Out Of The Blue
Balance Of Power
Electric
Light Orchestra
Like diamonds, basic black, and Jello, rock
music goes with anything. And when Electric Light Orchestra co-founders Jeff
Lynne and Roy Wood combined pop-rock with an orchestra, the innovation struck
gold. The orchestra eventually gave way to synthesizers, but the magic—strange
or not—remained. The expanded reissues of Out Of The Blue (1977)
and Balance Of Power (1986) document the innovation, technical
brilliance, stunning musical scope and underlying cohesiveness that forged lush,
shimmering masterpieces that are still hypnotically captivating today.
From Out Of The Blue, Lynne’s accomplished songwriting
spawned a staccato succession of hits: “Turn to Stone,” “Sweet
Talkin’ Woman,” “Mr. Blue Sky” and “It’s
Over.” The effervescent songs melded ethereal symphonic flourishes with
a Beatlesque eloquence that was simple, but never banal. Deeper cuts like the
exquisite “Summer and Lightning” and “Wild West Hero”
also radiate a mesmerizing otherworldliness that combines both charm and tender
fragility. And Lynne’s vocals have melancholic hues that enrich even the
bubbliest tunes with poignant shadings.
Balance Of Power was ELO’s swan song — the album
that foreshadowed both the breakup of the band, and the breakdown of Lynne’s
marriage. Synthesizers had replaced symphony, and several songs, like “So
Serious,” lament a relationship in its twilight: “Can it really
be so serious/To be all broken up and delirious/I guess we've really been out
of touch/But can it really be so serious?” Yet neither of these factors
diminished the quality of the album, replete with boisterous, impeccably crafted
power pop. After all, it was the songwriting — not the orchestra —
that was central to ELO’s style. And the band remained resolutely true
to that style, regardless of the hair metal sprouting around them at the time.
Standout cuts include the bright buoyancy of “Heaven Only Knows,”
“Getting to the Point” (which even features a sax solo), the harmony-laden
“Secret Lives,” and the feverishly rollicking “Calling America,”
which only reached the Top 20, but should have shot into the Top 10. The expanded
edition of Balance Of Power is also packed with a tantalizing
seven bonus cuts, including five tracks of previously unreleased material. It’s
not just any band that could have made both the Beatles and Beethoven equally
proud. With these CDs, ELO proved they had the musical chops to do both.
~ Merryl Lentz
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