As the second of the classic seven Moody
Blues albums released between 1967 and 1972, this album while still great has
perhaps aged the most. The use of psychedelic trappings such as sitars and
swirling stereo mixes plus songs about Eastern religion and the drug culture
feels far removed from the world of 2018.
That actually may be the charm of listening to …Chord, however, as it takes you back to another era. While Justin
Hayward had shone brightest on Days Of
Future Passed (“Tuesday Afternoon” and “Nights In White Satin”), Ray Thomas
(“Legend Of A Mind”) and John Lodge (“Ride My See-Saw”) have the best tracks
this time. This new five disc boxset continues the expansion of the original
twelve-track 1968 Deram LP adding some elements that may make the extra price
worth it for Moodies obsessives (but likely will keep it on the shelf for
casual fans).
In 1997 a straight reissue labelled “digitally
remastered” was released and frankly sounds muddy. The only thing making this
version worth keeping is a nice interview with the band in the booklet about
making the album; otherwise it is not the version to own. In 2006, a two CD set
came out labelled as “Deluxe Edition” on the plastic slipcase. Disc one was the
original album while disc two was fifteen tracks of alternate mixes (“The Word”
[Mellotron mix]” for example), single songs (“A Simple Game”, etc.) and a nice
five song BBC session. The packaging was great, being a quad folder with a fine
photo-filled booklet featuring an essay by Mark Powell. The booklet also had
short discussions about all the bonus tracks. The sound was much better than
the ’97 version with more treble and less mud in the middle frequencies. A
single disc remaster version with only nine bonus tracks (minus the BBC set)
was released in 2008 as well.
With the 2018 fiftieth anniversary of the
original album upon us, this new boxset makes sense if you need everything you can
get your hands on by the classic version of the Moody Blues. Disc one is the
original album appended with five single mixes (including a never released mono
mix of “Legen
To sum up, buy the 2006 or
2008 versions if you aren’t a completest and just want a great CD. Buy the box
for the visuals or if you need a 5.1 mix. That being said, it is a shock to
report (as a confirmed CD lover) that in playing each version side by side with
a pristine copy of the old vinyl, the original black rotating version actually
wins out for this reviewer for the best overall sound (unless you prefer your
sound with a thicker middle which the CD does have).- Doc Krieger
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