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Justin Hayward
28,078 Followers
• 25 Upcoming Shows
25 Upcoming Shows
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Fan Reviews

Jack
April 22nd 2025
Terrific show from Justin and his ace band members!
The sound was excellent - every note, every instrument, and every word clearly audible.
Mr. Hayward was gracious, friendly - both with the appreciative audience and his stage mates.
Mike Dawes (no relation to Dawes the band) played a brief, but virtuoso warm-up for the crowd prior to Mr. Hayward's appearance. The songs were brilliantly performed - I marveled at how fresh Nights in White Satin sounded after perhaps the thousandth rendition by this R&R Hall of Famer. Justin relied on a stage full of guitars including his treasured red 335 Gibson - the only one he actually stopped to carry off at the finale. A guitar tech, a Josh Johnson, superbly handled the guitars for Mr. Hayward and Mr. Dawes throughout the performance and even came on stage for a few himself!
The venerable Sunrise Theatre, at 102 years old, was the perfect venue for this sort of performance.
This was one to remember!
Fort Pierce, FL@Sunrise Theatre

Blanche
December 6th 2024
A stellar performance, the exuberance was palpable . After attending innumerable performances over the decades, one might expect taking the pleasure for granted but such is not the case. Each has been singular, with tweaks and additions that genuinely delight, plus I'm in it for discovering new venues, seeing how Justin Hayward has evolved since 1966 to the present. He's at last able to share his deeper cuts, the ones that mattered most to him yet somehow never quite seemed to fit the Moody Blues collaborative studio approach and subsequent live setlists. So very much overdue, enthusiastically received, with audiences bringing both awe and affection for this songwriter and musician who at 78 can still rock the house like few others.
The Greensburg 15-tune setlist delivered substance also, namely: Tuesday Afternoon; Driftwood; Blue World; Living for Love; Hope and Pray; the 6-tune medley (The Day We Meet Again / One Lonely Room / Out and In / In My World / Meanwhile / Voices in the Sky); The Voice; Forever Autumn; Never Comes the Day; Your Wildest Dreams; Question; Nights in White Satin; The Story in Your Eyes; You and Me; and, I Know You're Out There Somewhere. The humility persists, as does his commitment to
continue touring, his sincere regard for his talented and equally ebullient troupe -- Mike Dawes, Karmen Gould, Julie Ragins, and recently his guitar tech Josh Johnson on a few tunes. They had the nearly 1,300 attendees jumping from their seats, cheering, applauding, transported back to Days of Future Passed, equally enjoying Living for Love, a reminiscence we all share.
The 9-date itinerary over Thanksgiving and into December snow was a lovely surprise. We didn't disappoint. Neither did Justin and his crew. Yes, the drive over the mountains in the gales and snow was a bit white-knuckled, both ways. But wouldn't have missed Greensburg for the world. Just the affirmation needed, an uplift when headlines are too often sordid, that goodness, generosity, and integrity remain, as they did in the 60s and 70s, the summer of love.
Greensburg, PA@The Palace Theatre

Tim
October 18th 2024
Absolutely brilliant! The songs were everything you could ask for & Justin's vibe was incredibly warm and friendly & his voice sounded fantastic - as expressive & youthful as ever.
Almost all the songs we most wanted to hear were played (including all the best known ones) -
the only one I'd especially liked to have heard that wasn't played was his "Lovely To See You" from the Moody Blues' "To Our Children's Children's Children" album.
As part of a medley he also played Mike Pinder's "Out And In" (also from the MB "..Children's..." album) -
which was fabulous & I'm guessing was, in part at least, a tribute to Mike, who passed away earlier this year.
There was only about 3 songs that I wasn't familiar with and they were all excellent too.
His band were great & the last song was "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" which was lovely & a very appropriate one to end on; as hopefully those who were there will all get to see him again at some point.
On which point; my wife Carrie and I will definitely go to see him again next time he tours the UK!
