fbpx
Wikipedia

Electric Light Orchestra

The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) are an English rock band formed in Birmingham in 1970 by songwriters and multi-instrumentalists Jeff Lynne and Roy Wood with drummer Bev Bevan. Their music is characterised by a fusion of pop and classical arrangements with futuristic iconography.[3] After Wood's departure in 1972, Lynne became the band's sole leader, arranging and producing every album while writing nearly all of their original material. For their initial tenure, Lynne, Bevan, and keyboardist Richard Tandy were the group's only consistent members.

Electric Light Orchestra
Background information
Also known as
  • ELO
  • Jeff Lynne's ELO (2014-present)
Origin
Genres
Years active
  • 1970–1983
  • 1984–1986
  • 2000–2001
  • 2014–present
Labels
Spinoffs
Spinoff of
Members
Past members
Websitejefflynneselo.com

ELO was formed out of Lynne's and Wood's desire to create modern rock and pop songs with classical overtones. It derived as an offshoot of Wood's previous band, the Move, of which Lynne and Bevan were also members. During the 1970s and 1980s, ELO released a string of top 10 albums and singles, including the band's most commercially successful album, the double album Out of the Blue (1977). Two ELO albums reached the top of the British charts: the disco-inspired Discovery (1979) and the science-fiction-themed concept album Time (1981). In 1986 Lynne lost interest in the band and disbanded the group. Bevan responded by forming his own band, ELO Part II, which later became The Orchestra. Apart from a brief reunion in the early 2000s, ELO remained largely inactive until 2014, when Lynne re-formed the band with Tandy as Jeff Lynne's ELO.[8]

During ELO's original 13-year period of active recording and touring, they sold over 50 million records worldwide.[9] They collected 19 CRIA, 21 RIAA, and 38 BPI awards.[10][11] From 1972 to 1986, ELO accumulated 27 top 40 songs on the UK Singles Chart, and fifteen top 20 songs on the US Billboard Hot 100.[12][13] The band also holds the record for having the most Billboard Hot 100 top 40 hits (20) without a number one.[14][nb 1] In 2017, four key members of ELO (Wood, Lynne, Bevan, and Tandy) were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.[17]

History

1970–1973: Formation and early albums

 
The Move/Electric Light Orchestra in 1972

In 1968, Roy Wood — guitarist, vocalist and songwriter of the Move — had an idea to form a new band that would use violins, cellos, string basses, horns and woodwinds to give their music a classical sound, allowing rock music to "pick up where the Beatles left off..." in a new direction.[18] The orchestral instruments would be the main focus, rather than the guitars. Jeff Lynne, frontman of fellow Birmingham group The Idle Race, was excited by the concept. When Trevor Burton left the Move in February 1969, Lynne was asked by Wood to join, only to say no, as he was still focused on finding success with his band. But in January 1970, when Carl Wayne quit the band, Lynne accepted Wood's second invitation to join, on the condition that they focus their energy on the new project.

On 12 July 1970, when Wood added multiple cellos to a Lynne-penned song intended to be a Move B-side, the new concept became a reality and "10538 Overture" became the first Electric Light Orchestra song. The original plan was to end The Move following the release of the Looking On album at the end of 1970, crossing over to the new unit in the new year. But to help finance the fledgling band, one further Move album, Message from the Country, was recorded during the lengthy ELO recordings and released in mid-1971. The resulting debut album The Electric Light Orchestra was released in December 1971. Only the trio of Wood, Lynne and Bevan played on all songs, with Bill Hunt supplying the French Horn parts and Steve Woolam playing violin. It was released in the United States in March 1972 as No Answer. The name was chosen after a record company secretary had tried to ring the UK company to get the name of the album. They were unavailable so she left a note reading "No answer".[19] "10538 Overture" became a UK top-ten hit. With both bands' albums in the stores simultaneously, the Move and ELO both appeared on television during this period.

ELO's debut concert took place on 16 April 1972 at the Greyhound Pub in Croydon, Surrey,[20] with a line-up of Wood, Lynne, Bevan, Bill Hunt (keyboards/French horn), Andy Craig (cello), Mike Edwards (cello), Wilfred Gibson (violin), Hugh McDowell (cello), and Richard Tandy (bass). However, this line-up did not last for long.[failed verification] First Craig departed, and then Wood, during the recordings for the band's second LP. Taking Hunt and McDowell with him, Wood left the band to form Wizzard. Both cited problems with their manager, Don Arden,[21] who Wood felt failed in his role, and an unsatisfactory tour of Italy, where the cellos and violins could not be heard over the electric instruments. However, Arden would manage Wizzard, despite Wood's negative comments towards Arden.[22] Despite predictions from the music press that the band would fold without Wood, who had been the driving force behind the creation of ELO, Lynne stepped up to lead the band, with Bevan, Edwards, Gibson and Tandy (who had switched from bass to keyboards to replace Hunt) remaining from the previous line-up, and new recruits Mike de Albuquerque and Colin Walker joining the band on bass and cello, respectively.[23]

The new line-up performed at the 1972 Reading Festival on 12 August 1972. Barcus Berry instrument pick-ups, now sported by the band's string trio, allowed them to have proper amplification on stage for their instruments, which had previously been all but drowned out by the electrified instruments. The band released their second album ELO 2 in early 1973, which produced their second UK top 10 and their first US chart single, an elaborate version of the Chuck Berry classic "Roll Over Beethoven" (which also incorporated the first movement of Beethoven's own Fifth Symphony).[24] ELO also made their first appearance on American Bandstand. During the recording of the third album, Gibson was let go after a dispute over money, Mik Kaminski joined as violinist, and Walker left since touring was keeping him away from his family too much.[citation needed] Remaining cellist Edwards finished the cello parts for the album. The resulting album, On the Third Day, was released in late 1973, with the American version featuring the popular single "Showdown". After leaving Wizzard, Hugh McDowell returned as the group's second cellist, also in late 1973, in time to appear on the On the Third Day cover in some regions, despite not having played on the album.

