Looking for a Miracle In My Life: The Moody Blues Ask a “Question”

The Moody Blues released “Question” in 1970, created from two songs guitarist Justin Hayward was writing, resulting in a beautiful song suite about seeking solace while struggling with the world’s problems.

Perhaps the most famous instance of songwriters throwing together two unfinished songs to create a great song is when John Lennon and Paul McCartney combined two drafts of songs to create the masterpiece “A Day in the Life” that closed the Beatles’ Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) album. But not long after that album, The Moody Blues also created a classic song when guitarist Justin Hayward combined two songs he was working on, ultimately forming the song “Question.”

The Moody Blues released “Question” as a single in 1970. And they released a new version of the song in 1989. You might not recall the song from the title, but once you hear it, you will remember it.

The Questions Portion of “Question”

“Question” contains two contrasting parts that might initially seem not to go together. The high-powered first part of the suite provides the title of the song:

Why do we never get an answer when we’re knocking at the door,
With a thousand million questions about hate and death and war?
‘Cause when we stop and look around us, there is nothing that we need,
In a world of persecution that is burning in its greed
.

Hayward explained that he was inspired to write this section from Vietnam War protests. While touring in the United States, he heard young people express their concerns about the ongoing Vietnam War.

“I was just expressing my frustration around that, around the problems of anti-war and things that really concerned them, and for their own future that they may be conscripted,” Hayward noted. “How that would morally be a dilemma for them,” he thought, “After a decade of peace and love, it still seemed we hadn’t made a difference in 1970.”

The Love Song Portion of “Question”

After starting with the big questions, the song slows down into an acoustic love song:

I’m looking for someone to change my life;
I’m looking for a miracle in my life;
And if you could see what it’s done to me,
To lose the the love I knew could safely lead me through
.

This section stands as a beautiful love song on its own, but it works wonderfully combined with the faster question-asking section.

Why the Two Portions of “Question” Fit Together

Amazingly, the two sections fit together beautifully, despite their origins as different songs. There is nothing inconsistent with being upset and angry about societal problems while also seeking solace in one’s personal life.

But in the grey of the morning,
My mind becomes confused;
Between the dead and the sleeping,
And the road that I must choose
.

I’m looking for someone to change my life;
I’m looking for a miracle in my life;
And if you could see what it’s done to me,
To lose the love I knew could safely lead me to
The land that I once knew;
To learn as we grow old the secrets of our souls
.

Dick Holler’s song “Sanctuary,” recorded live by Dion in 1971, does something similar by singing in the voice of someone seeing the turmoil of the early 1970s and the failures of the promise of the 1960s. Among those worldly problems, the singer seeks a place of peace with friends.

The Moody Blues song “Question” struck a chord with people in the U.S. and U.K when it was released on the album A Question of Balance (1970). The song became one of the most popular Moody Blues songs, going to number two in the U.K. and number twenty-one in the U.S.

Perhaps because the song is so associated with the sound of The Moody Blues, “Question” is not often covered. But the London Symphony Orchestra recorded an instrumental version in 1978, which inspired The Moody Blues to recruit that orchestra to record a new version of “Question” for their 1989 Greatest Hits album.

The song still sounds great all these years later, while remaining relevant as we try to find love and balance in our lives amidst the confusion stemming from the questions in society about hate and death and war.

As we go into a new year, wishing you peace, love, and the answers to our questions.

And that is the story behind the song. Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Song of the Day: Dion’s “Sanctuary”
  • Saturday Mornings in the 1960s and 1970s
  • “Hello Christmas” from Dion and Amy Grant
  • Lou Reed Inducting Dion Into Rock Hall
  • Barbara Dane’s Cool Musical Legacy: “Wild Woman,” “Gasser,” “Hard-Hitter”
  • Joan Baez in Concert
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)

    I Heard Her Pray the Night Chicago Died

    Two hit songs from 1974 were story songs with an unusual connection: Paper Lace’s “The Night Chicago Died” and “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” by Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods.

    Paper Lace The year 1974 was an odd year for music, with a number of unusual hit pop songs that you rarely hear today. The year featured acts like Bob Dylan returning to touring for the first time in eight years. Queen played its first North American concert.  And the Ramones made their first appearance at CBGB. Yet, some of the biggest hit songs of the year were Carl Douglas’s “Kung Fu Fighting” and Blue Suede’s reworking of BJ Thomas’s 1968 release “Hooked on a Feeling,” adding ooga-chaka’s.