To sum up; it was one if the best gigs I've ever been too - thanks Justin and band!
Royal Tunbridge Wells, United Kingdom@Assembly Hall Theatre
View More Fan Reviews
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About Justin Hayward
Justin Hayward (born David Justin Hayward, on 14 October 1946, in Swindon, England) is best known as the main singer, guitarist and composer with the Moody Blues.
Having played with local bands in the Swindon area since the age of 13, Hayward's professional career began in 1964 when he joined Marty Wilde and his wife, Joyce, in the Wilde Three. While still only 17, and against Wilde's advice, Hayward signed a publishing contract with the skiffle artist and record producer, Lonnie Donegan. This was a move that Hayward would go on to regret as it meant that the songwriter's and composer's rights to all the songs he wrote up until 1974 would forever be owned by Donegan's Tyler Music.
Hayward joined the Moody Blues in late 1966, replacing the departing vocalist, Denny Laine. Bassist John Lodge replaced Clint Warwick at the same time.
The integration of Hayward and Lodge into the Moody Blues sparked greater commercial success and recognition for the band, transforming them from a mainly covers band into one of the biggest selling acts of all-time. Their album sales from 1978 to date (2006) are in excess of 60 million. The exact figures for the bands' album sales from 1967 to 1978 have been contested in court as record company and accountants' figures differ considerably.
The 1967 album "Days of Future Passed", one of the first and most influential albums of its genre, spawned the Hayward-penned singles "Tuesday Afternoon" and the classic "Nights in White Satin" that went on to sell in excess of 2 million copies. Hayward also wrote "Question" (that was held off the No1 spot in the UK by the England 1970 World Cup Squad with "Back Home") as well as the majority of the group's other singles including "Driftwood" (1978), "The Voice" (1981), "Blue World" (1983), "Your Wildest Dreams" (1986), "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" (1988), "Bless the Wings" (1991), "English Sunset" (1999) and "Haunted" (1999).
In 1972, the group decided to take a break from performing and recording as a unit. During this time, Hayward found international solo success - in 1977, with his album, "Songwriter", and the first single from it, "One Lonely Room"; and in 1978, collaborating on the concept album "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds'" that yielded his hits "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War".
Hayward has also co-written songs with other members of the band during their career, most prolifically with the band's bassist/vocalist, John Lodge. Together, in 1975, they had a hit single, "Blue Guitar", and album, "Blue Jays".
During the 1980s, Hayward composed and performed for film and television, including the theme song, "It Won't Be Easy", for the 1987 BBC2 science fiction series, "Star Cops". He also wrote "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film "The Howling IV", "Eternal Woman" for the film "She" and music for "The Shoe People".
In 1989, with producer-arranger Mike Batt, Hayward released "Classic Blue" - an album of standards written by other composers, set to orchestration and arranged by Batt. His most recent solo album, "The View From The Hill", was released in 1996 and a live recording, "Live in San Juan Capistrano" followed in 1998.
In 1974, Hayward was awarded the first of numerous ASCAP awards he has received for songwriting.
In 1985, the Moody Blues picked up the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, followed in 1988 by Hayward receiving the Ivor Novello Award, among other honours, for Composer of the Year for "I Know You're Out There Somewhere".
In 2004, Hayward was awarded the "Gold Badge" for lifetime achievement by the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA) to add to the "Golden Note" for lifetime achievement that he was awarded in 2000 by the American Society of Songwriters, Composers and Publishers (ASCAP) - one of only a handful of British artists to have received this award, the previous before Hayward being Elton John in 1991.
In a recent BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they have no plans to stop working and regarded it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music business and have people still want to see them perform and buy their music.
Hayward continues to tour and record with Moody Blues and as a solo artist. In April 2006, he took part in the stage tour of "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds' ". The show received outstanding reviews from audiences and critics alike and an international tour of the show is currently in the planning stage (June 2006).