1974–1982: Global success and concept albums

For the band's fourth album, Eldorado, a concept album about a daydreamer, Lynne stopped multi-tracking strings and hired Louis Clark as string arranger with an orchestra and choir.[25] ELO's string players still continued to perform on recordings, however. The first single off the album, "Can't Get It Out of My Head", became their first US top 10 hit, and Eldorado, A Symphony became ELO's first gold album. Mike de Albuquerque departed the band during the recording sessions as he wished to spend more time with his family, and consequently much of the bass on the album was performed by Lynne.

Following the release of Eldorado, Kelly Groucutt was recruited as bassist and in early 1975, Melvyn Gale replaced Edwards on cello. The line-up stabilised as the band took to a decidedly more accessible sound. ELO had become successful in the US at this point and the group was a star attraction on the stadium and arena circuit, and appeared on The Midnight Special more than any other band in that show's history with four appearances (in 1973, 1975, 1976, and 1977).

Face the Music was released in 1975, producing the hit singles "Evil Woman", their third UK top 10, and "Strange Magic".[24] The opening instrumental "Fire on High", with its mix of strings and acoustic guitars, saw heavy exposure as the theme music for the American television programme CBS Sports Spectacular in the mid-1970s. The group toured extensively from 3 February to 13 April 1976, playing 68 shows in 76 days in the US.

Their sixth album, the platinum selling A New World Record, became their first UK top 10 album when it was released in 1976.[24] It contained the hit singles "Livin' Thing", "Telephone Line", "Rockaria!" and "Do Ya", the last a re-recording of The Move's final single. The band toured in support in the US only from September 1976 to April 1977 with a break in December, then an American Music Awards show appearance on 31 January 1977,[26] plus a one-off gig in San Diego in August 1977.

A New World Record was followed by a multi-platinum selling album, the double-LP Out of the Blue, in 1977. Out of the Blue featured the singles "Turn to Stone", "Sweet Talkin' Woman", "Mr. Blue Sky", and "Wild West Hero", each becoming a hit in the United Kingdom. The band then set out on a nine-month, 92-date world tour, with an enormous set and a hugely expensive spaceship stage with fog machines and a laser display. In the United States the concerts were billed as The Big Night and were their largest to date, with 62,000 people seeing them at Cleveland Stadium.[27] The Big Night went on to become the highest-grossing live concert tour in music history up to that point (1978).[28] The band played at London's Wembley Arena for eight straight sold-out nights during the tour, another record at the time.

During an Australian tour in early 1978, Electric Light Orchestra were presented with 9 platinum awards for the albums Out of the Blue and New World Record.[29]

In 1979, the multi-platinum album Discovery was released, reaching number one on the UK Albums Chart.[24] Although the biggest hit on the album (and ELO's biggest hit overall) was the rock song "Don't Bring Me Down", the album was noted for its heavy disco influence. Discovery also produced the hits "Shine a Little Love" (their only No. 1 hit on a US singles chart---Radio & Records (R&R)),[30][31] "Last Train to London", "Confusion", and "The Diary of Horace Wimp". Another song, "Midnight Blue", was released as a single in southeast Asia. The band recorded promotional videos for all the songs on the album.

 
ELO performing in Oslo, Norway, in 1978

By the end of 1979, ELO had reached the peak of their stardom, selling millions of albums and singles, and even inspiring a parody/tribute song on the Randy Newman album Born Again, titled "The Story of a Rock and Roll Band". During 1979, Jeff Lynne also turned down an invitation for ELO to headline the August 1979 Knebworth Festival concerts. That allowed Led Zeppelin the chance to headline instead.

In 1980, Jeff Lynne was asked to write for the soundtrack of the musical film Xanadu and provided half of the songs, with the other half written by John Farrar and performed by the film's star Olivia Newton-John. The film performed poorly at the box office, but the soundtrack did exceptionally well, eventually going double platinum. The album spawned hit singles from both Newton-John ("Magic", a No. 1 hit in the United States, and "Suddenly" with Cliff Richard) and ELO ("I'm Alive", which went gold, "All Over the World" and "Don't Walk Away"). The title track, performed by both Newton-John and ELO, is ELO's only song to top the UK singles chart.[32] More than a quarter of a century later, Xanadu, a Broadway musical based on the film, opened on 10 July 2007 at the Helen Hayes Theatre to uniformly good reviews. It received four Tony Award nominations. The musical received its UK premiere in London in October 2015.[33]

In 1981, ELO's sound changed again with the science fiction concept album Time, a throwback to earlier, more progressive rock albums like Eldorado. With the string section now departed, synthesisers took a dominating role, as was the trend in the larger music scene of the time; although studio strings were present on some of the tracks conducted by Rainer Pietsch, the overall soundscape had a more electronic feel in keeping with the futuristic nature of the album. Time topped the UK charts for two weeks and was the last ELO studio album to be certified platinum in the United Kingdom until Alone in the Universe in 2015. Singles from the album included "Hold On Tight", "Twilight", "The Way Life's Meant to Be", "Here Is the News" and "Ticket to the Moon". However, the release of the single for "Rain Is Falling" in 1982 was the band's first single in the US to fail to reach the Billboard Top 200 since 1975, and the release of "The Way Life's Meant to Be" similarly was their first single in the UK to fail to chart since 1976. The band embarked on their last world tour to promote the LP. For the tour, Kaminski returned to the line-up on violin, whilst Louis Clark (synthesizers) and Dave Morgan (guitar, keyboards, synthesizers, vocals) also joined the on stage lineup. Clark had previously handled string arrangements for the band.[35]

1983–1986: Secret Messages, Balance of Power, disbanding

 
ELO performing in 1986 (Jeff Lynne and Richard Tandy pictured)

Jeff Lynne wanted to follow Time with a double album, but CBS blocked his plan on the grounds that a double vinyl album would be too expensive in the oil crisis and not sell as well as a single record, so as a result, the new album was edited down to a single disc and released as Secret Messages in 1983; many of the out-takes were later released on Afterglow or as B-sides of singles. The album was a hit in the UK reaching the top 5, but its release was undermined by a string of bad news that there would be no tour to promote the LP. Lynne, discouraged by the dwindling crowds on the Time tour, CBS's order to cut Secret Messages down to one disc, and his falling out with manager Don Arden, decided to end ELO in late 1983.[citation needed]

