Description
Tracklist:
: Stereo Remastered Album
1: The Day Begins: Inc. Morning Glory
2: Dawn: Dawn Is A Feeling
3: The Morning: Another Morning
4: Lunch Break: Peak Hour
5: The Afternoon
5a: Forever Afternoon (Tuesday?)
5b: (Evening) Time To Get Away
6: Evening
6a: The Sun Set
6b: Twilight Time
7: The Night: Nights In White Satin
: Bonus Tracks
: BBC Radio Session
8: Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood
: 1967 Mono Single Masters
9: Fly Me High
10: I Really Haven’t Got The Time
11: Love And Beauty
12: Leave This Man Alone
13: Cities
: Alternate Versions & Outtakes
14: Tuesday Afternoon (Alternate Mix)
15: Dawn Is A Feeling (Alternate Version)
16: The Sun Set (Alternate Version Without Orchestra)
17: Twilight Time (Alternate Vocal Mix)
[On back of case:]
“Originally released as Deram SML707 in November 1967.” [ [r773480] ]
“(P)(C) 2008 Decca Music Group Limited”
[Imprint on hub:]
“MADE IN USA BY EDC”
[From liner notes:]
“Project coordinated For [l=Universal Music] By [a=Joe Black]”
“CD Package design by Phil Smee at Waldo’s Design & Dream Emporium”
“THE BONUS TRACKS”
Track 8: “BBC Radio session for “Saturday Club” – Recorded May 9, 1967″
“…artists were invited to record sessions at the BBC’s studios in Maida Vale, London.”
“This recording…is the earliest surviving Moody Blues BBC session to feature Justin Hayward and John Lodge.”
“…”Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” (a hit some years earlier for The Animals)…with Ray Thomas’s flute…”
Track 9: “A-side of single”
Track 10: “B-side of single”
“Released as Decca F12607 in May 1967” [ [r3250262] ]
“The first Moody Blues release to feature new members Justin Hayward and John Lodge. Recorded on March 30, 1967…”
Track 11: “A-side of single”
Track 12: “B-side of single”
“Released as Decca F12670 in September 1967” [Similar to [r4494575] ]
“Recorded on July 17, 1967, Mike Pinder’s “Love And Beauty”…has the distinction of being the first Moody Blues recording to feature his use of the Mellotron.”
“Justin Hayward’s…”Leave This Man Alone,” recorded on June 29, 1967, features…flanged guitar…”
Track 13: “B-side of single”
“Released as Deram DM 161 in November 1967” [ [r540698] ]
“Recorded on July 17, 1967…released as the single companion to “Nights In White Satin” throughout the world.”
Tracks 14 & 15: “Recorded at Decca Studios West Hampstead –
October 24, 1967″
Tracks 16 & 17: “Recorded at Decca Studios West Hampstead –
October 26, 1967″
“In 1967 multi-track recording was essentially in its infancy, with 8-track tape recorders still some months away from arriving in Britain. In common with the techniques adopted by The Beatles on their [i]Sergeant Pepper[/i] album, [i]Days Of Future Passed[/i] was recorded by utilizing two four-track tape machines. Prior to orchestral overdubs being undertaken, the initial four-track tape was mixed down and then transferred to another four-track tape to allow further overdubs to take place. These recordings are initial reductions used as part of the process and serve as a fascinating insight into the ingenuity employed during the creative process.”