Hayward has lived in Monte Carlo since 1996 with his wife, Marie (married December 1970). They have one daughter, Doremi Celeste (born December 1972).
Having played with local bands in the Swindon area since the age of 13, Hayward's professional career began in 1964 when he joined Marty Wilde and his wife, Joyce, in the Wilde Three. While still only 17, and against Wilde's advice, Hayward signed a publishing contract with the skiffle artist and record producer, Lonnie Donegan. This was a move that Hayward would go on to regret as it meant that the songwriter's and composer's rights to all the songs he wrote up until 1974 would forever be owned by Donegan's Tyler Music.
Hayward joined the Moody Blues in late 1966, replacing the departing vocalist, Denny Laine. Bassist John Lodge replaced Clint Warwick at the same time.
The integration of Hayward and Lodge into the Moody Blues sparked greater commercial success and recognition for the band, transforming them from a mainly covers band into one of the biggest selling acts of all-time. Their album sales from 1978 to date (2006) are in excess of 60 million. The exact figures for the bands' album sales from 1967 to 1978 have been contested in court as record company and accountants' figures differ considerably.
The 1967 album "Days of Future Passed", one of the first and most influential albums of its genre, spawned the Hayward-penned singles "Tuesday Afternoon" and the classic "Nights in White Satin" that went on to sell in excess of 2 million copies. Hayward also wrote "Question" (that was held off the No1 spot in the UK by the England 1970 World Cup Squad with "Back Home") as well as the majority of the group's other singles including "Driftwood" (1978), "The Voice" (1981), "Blue World" (1983), "Your Wildest Dreams" (1986), "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" (1988), "Bless the Wings" (1991), "English Sunset" (1999) and "Haunted" (1999).
In 1972, the group decided to take a break from performing and recording as a unit. During this time, Hayward found international solo success - in 1977, with his album, "Songwriter", and the first single from it, "One Lonely Room"; and in 1978, collaborating on the concept album "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds'" that yielded his hits "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War".
Hayward has also co-written songs with other members of the band during their career, most prolifically with the band's bassist/vocalist, John Lodge. Together, in 1975, they had a hit single, "Blue Guitar", and album, "Blue Jays".
During the 1980s, Hayward composed and performed for film and television, including the theme song, "It Won't Be Easy", for the 1987 BBC2 science fiction series, "Star Cops". He also wrote "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film "The Howling IV", "Eternal Woman" for the film "She" and music for "The Shoe People".
In 1989, with producer-arranger Mike Batt, Hayward released "Classic Blue" - an album of standards written by other composers, set to orchestration and arranged by Batt. His most recent solo album, "The View From The Hill", was released in 1996 and a live recording, "Live in San Juan Capistrano" followed in 1998.
In 1974, Hayward was awarded the first of numerous ASCAP awards he has received for songwriting.
In 1985, the Moody Blues picked up the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, followed in 1988 by Hayward receiving the Ivor Novello Award, among other honours, for Composer of the Year for "I Know You're Out There Somewhere".
In 2004, Hayward was awarded the "Gold Badge" for lifetime achievement by the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA) to add to the "Golden Note" for lifetime achievement that he was awarded in 2000 by the American Society of Songwriters, Composers and Publishers (ASCAP) - one of only a handful of British artists to have received this award, the previous before Hayward being Elton John in 1991.
In a recent BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they have no plans to stop working and regarded it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music business and have people still want to see them perform and buy their music.
Hayward continues to tour and record with Moody Blues and as a solo artist. In April 2006, he took part in the stage tour of "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds' ". The show received outstanding reviews from audiences and critics alike and an international tour of the show is currently in the planning stage (June 2006).
Hayward has lived in Monte Carlo since 1996 with his wife, Marie (married December 1970). They have one daughter, Doremi Celeste (born December 1972).