Drummer Bevan moved on to play drums for Black Sabbath and bassist Groucutt, unhappy with no touring income that year, decided to sue Lynne and Jet Records in November 1983, eventually resulting in a settlement for the sum of £300,000 (equivalent to £994,300 in 2018). While Secret Messages debuted at number four in the United Kingdom, it subsequently performed poorly in the charts, with a lack of hit singles (though "Rock 'n' Roll Is King" was a sizeable hit in UK, the US and Australia) and a lukewarm media response.[citation needed]

That same year, Lynne moved into production work: having already produced two tracks for the Dave Edmunds album Information, he would go on to produce six cuts for his next, Riff Raff in 1984, and one cut on the Everly Brothers reunion album EB 84. He also composed a track for former ABBA member Agnetha Fältskog's 1985 album Eyes of a Woman.[36]

Lynne and Tandy went on to record tracks for the 1984 Electric Dreams soundtrack under Lynne's name; however, Lynne was contractually obliged to make one more ELO album. So Lynne, Bevan and Tandy returned to the studio in 1984 and 1985 as a three-piece (with Christian Schneider playing saxophone on some tracks and Lynne again doubling on bass in addition to his usual guitar in the absence of an official bass player) to record Balance of Power, released early in 1986 after some delays. Though the single "Calling America" placed in the Top 30 in the United Kingdom (number 28) and Top 20 in the States, subsequent singles failed to chart. The album lacked actual classical strings, which were replaced once again by synthesizers, played by Tandy and Lynne. However, despite being a 3-piece, much of the album was made by Lynne alone, with Tandy and Bevan giving their additions later.[37]

The band was then rejoined by Kaminski, Clark and Morgan, adding Martin Smith on bass guitar, and proceeded to perform a small number of live ELO performances in 1986, including shows in England and Germany along with US appearances on American Bandstand,[38] Solid Gold, then at Disneyland that summer.[39] ELO performed at the Heart Beat 86 charity concert organised by Bevan in the band's hometown of Birmingham on 15 March 1986;[40] a hint of Lynne's future was seen when George Harrison appeared onstage during the encore, joining in the all-star jam of "Johnny B. Goode". ELO's last performance for several years occurred on 13 July 1986 in Stuttgart, Germany playing as opening act to Rod Stewart. With Lynne no longer under contractual obligation to attend further scheduled performances, ELO effectively disbanded after that final show in Stuttgart in 1986, but there was no announcement made of it for the next two years, during which George Harrison's Lynne-produced album Cloud Nine and the pair's follow-up (with Roy Orbison, Bob Dylan and Tom Petty as Traveling Wilburys) Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1 were released.

1989–1999: ELO Part II

 
ELO Part II in concert

Bev Bevan (under an agreement with Lynne, who co-owned the ELO name with him) continued on in 1989 as ELO Part II, initially with no other former ELO members, but with ELO's main orchestra conductor, Louis Clark. Bevan also recruited Eric Troyer, Pete Haycock, and Neil Lockwood. ELO Part II released their debut album Electric Light Orchestra Part Two in May 1991. Mik Kaminski, Kelly Groucutt and Hugh McDowell, at the time working in a group called OrKestra, joined the group for their first tour in 1991. While McDowell did not stay, Groucutt and Kaminski became fully-fledged members.

In 1994, after the departure of Haycock and Lockwood, the remaining five recorded Moment of Truth with their newest member, Phil Bates. This lineup toured extensively up to 1999. Bevan retired from the lineup in 1999 and sold his share of the ELO name to Jeff Lynne in 2000, after Lynne had expressed his dismay that in certain areas the band were billed as 'ELO', rather than with '...Part II' added, suggesting it was the original outfit.[citation needed] After Bevan left, the band continued after they changed its name to The Orchestra. In 2001 The Orchestra released their debut album No Rewind.

2000–2001: Reformation

Lynne's comeback with ELO began in 2000 with the release of a retrospective box set, Flashback, containing three CDs of remastered tracks and a handful of out-takes and unfinished works, most notably a new version of ELO's only UK number one hit "Xanadu". In 2001 Zoom, ELO's first album since 1986, was released.[41] Though billed and marketed as an ELO album, the only returning member other than Lynne was Tandy, who performed on one track. Guest musicians included former Beatles Ringo Starr and George Harrison. Upon completion of the album, Lynne reformed the band with completely new members, including his then-girlfriend Rosie Vela (who had released her own album, Zazu, in 1986) and announced that ELO would tour again. Tandy rejoined the band a short time afterwards for two television live performances: VH1 Storytellers and a PBS concert shot at CBS Television City, later titled Zoom Tour Live and released on DVD. Besides Lynne, Tandy and Vela, the new live ELO lineup included Gregg Bissonette (drums, backing vocals), Matt Bissonette (bass guitar, backing vocals), Marc Mann (guitars, keyboards, backing vocals), Peggy Baldwin (cello), and Sarah O'Brien (cello). However, the planned tour was cancelled, reportedly due to poor ticket sales.[42]

2001–2013: Non-performing work, reissues and miniature reunions

 
The Orchestra during a performance in 2013

From 2001 to 2007, Harvest and Epic/Legacy reissued ELO's back catalogue. Included amongst the remastered album tracks were unreleased songs and outtakes, including two new singles. The first was "Surrender" which registered on the lower end of the UK Singles Chart at number 81, some 30 years after it was written in 1976. The other single was "Latitude 88 North".

