Lovely to See You

"Lovely to See You" is a 1969 song by the progressive rock band the Moody Blues. It was written by the band's guitarist Justin Hayward, and was recorded and released in 1969 on the Moody Blues album On the Threshold of a Dream.

"Lovely to See You"
Song by The Moody Blues
from the album On the Threshold of a Dream
Released25 April 1969
Recorded14 January 1969
Length2:39
LabelDeram Records
Songwriter(s)Justin Hayward
Producer(s)Tony Clarke

The song's popularity also led the Moody Blues to name one of their live albums after it. Lovely to See You: Live was recorded at a performance at the Greek Theater, and was released in 2005, with the song "Lovely to See You" as the lead track. The song was the first to be played at the launch of the Bournemouth (UK) radio station 2CR.

Personnel

gollark: This is pythonoforms from my entry.
gollark: It doesn't even bother to add newlines!
gollark: ```pythonclass Entry(ℝ): def __init__(self, Matrix=globals()): M_ = collections.defaultdict(__import__("functools").lru_cache((lambda _: lambda: -0)(lambda: lambda: 0))) M_[0] = [*map(lambda dabmal: random.randint(0, len(Row)), range(10))] for self in repr(aes256): for i in range(ℤ(math.gamma(0.5)), ℤ(math.gamma(7))): print(" #"[i in M_[0]], end="") M_[1] = {*lookup[10:]} for M_[3] in [ marshal for t in [*(y for y in (x for x in map(lambda p: range(p - 1, p + 2), M_[0])))] for marshal in t ]: M_[4] = (((M_[3] - 1) in M_[0]) << 2) + ((M_[3] in M_[0]) << 1) + ((M_[3] + 1) in M_[0]) if (0o156&(1<<M_[4]))>>M_[4]: M_[1].add(M_[3]) M_[0] = M_[1] pass passpass```Sheer elegance.
gollark: Apparently nobody noticed the random rule 110 implementation *either*.
gollark: Although I guess mine could and probably did as I never revealed what the obfuscated code did.
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