Show More
Genres:
Classic Rock, Rock
No upcoming shows in your city
Send a request to Justin Hayward to play in your city
Request a Show
concerts and tour dates
Upcoming
Past
all concerts & live streams
Show More Dates (25)
Live Photos of Justin Hayward

View All Photos
Justin Hayward's tour
Fan Reviews

Jack
April 22nd 2025
Terrific show from Justin and his ace band members!
The sound was excellent - every note, every instrument, and every word clearly audible.
Mr. Hayward was gracious, friendly - both with the appreciative audience and his stage mates.
Mike Dawes (no relation to Dawes the band) played a brief, but virtuoso warm-up for the crowd prior to Mr. Hayward's appearance. The songs were brilliantly performed - I marveled at how fresh Nights in White Satin sounded after perhaps the thousandth rendition by this R&R Hall of Famer. Justin relied on a stage full of guitars including his treasured red 335 Gibson - the only one he actually stopped to carry off at the finale. A guitar tech, a Josh Johnson, superbly handled the guitars for Mr. Hayward and Mr. Dawes throughout the performance and even came on stage for a few himself!
The venerable Sunrise Theatre, at 102 years old, was the perfect venue for this sort of performance.
This was one to remember!
Fort Pierce, FL@Sunrise Theatre

Blanche
December 6th 2024
A stellar performance, the exuberance was palpable . After attending innumerable performances over the decades, one might expect taking the pleasure for granted but such is not the case. Each has been singular, with tweaks and additions that genuinely delight, plus I'm in it for discovering new venues, seeing how Justin Hayward has evolved since 1966 to the present. He's at last able to share his deeper cuts, the ones that mattered most to him yet somehow never quite seemed to fit the Moody Blues collaborative studio approach and subsequent live setlists. So very much overdue, enthusiastically received, with audiences bringing both awe and affection for this songwriter and musician who at 78 can still rock the house like few others.
The Greensburg 15-tune setlist delivered substance also, namely: Tuesday Afternoon; Driftwood; Blue World; Living for Love; Hope and Pray; the 6-tune medley (The Day We Meet Again / One Lonely Room / Out and In / In My World / Meanwhile / Voices in the Sky); The Voice; Forever Autumn; Never Comes the Day; Your Wildest Dreams; Question; Nights in White Satin; The Story in Your Eyes; You and Me; and, I Know You're Out There Somewhere. The humility persists, as does his commitment to
continue touring, his sincere regard for his talented and equally ebullient troupe -- Mike Dawes, Karmen Gould, Julie Ragins, and recently his guitar tech Josh Johnson on a few tunes. They had the nearly 1,300 attendees jumping from their seats, cheering, applauding, transported back to Days of Future Passed, equally enjoying Living for Love, a reminiscence we all share.
The 9-date itinerary over Thanksgiving and into December snow was a lovely surprise. We didn't disappoint. Neither did Justin and his crew. Yes, the drive over the mountains in the gales and snow was a bit white-knuckled, both ways. But wouldn't have missed Greensburg for the world. Just the affirmation needed, an uplift when headlines are too often sordid, that goodness, generosity, and integrity remain, as they did in the 60s and 70s, the summer of love.
Greensburg, PA@The Palace Theatre

Tim
October 18th 2024
Absolutely brilliant! The songs were everything you could ask for & Justin's vibe was incredibly warm and friendly & his voice sounded fantastic - as expressive & youthful as ever.
Almost all the songs we most wanted to hear were played (including all the best known ones) -
the only one I'd especially liked to have heard that wasn't played was his "Lovely To See You" from the Moody Blues' "To Our Children's Children's Children" album.
As part of a medley he also played Mike Pinder's "Out And In" (also from the MB "..Children's..." album) -
which was fabulous & I'm guessing was, in part at least, a tribute to Mike, who passed away earlier this year.
There was only about 3 songs that I wasn't familiar with and they were all excellent too.
His band were great & the last song was "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" which was lovely & a very appropriate one to end on; as hopefully those who were there will all get to see him again at some point.
On which point; my wife Carrie and I will definitely go to see him again next time he tours the UK!
