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"A New World Record"

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (77 ratings)
01
Tightrope
5:05
$0.99
02
Telephone Line
4:40
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03
Rockaria!
3:13
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04
Mission (A World Record)
4:26
$0.99
05
So Fine
3:55
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06
Livin' Thing
3:32
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07
Above The Clouds
2:17
$0.99
08
Do Ya
3:45
$0.99
09
Shangri-La
5:34
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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 36:27

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eMusic Review 0

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Mike McGonigal

eMusic Contributor

Mike McGonigal is editorial director for YETI publishing and the author of three little music books. He lives in Portland, OR, where he spends his time assembli...more »

04.22.11
A driven, baroque and nerdily innocent stunner from start to finish
1986 | Label: Epic

ELO's second-best album, A New World Record, is a stunner from start to finish. It's no surprise that this was their first big hit: the '76 release included the finest disco-doo wop number the Beatles never got to write ("Telephone Line"); the bizarre flamenco rocker "Livin 'Thing"; the absurd retro mini-opera "Rockaria!"; and maybe their most balls-out jam ever, a re-recording of the Move classic "Do Ya," wherein Jeff Lynne's gruff shout of "woman!" in the chorus is beyond cute — it's like watching an Ewok flip you the bird.

There's something almost savant-like about ELO leader Jeff Lynne's approach to music; his work is driven and baroque, yet nerdily innocent at the same time. His best works could be said to be like the first three Star Wars films: they're as epic as they are silly, but if you haven't fallen in love with them — what the hell is wrong with you? Do you just hate fun?

The non-hits on the album are just as strong; nothing here sounds like filler. "Tightrope" pits lean rockabilly licks against almost-atonal strings and medieval voices. By the time you get to "Above the Clouds (Paris to Manchester)," a gorgeous little "Gene… read more »

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so fine

thegrandwazoo

chateau ELO 1976 -- big, full bodied, complex, and yet balanced...crisp delicate finish...lingering...

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As great as ever

Ah...Clem

Bought this when it came out in '76 and it stayed on the turntable for a month. Get the whole album.

user avatar

Can Jeff Lynn top this?

EMUSIC-00F5DCDA

This album is BRILLIANT! There's not a filler in the mix. The band does a great job too. Richard Tandy sounds particulary great with the keys. Don't buy singles. Buy the album. All good - front to back.

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They Say All Music Guide

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). – Bruce Eder

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