"Question" is a 1970 single by the English progressive rock band the Moody Blues. It was written by guitarist Justin Hayward, who provides lead vocals. "Question" was first released as a single in April 1970 and remains their second highest-charting song in the UK, reaching number two and staying on the chart for 12 weeks. The song reached number 21 on the Billboard Top 40 in the USA.[2] It was later featured as the lead track on the 1970 album A Question of Balance. The single also features the song "Candle of Life" on its B-side, which was from the Moody Blues' previous album To Our Children's Children's Children.

Hayward pieced the song together from two unfinished songs, which accounts for the change of pace in the middle of the song.[3][4][5] Hayward said that:.mw-parser-output .templatequote{overflow:hidden;margin:1em 0;padding:0 40px}.mw-parser-output .templatequote .templatequotecite{line-height:1.5em;text-align:left;padding-left:1.6em;margin-top:0}


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"Question" is one of the Moody Blues' most popular songs, and has been included in virtually all of their compilations and live albums. In addition, the song was re-recorded (along with "Isn't Life Strange") in the studio with the London Symphony Orchestra (who in 1978 had released an orchestral cover of the song) in 1988, for the Greatest Hits album.

Cash Box described the song as starting "with a guitar intro in the Who manner" that "[churns] up instant listener interest from the start" and then "alters midway to become a brilliantly presented ballad in the [Moody Blues'] own tradition."[7]

Ultimate Classic Rock critic Nick DeRiso rated it as the Moody Blues' greatest song, saying that the merging of two unfinished songs "achieve[d] this perfectly calibrated sense of emotional turbulence."[3] Classic Rock critic Malcolm Dome rated it as the Moody Blues' 3rd greatest song, saying that it "offers a powerful message that still retains an ability to emotionally move you."[4]

Former Marillion singer Fish covered the song as one of his personal favourites for his album Songs from the Mirror, released in 1993.[8] In 2010, Nada Surf covered the song on their album "If I Had a Hi-Fi."

When I was writing A More Beautiful Question, or, more accurately when I was procrastinating from writing the book, I began compiling the below list of songs that have to do with questions (often in the title) AND that I like (for the most part).

The Question Song was composed in the Eighth Interval following the disappearance of five of the six Weyrs. It was widely considered to be an uneasy song, which may have led to its removal as a Teaching Ballad. The song was found in the Archives by Robinton while copying some worm-eaten records under Master Archivist Ogolly. Robinton sang it at Benden Hold, which made then-Weyrleader S'loner recall learning it as a weyrling. Master Singer Merelan was unable to find the song in the Hold large archives. F'lon mentioned that maybe G'ranad, the former Weyrleader, had removed it.

As the Ninth Pass began, the Question Song came back into use, as Robinton remembered it when the sole remaining Weyr, Benden Weyr, asked for the assistance of the Holds and Crafts in dealing with the return of Thread. Lessa, Benden's Weyrwoman, realized that the song held clues as to the whereabouts of the missing Weyrs, and believed that they had come to the future to help combat Thread. Lessa traveled into the past and requested the Weyrs' assistance. Before leaving, Lessa commissioned the Question Song to provide the clues she would need.

Are you ready to dive into this incredible song?! I have been consuming TS10 for months now and as I predicted when it first came out, the songs reveal more and more layers. This song was one of them for me. I was intrigued with the Out of the Woods intro, but after creating the one song work out, it hooked me.

My suggestion: Get your workout in by checking out the link below. Watch my breakdown of the song. Carefully read the lyrics below, and then contemplate a few more questions I ponder at the end of this post.

