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Emerson Lake & Palmer [Remaster]

Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Release Date: 04/24/2007
Original Release:  1970
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 980750_CD
UPC # 826663104479
Label: Shout! Factory
Buying Info
 
Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Barbarian, The
2. Take a Pebble
3. Knife-Edge
4. The Three Fates / Lachesis / Atropos
5. Tank
6. Lucky Man

Performer: Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Engineer: Eddie Offord
Producer: Greg Lake; Derek Dressler (Reissue)
Distributor: Sony Music Distribution (

Notes: Audio Remasterer: Andy Pearce. When Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer left the Nice, King Crimson, and Atomic Rooster, respectively, they created the first prog-rock supergroup. ELP's 1971 debut was full of just as much bombast, technical facility, and brash classical-rock fusion as prog admirers could have hoped. A large part of the band's appeal was the keyboard mastery of Emerson, who shows both superhuman chops and sophisticated compositional abilities on the classically tinged instrumental "The Barbarian," which opens the album. "Take a Pebble" and "Lucky Man" represent the more pop-oriented ballad side of the ELP sound, for which bassist and singer Greg Lake is chiefly responsible. The instrumental epics "The Three Fates" and "Tank" find all three musicians interacting at a furious level, throwing awe-inspiring licks around with uncanny ease, with plenty of octopus-armed drumming from Carl Palmer. Epic, ambitious, and overflowing with technical mastery, EMERSON, LAKE AND PALMER paved the way for the prog rock phenomenon of the '70s.
Rolling Stone (4/15/71, p.42) - "...This is such a good album, it is best heard as a whole..."
Emerson, Lake & Palmer were one of the most popular of the initial wave of 1970s British prog-rock bands. They sported post-British Invasion rock's first alternative to the guitar hero in Keith Emerson, whose outlandish keyboard antics rivaled the onstage pyrotechnics of Hendrix and Townshend. The group mixed heavy rock riffs with classical influences, relying equally on instrumental virtuosity and an epic sense of showmanship that won them countless fans in their '70s heyday.
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Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.25

PID # 4165013


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