Crossword clues for moods
moods
- They may swing
- Elton "Four ___"
- What Rilo Kiley was "Capturing"?
- Various emotional states
- They might swing
- They may have swings
- They may be subject to swings
- They may be indicated by rings
- Subjunctive and indicative
- States subject to swings
- Some are good and some are bad
- Psychological states
- Prevailing psychological states
- Neil Diamond album for anytime?
- Inspirations for some boards
- Indicative and subjunctive
- Imperative and subjunctive
- Emotional temperaments
- Color-changing rings "read" them
- Agony and ecstasy
- '72 Neil Diamond album
- Ambiances
- Imperative and subjunctive, e.g
- They sometimes swing
- Climates
- They can swing
- Dispositions
- Periods of sullenness
- General attitudes
- Verbs and people have them
- Feelings
- Imperative and indicative
- Varying humors
- Indicative and subjunctive, e.g
- What verbs and people have
- States of mind
- Emotional states
- Frames of mind
- Red and blue states?
- People and verbs have them
- Highs and lows, perhaps
- They're subject to swings
Wiktionary
n. (plural of mood English)
Wikipedia
Moods is the eighth studio album by Neil Diamond, released by Uni Records in 1972. It contained the second of his #1 songs, " Song Sung Blue", and was something of a follow-up in style to the highly experimental Tap Root Manuscript.
Billboard praised Moods highly, saying it contained "brilliant, diversified material." This album, and its follow-up live album Hot August Night, are generally acknowledged to be the two most important recording projects of Diamond's career in terms of defining his signature sound for the future. Within the music industry and among music professionals this is considered one of Diamond's better and more creative recordings. It received a Grammy Award nomination for Album of the Year for 1972. Lee Holdridge was the arranger and conductor of the orchestra.
Moods is a studio album by American country music singer, Barbara Mandrell, released in September 1978.
Moods became Mandrell's most successful album during her career up to this point. The album spawned two singles, both of which became #1 country hits, "Sleeping Single in a Double Bed" and a remake of the popular Luther Ingram R&B hit, "(If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want to Be Right". Both singles also charted on the Pop and Adult Contemporary charts. "If Loving You Is Wrong" became Mandrell's only Top 40 Pop hit, peaking at #31 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart. The popularity of these singles made "Moods" a success, peaking at #8 on the Top Country Albums chart - her highest charting album at that time. The album peaked on the Billboard 200 at #132.
Moods consisted of 10 tracks, ranging from sultry ballads to bouncy pop tunes. The album foreshadowed the success Mandrell would have well into the 1980s, when she would achieve more best-selling albums and reach the pinnacle of her career. She would become one of the few women to win "Entertainer of the Year" (and the first person to ever win it twice) from the Country Music Association and would also win American Music Awards and two Grammy awards.
Moods is an album by jazz group The Three Sounds released in 1961 on the Blue Note label. It was recorded the same day Feelin' Good was recorded.
Moods is an album by American jazz pianist Mal Waldron, recorded in 1978, and released by the Enja label. Originally released as a double LP, the CD reissue omitted three of the piano solos (which were included as bonus tracks on the CD reissue of One-Upmanship) to fit onto one compact disc and altered the running order; a later CD reissue reinstated Waldron's " Soul Eyes".
Moods (also referred to as Moods Featuring Paul Quinichette) is the 1954 debut album by American jazz saxophonist Paul Quinichette featuring compositions and arrangements by Quincy Jones released on the EmArcy label. The tracks were recorded on two session dates in November 1954 with two different line-ups, an (almost) regular jazz sextet with flutist Sam Most as second horn player and two guitarists. The second session featured an Afro-Cuban combo with Herbie Mann on flute and also on tenor saxophone and Latin percussion instead of a drum set. The difference between the two sessions was preserved in splitting the album with the later recorded Latin jazz session on the LP's A-side, the more straight ahead approach on the other.
Usage examples of "moods".
In certain moods Elgar could not change from one seat to another without its being brought to his mind that he had moved by necessity.
Eleanor, and the dark moods which now and then held her in sullen solitude.
From that moment on, his temper was less hair-trigger, his moods less black.
He was still given to dark moods, sudden rages, bleak depressions--but the patches of sunlight lasted longer all the time, the smiles came more frequently, he was beginning to make jokes.
Even in its quieter moods, the surging stream, foaming down the middle of a rock-strewn floodplain many times wider than itself, had the greenish, cloudy cast of glacial runoff.
And I have felt a good deal of secret contempt for her father, with his moods and tenses, his pill-boxes and his plasters, his feastings and his fastings.
I think a mother, especially, ought to learn to enter into the gayer moods of her children at the very moment when her own heart is sad.
Margaret Cooper--ardent, commanding, and impatient, hourly found occasion, even in the secluded village where she dwelt, for the exercise of moods equally adverse to propriety and happiness.
In a moment, with the acquisition of new moods, he had acquired a new aspect.
They did not lessen her sense of suffering, perhaps, but they were not without their effect in producing other moods, which, once taken in company with the darker ones of the soul, may, in time, succeed in alleviating them.
The soul takes its color from the cloud, and changes its moods as often.
Dark and terrible were the excited moods in which she retired from her toils to that slumber which she could not always secure.
He had a penchant For being cruel, and his moods changed like the wind.
Besides, he knew and understood Paula much better than anyone else did, and he had always been able to accurately gauge her moods, even when she was putting up a front.
As a child she had often been the victim of his whims and moods and temperamental outbursts.