22,000 Days
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| "22,000 Days" | |
|---|---|
| Single by The Moody Blues | |
| from the album Long Distance Voyager | |
| A-side | "The Voice" |
| Released | 23 July 1981 |
| Recorded | Spring 1980 |
| Genre | Progressive rock, new wave |
| Length | 5:25 (album version) 4:58 (single version) |
| Label | Threshold |
| Songwriter(s) | Graeme Edge |
| Producer(s) | Pip Williams |
"22,000 Days" is a song written by Graeme Edge that was first released by the Moody Blues on their 1981 album Long Distance Voyager. It was also released as the B-side to the top-ten single "The Voice". "22,000 Days" reached No. 38 on the Billboard Top Rock Tracks chart.
Lyrics and music
The lyrics of "22,000 Days" exhort the listener to live life to the full and not waste time because we only have limited time to live.[2] 22,000 days amount to a little more than 60 years.[2] Edge said of the relatively short lifespan implied by the song:
That's one of those things where you mess around with a calculator, and you work out various things. And I worked out how many days; you know, just given an average lifespan of 70 years. And it came out to something that really shook me, something like 23,927 days. But I changed it to 22,000 days because it seemed better. Twenty-two thousand days is 66 1/2 years. And if you figure, well, maybe the first five or six years you aren't going to be worth much, and the last five or six years you aren't going to be worth much, it works out that your useful life is about 22,000 days. And that really surprised me because that doesn't seem much...If you do too much and have a day's hangover, you've wasted 1/22,000 of your life. And all of a sudden the days start getting more valuable.[1]
Music journalist Geoffrey Freakes described "22,000 Days " as having a "Led Zeppelin-influenced intro, with Edge playing a "John Bonham-like stomp" on the drums.[2] Freakes also praised Pat Moraz's "inventive keyboard fills" as well as his keyboard solo in the middle of the song.[2] Moraz said:
For that song I actually wrote that riff; I wrote the whole instrumental part. That was a modulation in A-minor of a song I had written which was the main part of "Children's Concerto". So, although the song is credited to Graeme Edge alone, it was a collaboration. But I didn't want to start creating any problems by asking for credit, or anything like that. I was happy to be part of the group.[1]
The lead vocals of the verses are sung by Justin Hayward and John Lodge with Ray Thomas also in the mix, and all three sing equally in on the refrain.[1] Producer Pip Williams said:
The choruses were the first vocals on "22,000 Days" to be recorded, with John, Ray and Justin all singing together around one microphone. They sang each different harmony part all together, in unison. I positioned them around the mike so that no one voice was dominant. All the voices thus sing all the harmonies, giving a powerful choir sound. Ray then recorded a main lead vocal track.[1]
The song was originally recorded with Thomas singing the lead vocal in the verses, with a smoother melody than was on the final recording.[1] Lodge later suggested that they sing the verses in a more staccato fashion, to be consistent with the percussion sound.[1] Lodge and Hayward recorded the verse vocals in that manner, with Lodge's voice higher and thus more prominent, but Thomas's original vocal was included in the mix.[1]