All Over The World: The Very Best Of ELO

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All Over The World: The Very Best Of ELO album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 77:44

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Must Buy

emusic-mopmonkey

I have three young boys who never heard of ELO. When I started playing the album the boys couldn't believe how great the sounded

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Strange Magic

djsully

It's not only the title of one of these great songs, it is an apt description of ELOs musical genius. If you are new to ELO, this is a great place to start. Once you jump in, you'll be hooked. Jeff Lynne and ELO, and later the Traveling Wilburys produce music that is fun to listen to, sing along with and set your mood just right. Enjoy these GEMs of the late 70s early 80s that echo disco, jazz fusion, funk and British influenced world music. Look for Midnight Blue and Last Train to London on their other albums. Not to be missed.

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Covers most of their best

EMUSIC-01F1A2DE

This album covers most of the best of ELO. There were several earlier songs - Do Ya, Roll Over Beethoven, Can't Get It Out of My Head - that I missed. Overall a good collection at a good value.

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ELO

TroyTroy

What can you say, this is a classic of all time. I recommend the whole album.

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Sounds great!

DavidB

Downloaded the album. Listened to few selections and they sound great. I must agree with another reviwer about the "entire album" concept. But this one only cost me 12 credits vs. all 20. Still a good deal.

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Forgotten classics

EMUSIC-00E0D9E8

This album is filled with forgotten classics. A few, like the cover song for Xanadu could afford to be lost in time but all in all a great album. Part of the good side of eMusic prices going up (but I still liked the lower prices better).

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They Say All Music Guide

Epic/Legacy’s 2005 release All Over the World: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra is the latest installment in the seemingly endless series of ELO comps. Since it follows 2003′s handy single-disc The Essential Electric Light Orchestra by merely two years, it’s easy to wonder what distinguishes this from the other ELO collections on the market, and whether it was necessary to release another single-disc set so quickly after the last. The biggest differences between All Over the World and Essential is that the 2005 release has some very nice but altogether too brief liner notes from Jeff Lynne along with five more tracks than the 15-track 2003 release. That doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s a better album, however. While it does contain the terrific “Showdown,” which was missing from Essential, All Over the World is inexplicably missing ELO’s first American Top Ten single, “Can’t Get It out of My Head,” along with such other key tracks as “Do Ya,” “Calling America,” “Roll Over Beethoven,” “10538 Overture,” and “Boy Blue.” Although the presence of “Xanadu” and such album tracks as “The Diary of Horace Wimp” make up for some of these absences, there are too many good songs missing to make this a pick over Essential, which has a higher ratio of hits. That said, All Over the World has most of the big songs — “Mr. Blue Sky,” “Evil Woman,” “Don’t Bring Me Down,” “Sweet Talkin’ Woman,” “Turn to Stone,” “Hold on Tight,” “Livin’ Thing,” “Ma-Ma-Ma Belle,” “Strange Magic,” and “Rock and Roll Is King” among them — and it’s a good listen, so most casual fans won’t be disappointed if this is the only ELO disc they own (although they will sorely miss “Can’t Get It out of My Head”). But if you’re just about to pick up one ELO disc, get Essential or, better still, 1995′s double-disc Strange Magic instead, since they both are tighter, better listens than this and have more of the major hits. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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