Gemini Dream

"Gemini Dream" is a 1981 single by the progressive rock band The Moody Blues. It reached number 12 on the US Hot 100, as well as number 1 on the Canada RPM Top 100 Singles chart. It is ranked as the 28th biggest Canadian hit of 1981.

"Gemini Dream"
Single by The Moody Blues
from the album Long Distance Voyager
B-side"Painted Smile"
Released19 May 1981
Recorded19 February 1980  Mid-April 1981
GenreNew wave, rock
Length4:10 (album)
3:47 (single)
LabelThreshold
Songwriter(s)Justin Hayward
John Lodge
Producer(s)Pip Williams
The Moody Blues singles chronology
"Driftwood"
(1978)
"Gemini Dream"
(1981)
"The Voice"
(1981)
Music video
"Gemini Dream" on YouTube

History

The song was the first of three singles released from the Moody Blues’ 1981 album Long Distance Voyager, which also included "Painted Smile", another track from the album, on the B-side. Two more songs from Long Distance Voyager, "The Voice" and "Talking Out of Turn", were subsequently released as singles after the album's release.

"Gemini Dream" was written jointly by the band's lead guitarist Justin Hayward and bassist John Lodge, both of whom won an ASCAP songwriting award for it. While Hayward and Lodge had collaborated on a duet album outside of the Moody Blues in 1975 called Blue Jays, "Gemini Dream" was the first song performed by the Moody Blues that they had written together. On the studio recording, and most live performances, Hayward sings lead vocals, although Lodge would occasionally take lead vocals in concert.

"Gemini Dream" was the first Moody Blues single to feature Patrick Moraz on keyboards. Moraz had replaced the original keyboardist Mike Pinder, who left the band shortly after completion of their previous album Octave for personal reasons. Moraz was hired to take Pinder's place in time for the Moody Blues' 1979 Octave World Tour. After the tour, Moraz was then retained as a permanent member of the band, and he recorded with them until 1991.

"Gemini Dream" was also the first Moody Blues single released on Polydor Records, which had recently acquired Decca Records, the band's previous record label.

Chart performance

Personnel

References

  1. Library and Archives Canada, September 5, 1981
  2. "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada". Collectionscanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 2016-12-09.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-10-22. Retrieved 2016-12-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Whitburn, Joel (1999). Pop Annual. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research Inc. ISBN 0-89820-142-X.
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