneous "And You and I."

In addition to Mike Pinder's considerable contributions to this album at the Chamberlin and Mellotron, Thomas, Lodge, Hayward, and Edge all contribute substantially to each other's songs. "The Land of Make-Believe" begins and ends with Ray Thomas' flute; at certain points during "I'm Just a Singer in a Rock and Roll Band," I hear his saxophone. During this final song, of the original album, Hayward delivers a potent guitar solo, and Lodge performs an almost legendary bass line joined by Edge's dynamic, gradually forceful drums.

In "The Land of Make-Believe," Hayward exalts, "Fly little bird up unto the clear blue sky" in a fashion evocative of Yes' "sister bluebird" from "Starship Trooper."

How do you know but ev'ry Bird that cuts the airy way, /Is an immense world of delight, /clos'd by your senses five?

William Blake

"Seventh Sojourn" is the imaginative interregnum upon which the Moody Blues landed in 1972, drawing upon the musical tapestry established in their previous six albums. As with any collective effort, the five "Moodies" had attained a point in which their creative process had reached an uneasy path. However, the final product, this seventh "refuge" need not to have necessarily translated to the six year hiatus between it and 1978's "Octave." Hayward and Lodge's 1975 "Blue Jays" certainly functions as a de facto Moody Blues album. By the release of "Octave," Mike Pinder found himself no longer interested in touring, opening the door for Patrick Moraz's tenure with the band.

Dr. Leary may have passed away in 1996, but that "legendary" mind endures. Somehow, almost 55 years later, the voices of John Lennon, Yoko Ono, and Timothy Leary (among others) resonate from that hotel room in Montreal's Queen Elizabeth Hotel on June 1, 1969, proclaiming "Give Peace a Chance." Perhaps, today, this exhortation may be equally, if not, more important than in 1969 . . . .

ken_scrbrgh | 5/5 |

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