Floating (The Moody Blues song)

"Floating" is a song by the Moody Blues from their November 1969 album To Our Children's Children's Children, a concept album about space travel, dedicated to NASA and the Apollo 11 astronauts.[1]

"Floating"
Song by The Moody Blues
from the album To Our Children's Children's Children
Released21 November 1969
RecordedMay–September 1969
Length3:01
LabelThreshold
Songwriter(s)Ray Thomas
Producer(s)Tony Clarke

Background

Written by band flautist Ray Thomas, "Floating" is a jaunty, semi-children's song about a future in which advances in space travel have enabled the Moon to become a family vacation spot. The song's lyrics describe the experience of "Floating" from weightlessness due to the microgravity experienced in space flight.

Thomas's previous outspoken sympathy for LSD advocate Timothy Leary, as expressed in his song "Legend of a Mind", along with coincidental drug-related slang terms current at the time involving words such as "candy" and "rock," led some Americans to see in "Floating" a coded encouragement to use drugs.[2]

Personnel

References

  1. The Moody Blues Companion, Edward Wincentsen and Rhonda Conley (2001)
  2. See for instance Bob Larson, "Rock and Roll: The Devil's Diversion" (3rd ed., 1970); David Noebel, "The Marxist Minstrels" (1970)
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