A New World Record [Bonus Tracks] [Remaster]Electric Light Orchestra
Release Date: 09/12/2006
Original Release:
1976
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 859756_CD
UPC # 696998542228
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Disc: 1
12.
Tightrope - (Instrumental Early Rough Mix, previously unreleased, instrumental, bonus track)
14.
So Fine - (Instrumental Early Rough Mix, previously unreleased, instrumental, bonus track)
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Electric Light Orchestra
Engineer: Ryan Ulyate; Marc Mann; Dick Plant; Duane Scott; John Richards Producer: Jeff Lynne; Jeff Lynne; Jeff Lynne (Reissue); Jeff Magid (Reissue) Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Also available in a 3-pack with FACE THE MUSIC and DISCOVERY. Electric Light Orchestra: Jeff Lynne, Bev Bevan, Richard Tandy, Kelly Groucutt, Mik Kaminski, Hugh McDowell, Melvyn Gale. Electric Light Orchestra: Mik Kaminski (violin); Richard Tandy (piano, Moog synthesizer); Kelly Groucutt, Hugh McDowell, Melvyn Gale, Jeff Lynne, Bev Bevan. Personnel: Jeff Lynne (vocals, guitar, slide guitar, Wurlitzer organ, percussion); Kelly Groucutt (vocals, bass guitar, percussion, background vocals); Richard Tandy (guitar, grand piano, electric piano, Clavinet, Wurlitzer organ, Mellotron, mini-Moog synthesizer, percussion, background vocals); Mik Kaminski, Hugh McDowell, Melvyn Gale (cello); Bev Bevan (mini-Moog synthesizer, drums, percussion, background vocals). Liner Note Authors: Jeff Lynne; Rob Caiger. Recording information: De Lane Lea Studios, London, England; Musicland Studios, Munich, Germany. Illustrator: Kosh. Photographers: Kosh; Andrew Kent; Barry Plummer. 1976's A NEW WORLD RECORD is both a classic of commercial '70s pop and an archetypal ELO album. From the outer-space synths and rich orchestrations that open the album to Jeff Lynne's meticulous production and Beatlesque melodies, A NEW WORLD RECORD is magnificent ear candy. Both ambitious enough to appeal to "serious" rock fans and ultra-catchy enough to sound terrific on Top 40 radio (the plaintively gorgeous, McCartney-like "Telephone Line" and the anthemic "Livin' Thing" were well-deserved smashes), ELO was one of the few '70s bands whose appeal covered both the FM and AM spectrums. The album even resurrects "Do Ya," a classic single by Lynne's former band, the Move, in a splashy new version. The next ELO album, 1977's elaborate double-album OUT OF THIS WORLD, was probably the band's commercial high point, but A NEW WORLD RECORD is the group's artistic high-water mark. Jeff Lynne reportedly regards this album and its follow-up, Out of the Blue, as the high points in the band's history. One might be better off opting for A New World Record over its successor, however, as a more modest-sized creation chock full of superb songs that are produced even better. Opening with the opulently orchestrated "Tightrope," which heralds the perfect production found throughout this album, A New World Record contains seven of the best songs ever to come out of the group. The Beatles influence is present, to be sure, but developed to a very high degree of sophistication and on Lynne's own terms, rather than being imitative of specific songs. "Telephone Line" might be the best Lennon-McCartney collaboration that never was, lyrical and soaring in a way that manages to echo elements of Revolver and the Beatles without ever mimicking them. The original LP's second side opened with "So Fine," which seems like the perfect pop synthesis of guitar, percussion, and orchestral sounds, embodying precisely what Lynne had first set out to do with Roy Wood at the moment ELO was conceived. From there, the album soars through stomping rock numbers like "Livin' Thing" and "Do Ya," interspersed with lyrical pieces like "Above the Clouds" (which makes striking use of pizzicato bass strings). Of all the ELO albums that deserved a Mobile Fidelity-style audiophile treatment (and never got it), A New World Record was the one, if only because it was ELO's most finely realized album, their Revolver or Sgt. Pepper's. It finally arrived in the late summer of 2006, sounding magnificent, although it's something of a tribute to the material here that some of the interim remasterings of the material on it, as part of anthologies such as the Flashback triple-CD set, were pretty damn good, too -- the upgraded sound and the volume pushed harder (like to the limit) has brought out the full majesty of the arrangement used on "Do Ya" and imparted greater impact to songs such as "Telephone Line" and "Livin' Thing." And then there are the outtakes -- "Telephone Line" with an alternate vocal track is intriguing, but the real treat is "Surrender," a stunning hook-laden piece of pop/rock that ought to have been a single (and surely would have been a hit); its presence alone would justify buying this CD, and if it were the only new element here, it would have made the effort behind this release worthwhile. And instrumental mixes of "Tightope," "Above the Clouds," "So Fine," and "Telephone Line" aren't just icing on the cake -- they're practically a whole extra cake, making this one very full musical meal, even for those who don't love the original album. The annotation isn't quite as thorough as what has appeared in other reissues in this series, but that's the only place where this CD lags even a little bit, in terms of telling about each song. ~ Bruce Eder
ELO began as an outgrowth of '60s UK psych-rockers the Move and the Idle Race, but when former Move frontman Roy Wood departed early in the game, Jeff Lynne fashioned the band as a high-tech Beatles for the '70s. Featuring a full-time string section, ELO picked up where "Strawberry Fields" left off, creating orchestral Britpop without the pretense of prog-rock. The band's slick, lush sound helped define '70s pop, and proved influential decades later to the likes of Air and the Polyphonic Spree.
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