After the Moody Blues restyled themselves from rhythm and blues-flavored “Go Now” hitmakers to pensive album music creators with Days Of Future Passed, the late 1960s brought rich rewards. That was especially true with their two major LP successes within a few months in 1969, On The Threshold Of A Dream and To Our Children’s Children’s Children.

If they’d wondered whether they could maintain such pre-eminence in the new decade, the answer was that 1970 saw the Moodies go from strength to strength. At the end of May, Justin Hayward’s powerful, episodic “Question” became their biggest UK hit since the “Go Now” days at No.2, a higher peak than they would ever achieve there again.

The new album containing that hit, A Question of Balance, was a new direction for the Moodies in that its songs didn’t share an overriding theme, as on previous albums — and in that, remarkably, the band went into the studio with nothing ready, emerging five weeks later with the master tapes.

“Our songs are about what happens to everybody,” John Lodge told Record Mirror soon after the album was released. “We might get around to a lot more places, but we have the same experience as everybody else, and that’s what we write about.”

Balance was released on August 7 and jumped onto the UK chart at No.3, as Simon & Garfunkel’s Bridge Over Troubled Water continued its apparently unstoppable run at the top. That album was not only in its fifth consecutive week at No.1 but had spent 22 of its 26 chart weeks at the summit.

Listen to the best of the Moody Blues on Apple Music and Spotify.

What’s more, if anyone was going to overhaul Paul and Art, it looked like it would be Elvis Presley, whose On Stage, February 1970 climbed 5-2. But that was reckoning without the strength of the Moody Blues’ popularity. On August 22, A Question of Balance began a three-week reign at No.1 in the UK; in America, it climbed to No.3 and would eventually go platinum.

Buy or stream A Question of Balance.

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