In August 2010, Eagle Rock Entertainment released Live – The Early Years in the UK as a DVD compilation that included Fusion – Live in London (1976) along with previously unreleased live performances at Brunel University (1973) and on the German TV show Rockpalast (1974).[43] The Essential Electric Light Orchestra artwork was re-jigged to feature two different covers. The US and Australian releases shared one design, while the rest of the world featured the other for a new double album release in October 2011.[44]

Mr. Blue Sky: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra was released on 8 October 2012. It is an album of re-recordings of ELO's greatest hits, performed by Lynne exclusively, along with a new song titled "Point of No Return". Released to coincide with Lynne's second solo album release Long Wave,[45] these new albums contained advertisement cards, announcing the re-release of expanded and remastered versions of both the 2001 album Zoom and Lynne's debut solo album Armchair Theatre, originally released in 1990. Both albums were re-released in April 2013 with various bonus tracks. Also released was the live album, Electric Light Orchestra Live, showcasing songs from the Zoom tour. All three releases also featured new studio recordings as bonus tracks.[46]

Lynne and Tandy reunited again on 12 November 2013 to perform, under the name Jeff Lynne and Friends, "Livin' Thing" and "Mr. Blue Sky" at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo, London. The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra, with Chereene Allen on lead violin.[47]

2014–present: Jeff Lynne's ELO

 
Jeff Lynne's ELO performing at Hyde Park, September 2014

The success of the Children in Need performance was followed by support from BBC Radio 2 DJ Chris Evans, who had Lynne as his on-air guest and asked his listeners if they wanted to see ELO perform. The 50,000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2's "Festival in a Day" in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes. Billed as "Jeff Lynne's ELO", Lynne and Tandy were backed by the Take That/Gary Barlow band from the Children in Need concert, led by Mike Stevens[48] and the BBC Concert Orchestra. Lynne chose to use the name as a response to ELO offshoots ELO Part II and The Orchestra.[49] Chereene Allen[47] was again the lead violinist for the band. The development of modern digital processing added a smoother finish to the work, which led Lynne to reconsider his preference for studio work, hinting at a UK tour in 2015.[50]

On 8 February 2015, Jeff Lynne's ELO played at the Grammy Awards for the first time.[51] They performed a medley of "Evil Woman" and "Mr. Blue Sky" with Ed Sheeran, who introduced them as "A man and a band who I love".[52]

On 10 September 2015, it was announced that a new ELO album would be released. The album was to be under the moniker of Jeff Lynne's ELO, with the band signed to Columbia Records.[53] Alone in the Universe was released on 13 November 2015. The album was ELO's first album of new material since 2001's Zoom.[54] The first track, and single, "When I Was a Boy" was made available for streaming on the same day and a music video for the song was also released.[54] A small promotional tour followed the album's release which saw Jeff Lynne's ELO perform a full concert for BBC Radio 2 along with their first two shows in the United States in 30 years, both which sold out very quickly. Jeff Lynne's ELO also made rare US television appearances on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel Live and CBS This Morning.[55] A 19-date European tour was announced for 2016,[56] with the band playing the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury Festival on 26 June 2016.[57]

In 2017 they played their "Alone in the Universe" tour.[58][59] That same year, on 7 April, they played at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as they were inducted during the 32nd Annual Induction Ceremony.[60]

The band continued to tour in 2018 in North America and Europe. A video was created for the City of Birmingham which used the original recording of "Mr. Blue Sky" as its music; this was played at the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games Closing Ceremony during the handover presentation of Birmingham 2022.[61]

On 3 August 2018, Secret Messages was reissued "as originally conceived" as a double album. It included several cut tracks, such as the CD exclusive bonus track "Time After Time", B-side exclusives "Buildings Have Eyes" and "After All", the Afterglow exclusives "Mandalay" and "Hello My Old Friend", and the 2001 reissue exclusives "Endless Lies" and "No Way Out".[62]

On 22 October 2018, Lynne announced that Jeff Lynne's ELO would embark on a 2019 North American tour from June to August 2019.[63]

ELO released their 14th album, From Out of Nowhere, on 1 November 2019.[64] While a tour from the album was announced to begin in October 2020, the official Jeff Lynne's ELO Twitter page then later announced that the tour was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[65]

Legacy and influence

According to music journalist Simon Price, ELO was

arguably the most uncool, even defiantly anti-cool, of the lot and have been the slowest to be rehabilitated since ... They've been sampled by dozens upon dozens of acts, from Company Flow to the Pussycat Dolls, if you go looking. Every now and then in my journalistic career, it's been possible to coax a contemporary band to admit to an ELO influence; the Flaming Lips and Super Furry Animals being two examples. But the band in whom I perceive the greatest amount of ELO DNA are outside the rock genre altogether: Daft Punk."[66]

In November 2016, Jeff Lynne's ELO won Band of the Year at the Classic Rock Roll of Honour Awards.[67] In October 2016, ELO were nominated for the 2017 class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the first time.[68] It was the first time the Hall had announced in advance the members of bands who would be inducted; the members of ELO listed were Jeff Lynne, Roy Wood, Bev Bevan and Richard Tandy.[69] On 20 December 2016, it was announced ELO had been elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2017.[17]

Members

Principal members

  • Jeff Lynne — lead and backing vocals, guitars, bass, piano, keyboards, cello, drums, percussion (1970–1983, 1985–1986, 2000–2001, 2014–present)
  • Roy Wood — lead and backing vocals, guitars, bass, cello, oboe, bassoon (1970–1972)
  • Bev Bevan — drums, percussion, backing vocals (1970–1983, 1985–1986)
  • Richard Tandy — piano, keyboards, synthesizer, bass, guitar, backing vocals (1972–1983, 1985–1986, 2000–2001, 2014–2016, 2019–present[70])

Discography

Notes

  1. ^ The band did reach No. 1 on the Radio & Records chart with "Shine a Little Love" in 1979.[15][16]

