In 1974, the Moody Blues decided to take what ended up being a four-year break from performing and recording. Hayward continued working with Lodge and producer
Tony Clarke, using musicians from the Moody Blues' label,
Threshold, and sounding very much like the mother group. Together, they had a hit in 1975 with "Blue Guitar" (a Hayward recording with the band
10cc) and released an album titled
Blue Jays. In 1977, Hayward recorded his first solo album
Songwriter. He enjoyed international solo success in 1978 when he appeared on ''
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds''
concept album, which yielded his hits "
Forever Autumn" and "The Eve of the War". Wayne later contributed to Hayward's 1980 album
Night Flight. Hayward issued a rare non-album single "Marie" backed by "Heart of Steel' (Decca F13834) in April 1979, both sides composed by him, the 'A' side dedicated to his wife. These tracks were later included among the bonus tracks on a CD reissue of his
Songwriter solo album in 2004. 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, "Something Evil, Something Dangerous" for the film
Howling IV: The Original Nightmare, "Eternal Woman" for the film
She and music for the animated television series
The Shoe People. In 1989, with producer-arranger
Mike Batt, Hayward released
Classic Blue, an album of pop standards written by other song writers set to
orchestration arranged by Batt.
Classic Blue included a version of
Led Zeppelin's hit "
Stairway to Heaven". Hayward's solo album
The View from the Hill was released in 1996 and a live recording,
Live in San Juan Capistrano, followed in 1998. On 10 March 1997, Hayward was featured on the
BBC One's programme
This Is Your Life with
Michael Aspel. Hayward contributed vocals to a song on
Rick Wakeman's 1999 album
Return to the Centre of the Earth. In June 2003, he gave several performances at the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Later that year, he sang along with other rock singers on another orchestral album, consisting of Moody Blues songs with the Frankfurt Rock Orchestra, titled
Justin Hayward and Friends Perform the Hits of the Moody Blues (alternatively called
Justin Hayward and Friends Sing the Moody Blues Classic Hits). Hayward was later involved in a legal dispute, since resolved, arguing he was not paid for his participation on the album. In April 2006, Hayward took part in the stage tour of ''
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds'', reprising his role in autumn 2007 in Australia and in the UK in December 2007. He did so again in the UK in June 2009 and appeared on the tour in November and December 2010. The Moody Blues, with Hayward, Lodge and original drummer
Graeme Edge, continued to tour extensively, and in a
BBC World Service interview, Hayward and Lodge made it clear they had no plans to stop working, regarding it as "a privilege" to still be working in the music industry. In an interview in 2005, Edge said if he remained in good health, he could go on for 10 more years. On 10 December 2011, Hayward, along with
Ian Anderson from
Jethro Tull and
Bruce Dickinson from
Iron Maiden, played a concert together at
Canterbury Cathedral. In February 2013, Hayward released his solo album
Spirits of the Western Sky on the
Eagle Rock label. He toured solo with this album on the East coast of the US in August 2013, to much acclaim, with Moody Blues keyboardist Alan Hewitt and vocalist Julie Ragins. The opening act and accompanying guitarist in the main show was UK's
Mike Dawes. The final show of the solo tour, in
Atlanta, was recorded by producer/director
David Minasian for a live DVD project and a live CD. Recorded at the Buckhead Theatre on 17 August, the resulting DVD,
Spirits… Live (2014), features the full concert along with a one-hour behind-the-scenes documentary titled
On The Road To Love depicting Hayward's 2013 American tour, also directed by Minasian. Following its release by Eagle Rock/Universal in August 2014, the DVD immediately rose to the No. 2 position on the Billboard Music Video charts and would soon be broadcast by the
PBS network. Two additional Hayward/Minasian collaborations quickly followed: a concert DVD filmed in Clearwater, Florida, titled
Watching and Waiting, and
The Story Behind Nights in White Satin, a documentary which chronicled the origins of Hayward's classic 1967 composition. In April 2015, Hayward was interviewed on BBC Radio 2's
Johnnie Walker show. The spring of 2016 saw another Hayward release from producer/director David Minasian. Titled
Live in Concert at the Capitol Theatre, the DVD contained a few surprises including the first live performance of "You Can Never Go Home" from the 1971
Every Good Boy Deserves Favour LP. Also featured was a bonus studio recording of a new song titled "The Wind of Heaven", a joint composition between Minasian and Hayward. Intended as the main theme for a forthcoming motion picture, the song, with an elaborate music video directed by Minasian, was released ahead of schedule on the DVD to coincide with Hayward's 2016 US solo tour. Hayward performed during the "On the Blue Cruise" in February 2019. He postponed some tour dates following the cruise "due to a medical condition that prevents me from doing extensive traveling in the next few weeks." In 2022, Hayward rejoined the cast of Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of The War of the Worlds' "Life Begins Again" tour, reprising his role as the Sung Thoughts of the Journalist. ==Instruments==