The band played 'Tuesday' in an uplifting tempo punctuated by the hard-driving drumming duo of Graeme Edge and Gordon Marshall, the latter having joined the band in 1991. Mullen played a breathtaking, mesmerizing flute solo which ignited the crowd. Combine the mood-altering resplendent subtlety of ex-
Moody flutist Ray Thomas with the furiously aggressive tones that emit from the flute of Ian Anderson and you've got your portrait of Norda Mullen.
Hayward played acoustic on "Never Comes The Day" and Julie Ragins and Paul Bliss helped set the soft, transcendent tone with graceful moving touches on the keyboards, leaving Mullen to finally blast this 1969 piece through the ceiling with two explosive whipping harmonica solos that would have made Paul Butterfied proud.
It should be noted the raucous crowd consisted of mostly people aged forty through seventy. So maybe there were more bottles of Geritol in the audience than whiskey flasks. All the same, this crowd - after just three songs - had no inhibitions about dancing in the seats and aisles.
A half-hour into the show, Ragins gently touched her electric keyboard and then Bliss backed her with a prolonged deep hit on his Mellotron and the crowd rose to its feet in recognition. Lodge took a leap in the air and then Hayward sang the first few words of "The Voice" and - at that moment - both band and crowd seemed to sense this a special night. The guitar solo on "The Voice" is short, but Hayward stood at the tip of the stage to let the crowd know he cared - and the crowd responded in gratitude for this precise ear-piercing guitar lick.
The first set concluded with Hayward's 1971 masterpiece "Story In Your Eyes." As great as it is, this song wouldn't work without Lodge's rich, graceful back-up harmonies. After Hayward let out a pulsating guitar solo, he nodded at Lodge, who took center stage with his own blistering guitar solo and the two traded back and forth again and then met center stage to rock side by side in perfect rhythm. Edge and Marshall finally finished this masterwork in a rapidly aggressive, symbol-crashing fury.
It's a testament to the modesty of Edge that he allows rock and roll's most memorable, and perhaps greatest, drumming riff to ever open a hit song to remain only on disc. Boom-pa, boom-pa, boom-pa TISH! Boom-pa, boom-pa, boom-pa TISH!
On this night, Edge and Marshall opened "I'm Just A Singer (In A Rock And Roll Band)" with short modest strokes. Hayward, Lodge, Ragins and Mullen sang "I'm Just A Singer" in noble, glorious harmony with a strong collective purpose as if there were 300,000 people in witness instead of 3,000.
Sure, this is the best song Lodge ever wrote, but it's also one of the best songs that anyone ever wrote.
How can we understand?
Riots by the people for the people
who are only destroying themselves.
And when you see a frightened person
who is frightened by the people
who are scorching this earth!
"Nights In White Satin" was played mostly up-tempo with Edge and Marshall tenaciously smacking the skins and, most prominently, Hayward's voice reaching for and hitting higher notes that can't be found on the 1967 record.
Hayward and Lodge each tried to introduce the finale, but neither could speak as the crowd wouldn't stop screaming its collective appreciation for Hayward's 'White Satin' vocal work. So Lodge, teammate that he is, just stepped back and pointed to his forty-year band mate.
Go ahead, keep cheering.
Hayward genuinely looked surprised - and touched.
Accepting the fact that quieting this crowd was an impossibility, Hayward eventually picked up his acoustic guitar and went into his wickedly fast, legendary, incomparable strumming chords which open "Question."
Lodge's harmonies on back-up vocals were again superhuman and with Ragins and Mullen providing further passionate crooning, Hayward again stretched his lead vocal work to extraordinary high heights.
"Ride My See-Saw" was the encore and no words can do it justice. The band served up this 1968 jewel with all the frenzied energy it deserves. Lodge, his arms wailing back and forth, led the crowd in a 1960's-style wave.
Forty-three years, twenty-six albums, countless great songs, 60 million albums sold and you can still trust the
Moody Blues. When they say 'Lovely To See You,' they mean it.
SET LIST: MOODY BLUES
FEB 15, 2007
PASADENA CIVIC AUDITORIUM
1.) LOVELY TO SEE YOU
2.) TUESDAY AFTERNOON
3.) LEAN ON ME
4.) NEVER COMES THE DAY
5.) STEPPIN' IN A SLIDE ZONE
6.) THE VOICE
7.) ONE MORE TIME TO LIVE
8.) I KNOW YOU'RE OUT THERE SOMEWHERE
9.) STORY IN YOUR EYES
INTERMISSION
1.) YOUR WILDEST DREAMS
2.) ISN'T LIFE STRANGE
3.) THE OTHER SIDE OF LIFE
4.) DECEMBER SNOW
5.) HIGHER AND HIGHER
6.) ARE YOU SITTING COMFORTABLY
7.) I'M JUST A SINGER (IN A ROCK AND ROLL BAND)
8.) NIGHTS IN WHITE SATIN
9.) QUESTION
ENCORE:
10.) RIDE MY SEE-SAW
Read Mandell's interview with some of the band's members
here.
To see the
Moody Blues remaining tour dates, click
here.
Allan Mandell covers the arts and sports for the La Canada (California) Valley Sun