John Lodge, longtime bassist and singer in the Moody Blues and writer of the band’s hits like “Ride My See-Saw” and “Isn’t Life Strange,” has died at the age of 82
Lodge’s death was announced Friday by his family in a statement posted on the Moody Blues’ social media accounts. While no cause of death was provided, his family said he died “suddenly and unexpectedly,” and that he “peacefully slipped away surrounded by his loved-ones and the sounds of The Everly Brothers and Buddy Holly.”
“As anyone who knew this massive hearted man knows, it was his enduring love of his wife, Kirsten, and his family, that was the most important thing to him, followed by his passion for music, and his faith,” Lodge’s family said in a statement.
“He was never happier than being on stage – he was ‘Just a ‘Singer in a Rock and Roll Band’ and he adored performing with his band and son-in-law, Jon (vocalist with YES), and being able to continue sharing this music with his fans.”
Lodge joined the Moody Blues — who already had a hit with their 1964 rendition of “Go Now” — in 1966, replacing founding bassist Clint Warwick; lead singer and guitarist Justin Hayward also joined the group around this time, forming the band’s “classic” lineup that spanned a decade and eight studio albums together.
“In 1967, Graeme Edge, Mike Pinder, Ray Thomas, Justin Hayward and myself, along with our producer Tony Clarke, went into the Decca recording studio in London, England, and so days later, we came out with an album that changed our lives forever,” Lodge said in 2018 during his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction speech. “The album Days of Future Passed. And I’d like to thank American radios for supporting us for five decades. And the belief in us has just been tremendous and has given us encouragement to keep going, and doing everything we love to do and that’s make music.”
Beginning with 1967’s Days of Future Passed through the 2003 Christmas album December, Lodge wrote and sang on tracks like “Eyes of a Child,” “Isn’t Life Strange,” “I’m Just a Singer (In a Rock and Roll Band),” and “Ride My See-Saw.”
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The Moody Blues’ Lodge-penned songs also included their 1978 comeback single “Steppin’ in a Slide Zone,” 1981’s “Talking Out of Turn,” 1983’s “Sitting at the Wheel,” and 1988’s “Here Comes the Weekend.”
Amid lineup changes, Lodge remained a member of the Moody Blues for the remainder of the group’s existence, appearing on 15 of the band’s 16 studio albums, as well as a touring member until 2018, when the group retired. Outside of the Moody Blues, Lodge released a trio of solo albums, as well as 1975’s Blue Jays alongside Hayward during the band’s mid-Seventies hiatus.
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“We will forever miss his love, smile, kindness, and his absolute and never-ending support,” Lodge’s family added Friday. “We are heartbroken, but will walk forward into peace surrounded by the love he had for each of us. As John would always say at the end of the show, thank you for keeping the faith.”
Lodge is the fourth major member of the Moody Blues to die in recent years, all of whom died following the band’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2018: Founding drummer Graeme Edge died in 2021, original vocalist Denny Laine died in 2023, and founding keyboardist Mike Pinder died in 2024. Founding flutist Ray Thomas died in January 2018, just months before the Rock Hall induction.