Procession (The Moody Blues song)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Procession_(The_Moody_Blues_song) an entity of type: Thing

"Procession" is a 1971 song by the Moody Blues and is the opening track of their album Every Good Boy Deserves Favour. It is the only song to have been co-written by all five members of the band. "Procession" is one of the first commercial songs to make use of electronic drums. The instrument in question was a custom drum synth developed by Moody Blues drummer Graeme Edge and Sussex University professor Brian Groves. A section of "Procession" was sampled by hip-hop musicians J Dilla and Madlib on the 2003 Jaylib album Champion Sound; the sample appears on the opening track "L.A. to Detroit." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Procession (The Moody Blues song)
rdf:langString Procession
rdf:langString Procession
xsd:integer 19417308
xsd:integer 1105652505
<second> 280.0
rdf:langString January–March 1971
xsd:date 1971-07-23
rdf:langString *Justin Hayward *John Lodge *Mike Pinder *Ray Thomas *Graeme Edge
rdf:langString "Procession" is a 1971 song by the Moody Blues and is the opening track of their album Every Good Boy Deserves Favour. It is the only song to have been co-written by all five members of the band. "Procession" is one of the first commercial songs to make use of electronic drums. The instrument in question was a custom drum synth developed by Moody Blues drummer Graeme Edge and Sussex University professor Brian Groves. For the most part, "Procession" is an instrumental song, with the exception of its three spoken words: "desolation", "creation", and "communication". These words, as well as other words ending in "-ation", also appear on the album track "One More Time to Live." A section of "Procession" was sampled by hip-hop musicians J Dilla and Madlib on the 2003 Jaylib album Champion Sound; the sample appears on the opening track "L.A. to Detroit."
<minute> 4.666666666666667
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2972
xsd:date 1971-07-23
xsd:double 280.0

data from the linked data cloud