References

  1. ^ a b Breithaupt, Don; Breithaupt, Jeff (2000), Night Moves: Pop Music in the Late '70s, St. Martin's Press, ISBN 978-0-312-19821-3
  2. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Electric Light Orchestra, Part II". AllMusic.
  3. ^ a b Ankeny, Jason. "Electric Light Orchestra". AllMusic.
  4. ^ The following references cite the band as either orchestral pop or symphonic pop:
    • Macan, Edward (1997). Rocking the Classics: English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509887-7.
    • "Music review: Jeff Lynn's ELO". The Scotsman. 2018. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
    • Araimo, Catherine (2018). "Listen to ELO Play the Ultimate Anti-Love Song on Valentine's Day 1976". Paste. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  5. ^ DeRiso, Nick. "How ELO Slimmed Down, Then Went Disco on 'Discovery'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  6. ^ Lecaro, Lina (7 August 2018). "Live in L.A.: Jeff Lynne's ELO Prove That Spacy Pop Rock Is Still a Livin' Thing". LA Weekly.
  7. ^ Ray, Michael, ed. (2012). "Classical Influences: Art Rock and Progressive Rock". Disco, Punk, New Wave, Heavy Metal, and More: Music in the 1970s and 1980s. Britannica Educational Publishing. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-61530-912-2.
  8. ^ Center, Event Tickets (22 October 2018). "Jeff Lynne's ELO Announces 2019 Headlining Tour". Medium.com. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  9. ^ . Elo.biz. Archived from the original on 11 May 2010. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  10. ^ . RIAA. Archived from the original on 4 October 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2011.
  11. ^ "Home". Bpi.co.uk. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  12. ^ "Electric Light Orchestra Chart History". Billboard.com. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  13. ^ "E.L.O. | full Official Chart History | Official Charts Company". Officialcharts.com. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  14. ^ Robert Porter. "Electric Light Orchestra – The USA Singles". Jeff Lynne Song Database. Retrieved 27 July 2007.
  15. ^ "ELO". Wweb.uta.edu. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  16. ^ "Charts". Wweb.uta.edu. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  17. ^ a b Sisario, Ben (20 December 2016). "Pearl Jam, Tupac Shakur and Joan Baez Will Join the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  18. ^ Picking up where the Beatles left off ... Jeff Lynne and ELO. Photograph: Andre Csillag/Rex Alan McGee (16 October 2008). "ELO: The band the Beatles could have been". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  19. ^ Electric Light Orchestra's No Answer. snopes.com. Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  20. ^ Bevan, Bev (1980). The Elo Story. Mushroom Publishing. p. 174. ISBN 0907394000.
  21. ^ "Roy Wood talks about ELO". BBC. 2007.
  22. ^ Kielty, Martin. "Why Roy Wood Really Left the Electric Light Orchestra". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  23. ^ Larkin, Colin (20 July 2016). "Electric Light Orchestra". Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  24. ^ a b c d "ELO: UK Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 9 February 2015
  25. ^ . Web.archive.org (5 June 2008). Retrieved 31 January 2011.
  26. ^ ELO Livin Thing American Music Awards 31 Jan 1977 Full. YouTube (25 February 2011)
  27. ^ Bornino, Bruno, "62,000 see ELO’s UFO" Cleveland Press 17 July 1978
  28. ^ Robert Porter. "Electric Light Orchestra – Out Of The Blue Tour: An in-depth look at the 1978 tour". Jeff Lynne Song Database. Retrieved 27 July 2007.
  29. ^ "Cashbox Magazine" (PDF). Billboard. 4 March 1978. p. 42. Retrieved 12 November 2021 – via World Radio History.
  30. ^ "ELO". Wweb.uta.edu. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
  31. ^ "Charts". Wweb.uta.edu. Retrieved 8 November 2018.
  32. ^ Guinness World Records: "British Hit Singles 14th Edition", page 195. 0-85112-156-X
  33. ^ Sara Benn (20 August 2015). "Xanadu gets UK premiere". Theatre news. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  34. ^ "Electric Light Orchestra – Time". Popmatters.com. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  35. ^ Sweeting, Adam (25 February 2021). "Louis Clark obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  36. ^ Van Der Kiste, John (2015). Jeff Lynne The Electric Light Orchestra. Fonthill Media.
  37. ^ Deriso, Nick (17 February 2021). "35 Years Ago: Electric Light Orchestra Blow Apart On "Balance of Power"". Ultimate Classic Rock. Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  38. ^ "ELO – Calling América AB 5 Jul 1986". YouTube. 31 May 2011. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  39. ^ "ELO – Disney's Summer Vacation Party (TV Show – 1986)". YouTube. 17 October 2012. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  40. ^ "Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) Concert at Birmingham NEC 1986 – Heartbeat 86". YouTube. 28 May 2013. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  41. ^ "Zoom". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  42. ^ "ELO a no-go". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 18 August 2001. pp. E8. "The off-switch has been flipped on the Electric Light Orchestra. Or at least its tour, which was wired to illuminate the First Union Center on 15 Sept."
  43. ^ "Electric Light Orchestra Live – The Early Years Coming to DVD August 24th". BraveWords. 13 August 2010. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  44. ^ . Ftmusic.com. Archived from the original on 13 November 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  45. ^ "Releases : elo". Elo.biz. 5 October 2012. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  46. ^ . Theseconddisc.com. Archived from the original on 13 January 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  47. ^ a b "Chereene Allen". Twitter.com.
  48. ^ Caroline Sullivan (15 September 2014). "Jeff Lynne's ELO review – school-disco joy for 1970s maximalism". The Guardian.
  49. ^ Miller, Joshua (10 November 2015). "Jeff Lynne's Long-Awaited Return to Electric Light Orchestra". Pastemagazine.com.
  50. ^ "Review and setlist: Jeff Lynne's ELO, Hyde Park, London". Birminghammail.co.uk. 15 September 2014. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  51. ^ Lynch, Joe (8 February 2015). "Grammys 2015: Ed Sheeran Joins Jeff Lynne's ELO for 'Mr. Blue Sky'". Billboard. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  52. ^ Grow, Kory (9 February 2015). "Ed Sheeran Performs With ELO at the Grammys". Rolling Stone.
  53. ^ . Electric Light Orchestra and Jeff Lynne. Archived from the original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved 18 April 2016.
  54. ^ a b "Electric Light Orchestra Returns In Fine Form". Npr.org. 24 September 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  55. ^ "Livin' Thing: Jeff Lynne's ELO Triumph at First U.S. Show in 30 Years". Rolling Stone. 21 November 2014.
  56. ^ "Jeff Lynne's ELO playing intimate U.S. release shows this month, touring Europe in 2016 (dates)". Brooklynvegan.com. 17 November 2014. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  57. ^ "Jeff Lynne's ELO to Play Pyramid Stage Sunday Teatime Slot". Glastonbury Festival. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  58. ^ "Jeff Lynne's ELO announce Wembley Stadium show". NME. 27 June 2016. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  59. ^ "Tom Chaplin and the Shires To Support Jeff Lynne's ELO on UK Dates". Stereoboard.com. Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  60. ^ Joe Lynch (8 April 2017). "11 Unforgettable Moments From the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2017 Ceremony". Billboard.com. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  61. ^ "ELO to have role in Birmingham 2022 handover at Gold Coast 2018 alongside rap artist and cast of youngsters". Insidethegames.biz.
  62. ^ "SECRET MESSAGES – 35TH ANNIVERSARY 2LP". ELO US. Retrieved 11 July 2020.[permanent dead link]
  63. ^ "Jeff Lynne's ELO Route 2019 North American Summer Tours". Rolling Stone.
  64. ^ Reed, Ryan (26 September 2019). "Jeff Lynne's ELO Ready New LP 'From Out of Nowhere,' Issue Title Track". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  65. ^ @JeffLynnesELO (15 May 2020). "It's with deep regret and sadness that I have to cancel my upcoming October UK tour..." (Tweet). Retrieved 11 July 2020 – via Twitter.
  66. ^ Price, Simon (16 September 2014). "The Jesus of Uncool Is Risen: ELO Live, By Simon Price". The Quietus. Archived from the original on 30 October 2021. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  67. ^ . Vintage Vinyl News. Archived from the original on 11 June 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  68. ^ Minsker, Evan (18 October 2016). "Rock Hall 2017 Nominations: Pearl Jam, Tupac, Depeche Mode, Kraftwerk, Janet Jackson, Bad Brains | Pitchfork". Pitchfork.com. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  69. ^ . Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 23 December 2016. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  70. ^ "Jeff Lynne Song Database - Jeff Lynne's ELO - From Out Of Nowhere Tour". www.jefflynnesongs.com. Retrieved 11 March 2023.

