eMusic Review 1
ELO's 1977 album Out of the Blue is (very) arguably one of the greatest records in rock history, approaching such canonical recordings as Sister Lovers, Loveless and Exile on Main Street. For this double album — one that features an intergalactic spaceship with an eight track tape loading bay on the cover, lead ELO dude Jeff Lynne took the maximalist approach he perfected on A New World Record and multiplied it by itself. The result is one of the most beautifully bombastic things you'll ever hear, with tons of information packed into each genre exercise — er, I mean, song. Did I mention that the songs are intense? Intense in the way that eating an entire bowl of cookie dough at once is intense. ELO could be said to share a lot with metal in three regards: an anthemic bent, an unreal stiffness and a pummeling that's supposedly related to European classical music. Take "Sweet Talkin 'Woman," one of the four top ten hits on the album, a really rocking prog-lite number. The song starts with strings playing syrupy sweet melodies, the guitar kicks in with a clean, '50s rock-style line, then vocodered backing vocals are beamed in from outer… read more »