"The Story in Your Eyes" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by The Moody Blues | ||||
from the album Every Good Boy Deserves Favour | ||||
B-side | "My Song" (Holland) "Melancholy Man" (US) |
|||
Released | 27 August 1971 | |||
Recorded | 4 November 1970 | |||
Genre | Progressive rock | |||
Length | 2:57 (album) 3:07 (single) |
|||
Label | Threshold Records | |||
Writer(s) | Justin Hayward | |||
Producer | Tony Clarke | |||
The Moody Blues singles chronology | ||||
|
"The Story in Your Eyes" is a 1971 hit single by the English rock band The Moody Blues. Written by the band's guitarist Justin Hayward, it was first released as a single with "My Song" on the B-side, and then on the 1971 album Every Good Boy Deserves Favour shortly after.
On the album, "The Story in Your Eyes" is the second track, and is preceded by the track "Procession". "Procession" was the first and only song that was written by all five members of the band. The song was intended to describe the history of music from the beginning of time, and the only three words in the whole piece are "desolation", "creation", and "communication".
"The Story in Your Eyes" features a repeated electric guitar riff, a propulsive yet elegant bass line, and Justin Hayward on lead vocals, while incremental use of a Mellotron and a choral background generates an expansive, rhapsodic sound. "The Story in Your Eyes" was the Moody Blues' final single to feature only the Mellotron as it would be supplied by the chamberlin, a similar instrument in time for their next album, Seventh Sojourn. The SACD release of the album Every Good Boy Deserves Favour contains a version of "The Story in Your Eyes" that has the Mellotron in dominant role.
The distinctive picture sleeve used for the French single release used a photograph of a close-up face with the Threshold logo in place of the mouth.
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
1971 | Billboard Hot 100 | 23 |
|