Further reading

  • Bevan, Bev The Electric Light Orchestra Story (London: Mushroom, 1980)
  • Van der Kiste, John Jeff Lynne: The Electric Light Orchestra, before and after (Stroud: Fonthill Media, 2015)

External links

  • Jeff Lynne's ELO
  • Electric Light Orchestra on Facebook
  • "Electric Light Orchestra". Record label. Legacy Recordings.
  • Electric Light Orchestra at IMDb
  • "ELO". Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. 2017.
  • "Jeff Lynne Songs". Database.

electric, light, orchestra, redirect, here, their, eponymous, debut, album, album, other, uses, disambiguation, english, rock, band, formed, birmingham, 1970, songwriters, multi, instrumentalists, jeff, lynne, wood, with, drummer, bevan, their, music, characte. The Electric Light Orchestra and ELO redirect here For their eponymous debut album see The Electric Light Orchestra album For other uses see ELO disambiguation The Electric Light Orchestra ELO are an English rock band formed in Birmingham in 1970 by songwriters and multi instrumentalists Jeff Lynne and Roy Wood with drummer Bev Bevan Their music is characterised by a fusion of pop and classical arrangements with futuristic iconography 3 After Wood s departure in 1972 Lynne became the band s sole leader arranging and producing every album while writing nearly all of their original material For their initial tenure Lynne Bevan and keyboardist Richard Tandy were the group s only consistent members Electric Light OrchestraELO performing live during their 1981 Time Tour From left Jeff Lynne Louis Clark obscured Kelly Groucutt Bev Bevan and Richard TandyBackground informationAlso known asELOJeff Lynne s ELO 2014 present OriginBirmingham EnglandGenresProgressive pop 1 2 progressive rock 1 3 orchestral pop 4 disco 5 pop rock 6 art rock 7 Years active1970 19831984 19862000 20012014 presentLabelsHarvestWarner Bros United ArtistsJetColumbiaEpicMCARCASpinoffsELO Part IIThe OrchestraSpinoff ofThe MoveThe Idle RaceMembersJeff LynneRichard TandyPast membersRoy WoodBev Bevan See members article for othersWebsitejefflynneselo wbr comELO was formed out of Lynne s and Wood s desire to create modern rock and pop songs with classical overtones It derived as an offshoot of Wood s previous band the Move of which Lynne and Bevan were also members During the 1970s and 1980s ELO released a string of top 10 albums and singles including the band s most commercially successful album the double album Out of the Blue 1977 Two ELO albums reached the top of the British charts the disco inspired Discovery 1979 and the science fiction themed concept album Time 1981 In 1986 Lynne lost interest in the band and disbanded the group Bevan responded by forming his own band ELO Part II which later became The Orchestra Apart from a brief reunion in the early 2000s ELO remained largely inactive until 2014 when Lynne re formed the band with Tandy as Jeff Lynne s ELO 8 During ELO s original 13 year period of active recording and touring they sold over 50 million records worldwide 9 They collected 19 CRIA 21 RIAA and 38 BPI awards 10 11 From 1972 to 1986 ELO accumulated 27 top 40 songs on the UK Singles Chart and fifteen top 20 songs on the US Billboard Hot 100 12 13 The band also holds the record for having the most Billboard Hot 100 top 40 hits 20 without a number one 14 nb 1 In 2017 four key members of ELO Wood Lynne Bevan and Tandy were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 1970 1973 Formation and early albums 1 2 1974 1982 Global success and concept albums 1 3 1983 1986 Secret Messages Balance of Power disbanding 1 4 1989 1999 ELO Part II 1 5 2000 2001 Reformation 1 6 2001 2013 Non performing work reissues and miniature reunions 1 7 2014 present Jeff Lynne s ELO 2 Legacy and influence 3 Members 4 Discography 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory Edit1970 1973 Formation and early albums Edit The Move Electric Light Orchestra in 1972 In 1968 Roy Wood guitarist vocalist and songwriter of the Move had an idea to form a new band that would use violins cellos string basses horns and woodwinds to give their music a classical sound allowing rock music to pick up where the Beatles left off in a new direction 18 The orchestral instruments would be the main focus rather than the guitars Jeff Lynne frontman of fellow Birmingham group The Idle Race was excited by the concept When Trevor Burton left the Move in February 1969 Lynne was asked by Wood to join only to say no as he was still focused on finding success with his band But in January 1970 when Carl Wayne quit the band Lynne accepted Wood s second invitation to join on the condition that they focus their energy on the new project On 12 July 1970 when Wood added multiple cellos to a Lynne penned song intended to be a Move B side the new concept became a reality and 10538 Overture became the first Electric Light Orchestra song The original plan was to end The Move following the release of the Looking On album at the end of 1970 crossing over to the new unit in the new year But to help finance the fledgling band one further Move album Message from the Country was recorded during the lengthy ELO recordings and released in mid 1971 The resulting debut album The Electric Light Orchestra was released in December 1971 Only the trio of Wood Lynne and Bevan played on all songs with Bill Hunt supplying the French Horn parts and Steve Woolam playing violin It was released in the United States in March 1972 as No Answer The name was chosen after a record company secretary had tried to ring the UK company to get the name of the album They were unavailable so she left a note reading No answer 19 10538 Overture became a UK top ten hit With both bands albums in the stores simultaneously the Move and ELO both appeared on television during this period ELO s debut concert took place on 16 April 1972 at the Greyhound Pub in Croydon Surrey 20 with a line up of Wood Lynne Bevan Bill Hunt keyboards French horn Andy Craig cello Mike Edwards cello Wilfred Gibson violin Hugh McDowell cello and Richard Tandy bass However this line up did not last for long failed verification First Craig departed and then Wood during the recordings for the band s second LP Taking Hunt and McDowell with him Wood left the band to form Wizzard Both cited problems with their manager Don Arden 21 who Wood felt failed in his role