Long Distance Voyager is the tenth album by the Moody Blues, first released in May 1981[1] on the group's Threshold record label. It was the group's first album featuring keyboardistPatrick Moraz (who previously had worked with bands such as Refugee and Yes) in place of co-founder Mike Pinder, who left after Octave in 1978.
Upon release in 1981, Long Distance Voyager became the Moody Blues' second American number one album, and was also the source of the US Top 20 singles "Gemini Dream" (No. 12) and "The Voice" (No. 15) on the Billboard Hot 100. A third single, "Talking Out of Turn", only reached No. 65 on the Billboard Hot 100 but reached No. 27 in Canada.[4][5] It also continued the Moody Blues' winning streak in their native United Kingdom, reaching No. 7 there.
Besides the singles, two songs from the album charted on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart. "Meanwhile" charted at No. 11 and "22,000 Days" charted at No. 38.[4]
In November 2008, the album was remastered and released on CD with one extra track.
Writing
According to Ray Thomas, "Most people think that Long Distance Voyager was named after the cosmic themes that dominate our music. But in fact we were simply describing ourselves."[6]John Lodge stated that "The Long Distance Voyager album is about people. Although the title is very space-oriented, it isn't. The whole idea is we are the same as we were a hundred years ago, two hundred years ago. It's about people and situations and feelings, and talking out of turn is a particular feeling."[7] The final three tracks comprise a mini-suite that combines themes of carnival jesters and the chaos experienced backstage at a rock show.
Guitarist Justin Hayward recalls writing "The Voice": "It was the first thing that we recorded for Long Distance Voyager. I used to feel a lot of guilt about our position in the world and that we were really privileged and that went into that song. Long Distance Voyager was a huge milestone for us. There was a time after the Octave album where we didn't quite know how to make things work. We were all a bit nervous. Long Distance Voyager really came together and we had a number one album. "The Voice" and "Gemini Dream" were both hits."[8]
Bassist Lodge remembers the inspiration for "Gemini Dream", and how the production of the album built the band's excitement to go on tour once again: "We had stopped touring with the Moody Blues in 1974, I think it was. In 1980, we had an album called Long Distance Voyager and we were going to go on the road after it was done. We had not recorded the album yet, but we knew we were going into the studio to record it soon. I came up with this idea that we needed a song that said we were are back on the road. The original song was called "Touring in the USA." That was the original demo when we were putting it together. As we were writing it together, we suddenly realized what we were actually talking about, and that is when you're a musician, you're either on the road, as a Moody Blue, or you're at home, as anyone else. It was just trying to combine the two things together that are the same person living two different lives."[9]
Graeme Edge's "22,000 Days" was inspired by his reflection on the number of days in a typical lifetime. He explains, ""I worked out how many days [are in] an average lifespan of 70 years. And it came out to something that really shook me, something like 23,927 days. But I changed it to 22,000 days because it seemed better. Twenty-two thousand days is 66 and a half years. And if you figure, well, maybe the first five or six years you aren't going to be worth much, and the last five or six years you aren't going to be worth much, it works out that your useful life is about 22,000 days. And that really surprised me because that doesn't seem much. And I did a lot of tests on people and I'd say 'give me a quick answer'. I was getting back like a quarter of a million, two million. People think they have so many days to live. See, 70 years, everybody knows, it doesn't really register. If you do too much and have a day's hangover, you've wasted 1/22,000 of your life. And all the sudden the days start getting more valuable."[10]
"Veteran Cosmic Rocker" was inspired by a phrase an interviewer used to describe author Ray Thomas. He remembers, "Some reporter from The New York Times came to one our gigs in the States and he referred to me as the 'Veteran Cosmic Rocker'. At the time I thought 'Bloody cheek. I'm not veteran.' And then I thought 'That sounds good actually.' So I nicked it and wrote that song."[11]
John Lodge remembers the sessions: "Long Distance Voyager changed everything again, because that album went to number one in America. I think we have three or four singles off that album, and it was our first album recorded in our own studio in London as well. We built Westlake Audio Studio to do, but it was the only album ever made at that studio by The Moody Blues."[13]
Album Cover
The cover for the album was based on a painting entitled "Punch" (1840) by Thomas Webster printed for the Art Union of Glasgow,[14] while the sleeve was based on a concept by the Moody Blues which was designed by Cream, who were in charge of the album's cover artwork. NASA's Voyager spacecraft is at the top of the front side of the album cover. Both Voyager 1 and Voyager 2's flybys of Saturn were in the news in 1980–81.
Reception
Billboard said that "the group is in prime form here with a knockout collection of gorgeous melodies, harmonies and poetic lyrics".[15]Billboard contributor Ed Harrison said that "'Long Distance Voyager,' though bending somewhat to commercial pop trends, still manages to recreate the group's lushly textured, classical /rock symphonic sound epitomized by classics like 'Nights In White Satin,' 'Ride My See-Saw,' 'Question' and others.."[16] 'Cash Box called it "a nice return to vinyl" for the Moody Blues, commenting on the "luxurious, symphoric rock setting on songs like 'In My World,' 'Talking Out of Turn' and '22,000 Days.' and noting that "the patented Moody Blues group vocal is also in fine form and, surprisingly, sounds perfectly contemporary."[17]
^Pennanen, Timo (2006). Sisältää hitin – levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972 (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki: Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava. ISBN978-951-1-21053-5.