    And two odd 1974 pop hits featured an unusual connection to each other: Bo Donaldson and The Heywoods’ “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” and Paper Lace‘s “The Night Chicago Died.”

    “The Night Chicago Died”

    “The Night Chicago Died” hit number one on the charts for Paper Lace on August 17, 1974. If you were around in those days, you probably can sing along to “The Night Chicago Died.” But if you were born after that date, it is quite possible you have never heard of the song.

    “The Night Chicago Died” is a story song about a 1930s battle between Al Copone’s men and the Chicago police. Songwriters Peter Callander and Mitch Murray tell a Prohibition-era story that is largely inaccurate in both historical events and city geography.

    But perhaps what made the song a hit was the part about the songwriter watching his momma cry while waiting to see if her policeman husband would come home alive.  Spoiler alert: The father-husband returns safely.

    At the end, the singer recalls that the door opened wide “And my daddy stepped inside,/ And he kissed my mama’s face, And he brushed her tears away.”

    “The Night Chicago Died” was a huge hit.  It sold more than three million copies.

    The British band Paper Lace consisted of Philip Wright (drummer and lead singer on “The Night Chicago Died”), Cliff Fish, Phil Hendriks, and Dave Major. While Paper Lace had a number one hit with “The Night Chicago Died” in the U.S., the song only went to number two on the U.K. charts.

    “Billy Don’t Be a Hero”

    Paper Lace, who still tour, did have a number one hit in the U.K. prior to “The Night Chicago Died.” The band’s version of “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” — a story song about a woman telling her love not to get killed in the war — went to number one in the U.K earlier in 1974.

    But before Paper Lace could release their version of “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” in the U.S., Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods claimed their one-hit-wonder status by releasing their version. The Bo Donaldson song went to number one in the U.S. in June 1974.

    Like “The Night Chicago Died,” the song “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” was written by Callander and Murray. “Billy,” however, has a sadder ending, with the heroic Billy getting killed.

    Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods reformed in the mid-1990s and still toured as of 2015. Mike Gibbons, the lead singer on “Billy Don’t Be a Hero,” did not tour with the band on the oldies circuit.  And he passed away on April 2, 2016.

    The song does not name the war where Billy is killed.  From the lyrics (“the soldier blues”) most assume the song is set during the Civil War. But in 1974 any song mentioning war made one think of the Vietnam War.

    I have barely heard “Billy Don’t Be a Hero” since the year it was released.  It does make a delightful brief appearance in the background music in Walk Hard: The Dewy Cox Story (2007).

    Yet, like “The Night Chicago Died,” I can still sing every word. That’s the power of pop.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Looking for a Miracle In My Life: The Moody Blues Ask a “Question”
  • Pete Seeger: “Bring Them Home”
  • Daniel Ellsberg: The Most Dangerous Man
  • Saturday Mornings in the 1960s and 1970s
  • Lesley Gore and Barry Goldwater
  • Travelin’ Soldier
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Buy from Amazon

    Saturday Mornings in the 1960s and 1970s

    1960s commercials

    As a kid growing up in the 1960s and 1970s, Saturday mornings were always special. In those days before everything was available 24/7 on the Internet, kids had to wait until Saturday mornings to catch a string of mindless fun programs aimed at their age group.

    I remember anticipating the new season of shows every year. I looked forward to waking up early on Saturdays, pouring myself a bowl of Quisp cereal, and sitting back in my own world of television. Occasionally, there were some lessons, such as in the Schoolhouse Rock segments, but mostly it was just for fun.

    The following video compiles clips from Saturday morning cartoons and commercials. If you grew up during this time span, the video will bring back a lot of memories of your favorite shows, as well as memories of the toys you had and the ones you always wanted. Maybe you remember when the child Mason Reese was famous for his commercials, or maybe you remember The Hudson Brothers, or maybe you remember commercial catchphrases like “I’m the sole survivor!”

    On the other hand, if you did not grow up during this time, the video will show you what we used to do in the old days. For example, before we had cell phones we had to play Spirograph and a game that shoved a pie in our faces. Check it out.

    What is your favorite Saturday morning memories? Leave your two cents in the comments.

    Buy from Amazon

  • Looking for a Miracle In My Life: The Moody Blues Ask a “Question”
  • Barbara Dane’s Cool Musical Legacy: “Wild Woman,” “Gasser,” “Hard-Hitter”
  • Joan Baez in Concert
  • I Heard Her Pray the Night Chicago Died
  • Happy Birthday Woody Woodpecker!
  • Take the 1966 Music Quiz
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)