and an unsatisfactory tour of Italy where the cellos and violins could not be heard over the electric instruments However Arden would manage Wizzard despite Wood s negative comments towards Arden 22 Despite predictions from the music press that the band would fold without Wood who had been the driving force behind the creation of ELO Lynne stepped up to lead the band with Bevan Edwards Gibson and Tandy who had switched from bass to keyboards to replace Hunt remaining from the previous line up and new recruits Mike de Albuquerque and Colin Walker joining the band on bass and cello respectively 23 The new line up performed at the 1972 Reading Festival on 12 August 1972 Barcus Berry instrument pick ups now sported by the band s string trio allowed them to have proper amplification on stage for their instruments which had previously been all but drowned out by the electrified instruments The band released their second album ELO 2 in early 1973 which produced their second UK top 10 and their first US chart single an elaborate version of the Chuck Berry classic Roll Over Beethoven which also incorporated the first movement of Beethoven s own Fifth Symphony 24 ELO also made their first appearance on American Bandstand During the recording of the third album Gibson was let go after a dispute over money Mik Kaminski joined as violinist and Walker left since touring was keeping him away from his family too much citation needed Remaining cellist Edwards finished the cello parts for the album The resulting album On the Third Day was released in late 1973 with the American version featuring the popular single Showdown After leaving Wizzard Hugh McDowell returned as the group s second cellist also in late 1973 in time to appear on the On the Third Day cover in some regions despite not having played on the album 1974 1982 Global success and concept albums Edit For the band s fourth album Eldorado a concept album about a daydreamer Lynne stopped multi tracking strings and hired Louis Clark as string arranger with an orchestra and choir 25 ELO s string players still continued to perform on recordings however The first single off the album Can t Get It Out of My Head became their first US top 10 hit and Eldorado A Symphony became ELO s first gold album Mike de Albuquerque departed the band during the recording sessions as he wished to spend more time with his family and consequently much of the bass on the album was performed by Lynne Following the release of Eldorado Kelly Groucutt was recruited as bassist and in early 1975 Melvyn Gale replaced Edwards on cello The line up stabilised as the band took to a decidedly more accessible sound ELO had become successful in the US at this point and the group was a star attraction on the stadium and arena circuit and appeared on The Midnight Special more than any other band in that show s history with four appearances in 1973 1975 1976 and 1977 Face the Music was released in 1975 producing the hit singles Evil Woman their third UK top 10 and Strange Magic 24 The opening instrumental Fire on High with its mix of strings and acoustic guitars saw heavy exposure as the theme music for the American television programme CBS Sports Spectacular in the mid 1970s The group toured extensively from 3 February to 13 April 1976 playing 68 shows in 76 days in the US Livin Thing from A New World Record 1976 source source Livin Thing was a Top 10 hit for the UK Singles Chart peaking at number four Problems playing this file See media help Their sixth album the platinum selling A New World Record became their first UK top 10 album when it was released in 1976 24 It contained the hit singles Livin Thing Telephone Line Rockaria and Do Ya the last a re recording of The Move s final single The band toured in support in the US only from September 1976 to April 1977 with a break in December then an American Music Awards show appearance on 31 January 1977 26 plus a one off gig in San Diego in August 1977 A New World Record was followed by a multi platinum selling album the double LP Out of the Blue in 1977 Out of the Blue featured the singles Turn to Stone Sweet Talkin Woman Mr Blue Sky and Wild West Hero each becoming a hit in the United Kingdom The band then set out on a nine month 92 date world tour with an enormous set and a hugely expensive spaceship stage with fog machines and a laser display In the United States the concerts were billed as The Big Night and were their largest to date with 62 000 people seeing them at Cleveland Stadium 27 The Big Night went on to become the highest grossing live concert tour in music history up to that point 1978 28 The band played at London s Wembley Arena for eight straight sold out nights during the tour another record at the time During an Australian tour in early 1978 Electric Light Orchestra were presented with 9 platinum awards for the albums Out of the Blue and New World Record 29 In 1979 the multi platinum album Discovery was released reaching number one on the UK Albums Chart 24 Although the biggest hit on the album and ELO s biggest hit overall was the rock song Don t Bring Me Down the album was noted for its heavy disco influence Discovery also produced the hits Shine a Little Love their only No 1 hit on a US singles chart Radio amp Records R amp R 30 31 Last Train to London Confusion and The Diary of Horace Wimp Another song Midnight Blue was released as a single in southeast Asia The band recorded promotional videos for all the songs on the album ELO performing in Oslo Norway in 1978 By the end of 1979 ELO had reached the peak of their stardom selling millions of albums and singles and even inspiring a parody tribute song on the Randy Newman album Born Again titled The Story of a Rock and Roll Band During 1979 Jeff Lynne also turned down an invitation for ELO to headline the August 1979 Knebworth Festival concerts That allowed Led Zeppelin the chance to headline instead In 1980 Jeff Lynne was asked to write for the soundtrack of the musical film Xanadu and provided half of the songs with the other half written by John Farrar and performed by the film s star Olivia Newton John The film performed poorly at the box office but the soundtrack did exceptionally well eventually going double platinum The album spawned hit singles from both Newton John Magic a No 1 hit in the United States and Suddenly with Cliff