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Electric Light Orchestra: Face the Music (remaster)

Face the Music would be ELO's first big hit album, after the moderate success of On the Third Day and Eldorado. Wonderfully remastered here, Face the Music now is seeing the CD release it always should have had. Featuring crystal clear sound, bonus tracks, and a fantastic booklet, this remarkable album proves once again why it is one of the standouts in the ELO catalog.

Kicking off with the haunting instrumental "Fire on High", later to become the musical theme to ABC TV's Wide World of Sports, ominous strings and backwards vocals (all you folks who remember playing your LP's backwards to hear what they were saying remember this- "The music is reversible, but time isn't...turn back..turn back...turn back.."), before Jeff Lynne's powerful acoustic guitar strums, Bev Bevan's thunderous drums, and Mik Kaminski's soaring violin come crashing into the mix. It's a dark song, but so powerful. "Waterfall" is an engaging and melodic piece, with sumptuous strings from Kaminski, cellists Hugh McDowell and Melvyn Gale, and plenty of Richard Tandy keyboards. One of the two huge hits from the album, "Evil Woman", is a funky rocker, blending classical orchestrations with soul and funk leanings, remaining to this day a standard on classic rock radio. Lynne's knack for clever lyrics and catchy vocal hooks are in top form on this one. One of the forgotten gems on the album is the poppy prog of "Nightrider", complete with soaring vocals from both Lynne and bassist Kelly Groucutt, in addition to great strings and Tandy's Moog synth embellishments.

The blistering hard rocker of the album is "Poker", with Lynne's distorted guitar licks and Tandy's dizzying Moog lines paving the way for Bevan's gymnastic drum work. Along with On the Third Day's "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle", this is one of the heavier pieces the band has ever recorded. "Strange Magic" is the other album radio hit, this one a lovely pop number dripping with melancholy and emotion, containing some of Lynne's best melodies ever. The one letdown on the album is the country flavored "Down Home Town", a song that just doesn't work on any level for this band. It leads into the closer "One Summer Dream", a majestic classical rocker that's all about the strings, Bevan's drums, and Lynne's dreamy vocals.

For bonus tracks you get a few alternate mixes of a couple of the songs, and the booklet is jam-packed with info and photographs. One of the greatest Electric Light Orchestra albums just got better folks.


Track Listing
1. Fire On High
2. Waterfall
3. Evil Woman
4. Nightrider
5. Poker
6. Strange Magic
7. Down Home Town
8. One Summer Dream
9. Fire On High Intro (Early Alternative Mix)
10. Evil Woman (Stripped Down Mix)
11. Strange Magic (U.S. Single Edit)
12. Waterfall (Instrumental Mix)

Added: October 10th 2006
Reviewer: Pete Pardo
Score:
Related Link: ELO Website
Hits: 3173
Language: english

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Electric Light Orchestra: Face the Music (remaster)
Posted by Keith Hannaleck, SoT Staff Writer on 2006-10-10 19:24:47
My Score:

Clearly, ELO was a progressive band, although most people never looked upon them as that because of their long run on the pop charts. They had it all going for them-a unique brand of rock music with parts of an orchestra mixed in and a singer/songwriter/guitar player on level with the best in the world. And to put the proverbial icing on the cake, they made a universal mixture of music that anyone could relate to and it still stands up very well today. Even though ELO had all of this and more, they were underrated. I feel their contributions to recorded music were peerless. Perhaps looking back now, we can all realize just how far ahead of their time they really were. And with advent of these marvelous reissues, we can hear it all better than ever and reconfirm why ELO was one of the greatest bands to record orchestrated rock music.

In the early years of ELO when Roy Wood teamed with Lynne, the band sounded very different, as No Answer and ELO II clearly illustrate. These are good recordings and a fine testament to the development of the band's future nucleus. The foundation was there for a great future but Wood split to form Wizard. This was a blessing in disguise for Lynne as he was able to take control of his destiny by working towards the sound he envisioned all along. This classic ELO sound was finally realized on Eldorado then subsequent recordings Face The Music and A New World Record. These three recordings were the apex of the ELO output. Face The Music is my personal favorite and "Fire On High" has one of the most memorable riffs I have ever heard. To this day, you can hear those instantly recognizable hook filled chords on TV commercials and programs.

Every CD comes packed with bonus tracks and booklets that have archival photos and an overview of what was going on with the band at the time. If you listen to the CDs in order and read the booklets, it serves as a good history of the band and helps you to understand how things unfolded over the years. The sound is excellent, as most remastered albums are these days. Epic/Legacy obviously gets it, if you are going to remaster a band's catalog you have to offer the listeners a little something extra besides a cleaner sound if you expect them to reach for their wallets again. For those that already have the albums on CD, this is worth looking into for the sound quality, and bonus tracks. On New World Record, the bonus tracks are exceptionally intriguing. Out of the five reissues, this album offers the best bonus tracks. "Surrender" is great tune, it sounds good enough to be a hit single today, and the early instrumental mixes of "Tightrope" and "Telephone Line" are very cool as well.

There are plenty of reasons to get these reissues if you are a longtime fan, and if you are looking for an introduction to the band, there is a lot more than the greatest hits packages available. These albums dive deep into the history of ELO and give a wonderful overview of a band that made groundbreaking music that still sounds fresh and distinctive to this day.




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