To sum up; it was one if the best gigs I've ever been too - thanks Justin and band!
Royal Tunbridge Wells, United Kingdom@Assembly Hall Theatre
View More Fan Reviews
About Justin Hayward
Justin Hayward (born David Justin Hayward, on 14 October 1946, in Swindon, England) is best known as the main singer, guitarist and composer with the Moody Blues.
Having played with local bands in the Swindon area since the age of 13, Hayward's professional career began in 1964 when he joined Marty Wilde and his wife, Joyce, in the Wilde Three. While still only 17, and against Wilde's advice, Hayward signed a publishing contract with the skiffle artist and record producer, Lonnie Donegan. This was a move that Hayward would go on to regret as it meant that the songwriter's and composer's rights to all the songs he wrote up until 1974 would forever be owned by Donegan's Tyler Music.
Hayward joined the Moody Blues in late 1966, replacing the departing vocalist, Denny Laine. Bassist John Lodge replaced Clint Warwick at the same time.
The integration of Hayward and Lodge into the Moody Blues sparked greater commercial success and recognition for the band, transforming them from a mainly covers band into one of the biggest selling acts of all-time. Their album sales from 1978 to date (2006) are in excess of 60 million. The exact figures for the bands' album sales from 1967 to 1978 have been contested in court as record company and accountants' figures differ considerably.
The 1967 album "Days of Future Passed", one of the first and most influential albums of its genre, spawned the Hayward-penned singles "Tuesday Afternoon" and the classic "Nights in White Satin" that went on to sell in excess of 2 million copies. Hayward also wrote "Question" (that was held off the No1 spot in the UK by the England 1970 World Cup Squad with "Back Home") as well as the majority of the group's other singles including "Driftwood" (1978), "The Voice" (1981), "Blue World" (1983), "Your Wildest Dreams" (1986), "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" (1988), "Bless the Wings" (1991), "English Sunset" (1999) and "Haunted" (1999).
In 1972, the group decided to take a break from performing and recording as a unit. During this time, Hayward found international solo success - in 1977, with his album, "Songwriter", and the first single from it, "One Lonely Room"; and in 1978, collaborating on the concept album "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds'" that yielded his hits "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War".
Hayward has also co-written songs with other members of the band during their career, most prolifically with the band's bassist/vocalist, John Lodge. Together, in 1975, they had a hit single, "Blue Guitar", and album, "Blue Jays".
During the 1980s, Hayward composed and performed for film and television, including the theme song, "It Won't Be Easy", for the 1987 BBC2 science fiction series, "Star Cops". He also wrote "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film "The Howling IV", "Eternal Woman" for the film "She" and music for "The Shoe People".
In 1989, with producer-arranger Mike Batt, Hayward released "Classic Blue" - an album of standards written by other composers, set to orchestration and arranged by Batt. His most recent solo album, "The View From The Hill", was released in 1996 and a live recording, "Live in San Juan Capistrano" followed in 1998.
In 1974, Hayward was awarded the first of numerous ASCAP awards he has received for songwriting.
In 1985, the Moody Blues picked up the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, followed in 1988 by Hayward receiving the Ivor Novello Award, among other honours, for Composer of the Year for "I Know You're Out There Somewhere".
In 2004, Hayward was awarded the "Gold Badge" for lifetime achievement by the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA) to add to the "Golden Note" for lifetime achievement that he was awarded in 2000 by the American Society of Songwriters, Composers and Publishers (ASCAP) - one of only a handful of British artists to have received this award, the previous before Hayward being Elton John in 1991.
In a recent BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they have no plans to stop working and regarded it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music business and have people still want to see them perform and buy their music.
Hayward continues to tour and record with Moody Blues and as a solo artist. In April 2006, he took part in the stage tour of "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds' ". The show received outstanding reviews from audiences and critics alike and an international tour of the show is currently in the planning stage (June 2006).
