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Showing posts with label elo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elo. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Eldorado

I am writing this post as I am lying in bed.  These cold days and nights are somewhat weakening, making the nighttime a place to unwind and get into a different element than you were during the day.  I have spent most of the night just hanging around, but as I usually do, I went on Spotify to listen to some relaxing instrumental music.  Some include Disney/Disney-Pixar scores, Alan Silvestri, etc...  But since I have been listening to the same songs for a few days now, I looked elsewhere to find nighttime comfort.  The biggest go-to for me is Electric Light Orchestra.  Jeff Lynne's chilling yet soothing vocal effects, his use of orchestral accompaniments, and transitions between tracks, are all perfect for submitting your mind into a different thought zone, allowing for the dismissal of problems and situations of typical every day life.

Despite these feelings of content and satisfaction, I am never one to listen to an album straight through.  I get distracted and will end up pausing and skipping to the tracks I love the most.  But my tiredness got the best of me tonight, and I did what my dad has been telling me to do for a month:  I am listening to ELO's Eldorado from beginning to end with no interruptions.

[Photo:  Electric Light Orchestra]

It's an album I've known my entire life, but knowing each song individually is different from knowing them all as one piece.  The opening track "Eldorado Overture" flows unnoticeably into the second, "Can't Get It out of My Head."  So unnoticeably, as a matter of fact, that when you are listening to the vinyl, you  would think it is one long track.  So unnoticeably, that when you are listening, your heart and time somewhat stop ticking.  But unlike some other heart-stopping music, your heart doesn't begin again at all until the album is over, and it's only because of the realization that it's over, and life doesn't actually flow that way.

The whole album has one main theme, and the songs are connected somehow, whether it be by the overture or the song before, it almost feels as though you are reading a book.  I have noticed a lot how several albums don't have something tying all of the songs together.  Either the songs are too different in sound or meaning, or they could even all sound too similar, blending all of the pieces together so no songs stick out.  A common occurrence with ELO is balance between differentiation and similarity between tracks.  While "Boy Blue" and "Nobody's Child" sound different within, what connects them is their similar intros (they're also several tracks away from each other).

The album comes to a faded end, with the second to last track being "Eldorado," which is much slower than some of its predecessors.  But once again it transitions flawlessly into the final track, "Eldorado Finale,"  which is symmetrical to the overture; the beginning of the overture is the end of the finale, and the end of the overture is the beginning of the finale.  Lay down, close your eyes, and listen to this album (with headphones, not earbuds) from beginning to end with no interruptions.  It will almost feel as though you are watching an opera, each song presenting a different scene with different emotions being presented and provoked.  Even though there are different emotions, the whole opera makes sense because of one ongoing theme and message.  And if Jeff Lynne and the rest of ELO did not do a phenomenal job of this, then maybe music isn't the field for me.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Evil Woman

1975 was a big year for music.  In January, three Led Zeppelin shows at MSG sold out in record time.  March was the month the movie version of The Who's Tommy premiered in London (although that movie was atrocious).  And in November, Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" reached number one where it will remain for nine weeks.  Also, several bands were formed that year including Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, Iron Maiden, and the Sex Pistols.

But aside from all of those exciting things, my dad sat front row at an Electric Light Orchestra concert.

My dad had somewhat forgotten about that concert until his friend sent out an e-mail with pictures he had taken from the show (the pictures below).

The year, of course, was 1975 and he and his buddies went to the Convention Hall in Asbury Park, NJ to see one of their favorite bands.  ELO had just released their 1975 album Face the Music in September and their first single from the album in October, "Evil Woman."

So that is what Jeff Lynne's eyes look like!  If you look at the first picture, Lynne is not wearing sunglasses.  He doesn't seem to take them off anymore.

I think these are really cool pictures.  Not only is the view amazing, but the black background really makes Jeff Lynne, Hugh McDowell, Mik Kaminski, and Melvyn Gale "pop" with all of their brightly colored clothes.  Nice style, 1975.

 [Photo:  Louis]

[Photo:  Louis]

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Father's Day

Happy Father's Day to all of the fathers out there!  In honor of this day, I thought I would make today's post dedicated to my dear father.
My dad loves music as much as - if not more than - I do.  Every Saturday night (and any other night he cooks dinner instead of my mom) he has music playing over the stereo.  He puts together a playlist, usually themed, using his 10,000+ library.  He actually ran out of room on iTunes and now has other songs on a drive.  People sometimes even ask my dad to make the playlist for a party they are having because he does such a good job.  So, to honor my dad's amazing work, I put together a list of my dad's favorite artists.


  1. Thunder Road - Bruce Springsteen
  2. Telephone Line - Electric Light Orchestra
  3. Tommy (the whole album) - The Who
  4. Aqualung - Jethro Tull
  5. Already Gone - The Eagles
  6. Open Arms - Journey
  7. Peggy Sue - Buddy Holly
  8. Billion Dollar Babies - Alice Cooper
  9. La Grange - ZZ Top
  10. Cocaine Blues - Johnny Cash

Monday, January 28, 2013

A New World Record

Side One:
1. Tightrope
2. Telephone Line
3. Rockaria!
4. Mission (A World Record)

Side Two:
1. So Fine
2. Livin' Thing
3. Above the Clouds
4. Do Ya
5. Shangri-la

Electric Light Orchestra's "A New World Record" is probably one of my favorite records, which is why I'm including it in my theme this week. The whole record - and most ELO - was written and produced by Jeff Lynne. My favorite song on the record (if I had to pick) is definitely "Telephone Line". I know it sounds a little cliché because everyone knows it, but I can't help it. The lyrics and the meaning behind the lyrics are amazing.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Electric Light Orchestra

It has arrived! My parents bought ELO's "Mr. Blue Sky: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra" from Amazon. The album contains different and new versions of certain songs, and knowing how talented ELO is, the new versions should not be a fail.