Goodbye /  by the Japanese band toe, and taken from their 2009 LP For Long Tomorrow is my favourite song, by a distance probably comparable to the distance between myself at the present moment and Japan at the present moment (some 5,800 miles). It is a sad but beautiful truth that no other song does to me what this song does. Ah, if only they could I may exist in a state of perpetual bliss. Goodbye /  makes the world a better place. It brings everything into focus and sets the landscape rolling into kaleidoscopic motion. It is a majestic piece of songwriting, sparse with vocals, with an instrumental focus, layered and gorgeously put together. Simple acoustic riffs blend into frenetic drumming and the track weaves its way like the Shinano River, casting out ripples of sound in seconds which each complement each other. Goodbye /  is a patient track, in that it builds steadily, and when it reaches its fuller moments it is absolutely sublime. There is, for example, a second of pause, then two seconds of vocals from Toki Asako, and then everything blooms in colour almost incomprehensible. It is a sudden shift, and it is absolutely majestic. And then things change shape, gain a new clarity, everything is stitched back together in a fashion slightly rearranged. The song has a spine, but what surrounds it is in constant flux, fluid motion. There are moments of calm, of subsidence, and then it all comes flooding back even bigger and my god, does it move me.

I have no idea how else to describe these songs. There were several of 

these that I recall but do not know who did them or what their titles 

are.Anyone remember these? If so, what are their titles and is there 

anywhere they can be downloaded?I always thought these were SO funny!!!


The earliest example was 'Flying Saucer' by Buchanan and [Dickie]

Goodman in 1956, reporting on the phenomenon of the day, flying sucer fever.

The interviewer was John Cameron Cameron, a take on John Cameron Sawase, who

was irritated at the imitation, but took a licking, and kept on ticking.

The artists and record companies where not pleased...until sales of the

sampled songs started to go up.

 Of course, success breeds a Christmas record, so it was 'Santa and The

Satellite' for Christmas of 1957 (just after the launch of Sputnik).

 Another early example was on based on the 1960 US presidental election.

 Currenly, Whimsical Will, on the Dr. Demento show has been keeping up

the tradition of the break in record on his weekly segments and in his

annual movie piece.

 Back in the 1970's, here in Michigan, Frank Maynard took the Dickie

Goodman "Mr. Jaws", extracted the drop-ins and spun a new story based on the

events of the day, using all those same drop-ins. To me, the first example

of a parody on a spoof record.-Tim Ryan

Ann Arbor, MI

"LadyMusicFan" wrote ...

You have to pick your subjects carefully when you try something like this...as

Carl Reiner said (explaining the long-term appeal of the Dick Van Dyke show),

nothing gets dated faster than topical material....Or would you actually buy a CD of Y2K-related songs?...r

The University of Chicago has long been renowned for our provocative essay questions. We think of them as an opportunity for students to tell us about themselves, their tastes, and their ambitions. They can be approached with utter seriousness, complete fancy, or something in between.

Don't worry - it's quick and painless! Just click below, and once you're logged in we'll bring you right back here and post your question. We'll remember what you've already typed in so you won't have to do it again.

So I wanted to listen to the Cars Soundtrack and noticed the best song on the album is missing. Route 66 by John Mayer. I can't figure out why this one song is missing. John Mayer is on Spotify as are several other versions of Route 66 (Chuck Berry, The Rolling Stones and Depeche Mode are the notable ones). Does anyone know why John Mayer's version isnt' available?

Spotify tries really hard to get music available on their service, but in the end the availability of music on Spotify is up to the artist and their music label.


This thread by Spotify staff explains why some music is not available:

 -Questions/I-want-an-artist-song-on-Spotify/td-p/1136005

I understand that some artists aren't on Spotify - Tool comes to mind. However, if you read my original post, the artist, John Mayer, IS on Spotify. As are several versions of the song in question. So your answer really didn't answer my question.

Edit: I just took my own advice and re-read your reply, @MattSuda. John Mayer is on Spotfy, but you said he probably hadn't given permission for the one song. Dumb me, not reading things through. Sorry for sounding snarky....

Unavailable music is always a mystery but when it's unavailable it's because the artist or music label has not given it the green light to be on Spotify. Albums are released in full so if just one song is not given the green light then it will show on the album but it will not be playable.

John mayer cannot legally release the song on spotify due to spotify paying royalties to original artist, most covers are not found on spotify unless the original artist or writer gives permission for song to be used. Also they need to obtain the publishing rights first. John mayer is and was independent when he did the cover for the movie, So non-label artists need to obtain a mechanical license for streaming someone else's song (a sync license for video) and pay royalties to the original songwriter each time a cover is streamed. Hence why it is not on there anymore. ff782bc1db

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