Electric Light Orchestra – The Electric Light Orchestra (1972/2015) [Official Digital Download 24bit/192kHz]

Electric Light Orchestra – The Electric Light Orchestra (1972/2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 41:29 minutes | 1,51 GB | Genre: Rock
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Epic/Associated

The Electric Light Orchestra is the debut studio album by English rock band Electric Light Orchestra (ELO), released in December 1971. In the US, the album was released in early 1972 as No Answer, after a misunderstood telephone message made by a United Artists Records executive asking about the album name. The caller, having failed to reach the ELO contact, wrote down “no answer” in his notes, and this was misconstrued to be the name of the album.

Electric Light Orchestra’s debut album is an astonishing creation in its own right, but neophyte listeners should be aware that it bears very little resemblance to the sound for which ELO would become known on its subsequent records. No Answer, as it ended up being called in America through a miscommunication with ELO’s U.S. label, is a minimalist work by comparison with anything on the band’s later albums. The core trio of Roy Wood, Jeff Lynne, and Bev Bevan, augmented by one horn player and a violinist, approaches the music alternately like a hard rock band attacking a song and a string ensemble playing a chamber piece. Filled with surprisingly loose playing and sounds throughout, and with a psychedelic aura hovering over most of the music, No Answer is unique in ELO’s output. Written and sung by Lynne, “10538 Overture” is the opener and the best song on the album. Wood’s “Look at Me Now,” by comparison, plays like a sweet, melodic follow-up to “Beautiful Daughter” from the Move’s Shazam, with some digressions on the oboe and a cello and violin subbing for the guitars. The rest moves from period-style popular songs to strangely cinematic conceptual pieces, on which the rock elements almost disappear in favor of quasi-classical playing by all concerned. A beautiful acoustic guitar workout by Wood, “1st Movement” also features the song’s composer on the oboe, while “Mr. Radio,” an exercise in 1920s nostalgia written and sung by Lynne, digresses for a moment into 1940s-style classical piano pyrotechnics. His “Whisper in the Night” ends the album with a lean and textured acoustic sound that, ironically, disappeared from ELO’s repertory when he exited the lineup following these sessions.

Tracklist:

01. Electric Light Orchestra – 10538 Overture (05:31)
02. Electric Light Orchestra – Look at Me Now (03:17)
03. Electric Light Orchestra – Nellie Takes Her Bow (05:59)
04. Electric Light Orchestra – Battle of Marston Moor (July 2nd, 1644) (06:03)
05. Electric Light Orchestra – First Movement (Jumping Biz) (03:00)
06. Electric Light Orchestra – Mr. Radio (05:04)
07. Electric Light Orchestra – Manhattan Rumble (49th Street Massacre) (04:22)
08. Electric Light Orchestra – Queen of the Hours (03:22)
09. Electric Light Orchestra – Whisper in the Night (04:47)