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"Driftwood" is a 1978 single by the English progressive rock band the Moody Blues. It was the second single released from the album Octave , after " Steppin' in a Slide Zone ". Written by Justin Hayward , "Driftwood" is a slow love ballad, in a similar manner to " Nights in White Satin " and " Never Comes the Day ."
The United Kingdom edition had 12 songs, while the United States release had only 10 in a different order. The editions released in the United States and Canada also had a different cover than the UK and European versions. This compilation was the final release by the Moody Blues' custom label, Threshold Records.
Greatest Hits is a compilation album by the progressive rock band the Moody Blues, released in 1989.The band recorded new versions of "Isn't Life Strange" and "Question" with orchestration by the London Symphony Orchestra. [2]
The Moody Bluegrass project is a group of Nashville artists who have recorded two tribute albums of Moody Blues songs in the bluegrass style. The first album, Moody Bluegrass – A Nashville Tribute to the Moody Blues , was released in 2004.
Octave is the ninth album by the Moody Blues (the eighth by this particular line-up), released in 1978, and their first release after a substantial hiatus following the success of the best-selling Seventh Sojourn in 1972.
It's an album of tracks taken from the Moody Blues discography, played with orchestral arrangements with lead vocal duties being taken in turn by Hayward, Sadler, and Williamson. It was originally released with a cover title of Moody Blues – Unplugged – Greatest Hits in 1996 on Phantom Sound & Vision. [2]
The Best of The Moody Blues is a compilation album by the British progressive rock band The Moody Blues, released on 23 September 1996. The album marked the first time the band's only UK No. 1 single, 1964's " Go Now ", was included on an official Moody Blues compilation album.
Classic Rock critic Malcolm Dome rated it as the Moody Blues' 6th greatest song, calling it "a high energy, driving song which begins with a strolling drum intro from Graeme Edge." [ 3 ] AllMusic critic Lindsay Planer said that "Even though this is an uptempo rocker, Lodge delves headlong into an introspective space equal to that of another ...