Hayward has lived in Monte Carlo since 1996 with his wife, Marie (married December 1970). They have one daughter, Doremi Celeste (born December 1972).
Having played with local bands in the Swindon area since the age of 13, Hayward's professional career began in 1964 when he joined Marty Wilde and his wife, Joyce, in the Wilde Three. While still only 17, and against Wilde's advice, Hayward signed a publishing contract with the skiffle artist and record producer, Lonnie Donegan. This was a move that Hayward would go on to regret as it meant that the songwriter's and composer's rights to all the songs he wrote up until 1974 would forever be owned by Donegan's Tyler Music.
Hayward joined the Moody Blues in late 1966, replacing the departing vocalist, Denny Laine. Bassist John Lodge replaced Clint Warwick at the same time.
The integration of Hayward and Lodge into the Moody Blues sparked greater commercial success and recognition for the band, transforming them from a mainly covers band into one of the biggest selling acts of all-time. Their album sales from 1978 to date (2006) are in excess of 60 million. The exact figures for the bands' album sales from 1967 to 1978 have been contested in court as record company and accountants' figures differ considerably.
The 1967 album "Days of Future Passed", one of the first and most influential albums of its genre, spawned the Hayward-penned singles "Tuesday Afternoon" and the classic "Nights in White Satin" that went on to sell in excess of 2 million copies. Hayward also wrote "Question" (that was held off the No1 spot in the UK by the England 1970 World Cup Squad with "Back Home") as well as the majority of the group's other singles including "Driftwood" (1978), "The Voice" (1981), "Blue World" (1983), "Your Wildest Dreams" (1986), "I Know You're Out There Somewhere" (1988), "Bless the Wings" (1991), "English Sunset" (1999) and "Haunted" (1999).
In 1972, the group decided to take a break from performing and recording as a unit. During this time, Hayward found international solo success - in 1977, with his album, "Songwriter", and the first single from it, "One Lonely Room"; and in 1978, collaborating on the concept album "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds'" that yielded his hits "Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War".
Hayward has also co-written songs with other members of the band during their career, most prolifically with the band's bassist/vocalist, John Lodge. Together, in 1975, they had a hit single, "Blue Guitar", and album, "Blue Jays".
During the 1980s, Hayward composed and performed for film and television, including the theme song, "It Won't Be Easy", for the 1987 BBC2 science fiction series, "Star Cops". He also wrote "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film "The Howling IV", "Eternal Woman" for the film "She" and music for "The Shoe People".
In 1989, with producer-arranger Mike Batt, Hayward released "Classic Blue" - an album of standards written by other composers, set to orchestration and arranged by Batt. His most recent solo album, "The View From The Hill", was released in 1996 and a live recording, "Live in San Juan Capistrano" followed in 1998.
In 1974, Hayward was awarded the first of numerous ASCAP awards he has received for songwriting.
In 1985, the Moody Blues picked up the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, followed in 1988 by Hayward receiving the Ivor Novello Award, among other honours, for Composer of the Year for "I Know You're Out There Somewhere".
In 2004, Hayward was awarded the "Gold Badge" for lifetime achievement by the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers and Authors (BASCA) to add to the "Golden Note" for lifetime achievement that he was awarded in 2000 by the American Society of Songwriters, Composers and Publishers (ASCAP) - one of only a handful of British artists to have received this award, the previous before Hayward being Elton John in 1991.
In a recent BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they have no plans to stop working and regarded it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music business and have people still want to see them perform and buy their music.
Hayward continues to tour and record with Moody Blues and as a solo artist. In April 2006, he took part in the stage tour of "Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of H G Wells' 'The War of the Worlds' ". The show received outstanding reviews from audiences and critics alike and an international tour of the show is currently in the planning stage (June 2006).
Hayward has lived in Monte Carlo since 1996 with his wife, Marie (married December 1970). They have one daughter, Doremi Celeste (born December 1972).
Show More
Genres:
Classic Rock, Rock
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