Richard and ELO I m Alive which went gold All Over the World and Don t Walk Away The title track performed by both Newton John and ELO is ELO s only song to top the UK singles chart 32 More than a quarter of a century later Xanadu a Broadway musical based on the film opened on 10 July 2007 at the Helen Hayes Theatre to uniformly good reviews It received four Tony Award nominations The musical received its UK premiere in London in October 2015 33 Twilight from Time 1981 source source The album Time 1981 represented a shift toward more electronic sounds 34 Problems playing this file See media help In 1981 ELO s sound changed again with the science fiction concept album Time a throwback to earlier more progressive rock albums like Eldorado With the string section now departed synthesisers took a dominating role as was the trend in the larger music scene of the time although studio strings were present on some of the tracks conducted by Rainer Pietsch the overall soundscape had a more electronic feel in keeping with the futuristic nature of the album Time topped the UK charts for two weeks and was the last ELO studio album to be certified platinum in the United Kingdom until Alone in the Universe in 2015 Singles from the album included Hold On Tight Twilight The Way Life s Meant to Be Here Is the News and Ticket to the Moon However the release of the single for Rain Is Falling in 1982 was the band s first single in the US to fail to reach the Billboard Top 200 since 1975 and the release of The Way Life s Meant to Be similarly was their first single in the UK to fail to chart since 1976 The band embarked on their last world tour to promote the LP For the tour Kaminski returned to the line up on violin whilst Louis Clark synthesizers and Dave Morgan guitar keyboards synthesizers vocals also joined the on stage lineup Clark had previously handled string arrangements for the band 35 1983 1986 Secret Messages Balance of Power disbanding Edit ELO performing in 1986 Jeff Lynne and Richard Tandy pictured Jeff Lynne wanted to follow Time with a double album but CBS blocked his plan on the grounds that a double vinyl album would be too expensive in the oil crisis and not sell as well as a single record so as a result the new album was edited down to a single disc and released as Secret Messages in 1983 many of the out takes were later released on Afterglow or as B sides of singles The album was a hit in the UK reaching the top 5 but its release was undermined by a string of bad news that there would be no tour to promote the LP Lynne discouraged by the dwindling crowds on the Time tour CBS s order to cut Secret Messages down to one disc and his falling out with manager Don Arden decided to end ELO in late 1983 citation needed Drummer Bevan moved on to play drums for Black Sabbath and bassist Groucutt unhappy with no touring income that year decided to sue Lynne and Jet Records in November 1983 eventually resulting in a settlement for the sum of 300 000 equivalent to 994 300 in 2018 While Secret Messages debuted at number four in the United Kingdom it subsequently performed poorly in the charts with a lack of hit singles though Rock n Roll Is King was a sizeable hit in UK the US and Australia and a lukewarm media response citation needed That same year Lynne moved into production work having already produced two tracks for the Dave Edmunds album Information he would go on to produce six cuts for his next Riff Raff in 1984 and one cut on the Everly Brothers reunion album EB 84 He also composed a track for former ABBA member Agnetha Faltskog s 1985 album Eyes of a Woman 36 Lynne and Tandy went on to record tracks for the 1984 Electric Dreams soundtrack under Lynne s name however Lynne was contractually obliged to make one more ELO album So Lynne Bevan and Tandy returned to the studio in 1984 and 1985 as a three piece with Christian Schneider playing saxophone on some tracks and Lynne again doubling on bass in addition to his usual guitar in the absence of an official bass player to record Balance of Power released early in 1986 after some delays Though the single Calling America placed in the Top 30 in the United Kingdom number 28 and Top 20 in the States subsequent singles failed to chart The album lacked actual classical strings which were replaced once again by synthesizers played by Tandy and Lynne However despite being a 3 piece much of the album was made by Lynne alone with Tandy and Bevan giving their additions later 37 The band was then rejoined by Kaminski Clark and Morgan adding Martin Smith on bass guitar and proceeded to perform a small number of live ELO performances in 1986 including shows in England and Germany along with US appearances on American Bandstand 38 Solid Gold then at Disneyland that summer 39 ELO performed at the Heart Beat 86 charity concert organised by Bevan in the band s hometown of Birmingham on 15 March 1986 40 a hint of Lynne s future was seen when George Harrison appeared onstage during the encore joining in the all star jam of Johnny B Goode ELO s last performance for several years occurred on 13 July 1986 in Stuttgart Germany playing as opening act to Rod Stewart With Lynne no longer under contractual obligation to attend further scheduled performances ELO effectively disbanded after that final show in Stuttgart in 1986 but there was no announcement made of it for the next two years during which George Harrison s Lynne produced album Cloud Nine and the pair s follow up with Roy Orbison Bob Dylan and Tom Petty as Traveling Wilburys Traveling Wilburys Vol 1 were released 1989 1999 ELO Part II Edit Main article ELO Part II ELO Part II in concert Bev Bevan under an agreement with Lynne who co owned the ELO name with him continued on in 1989 as ELO Part II initially with no other former ELO members but with ELO s main orchestra conductor Louis Clark Bevan also recruited Eric Troyer Pete Haycock and Neil Lockwood ELO Part II released their debut album Electric Light Orchestra Part Two in May 1991 Mik Kaminski Kelly Groucutt and Hugh McDowell at the time working in a group called OrKestra joined the group for their first tour in 1991 While McDowell did not stay Groucutt and Kaminski became fully fledged members In 1994 after the departure of Haycock and Lockwood the remaining five recorded Moment of Truth with their newest member Phil Bates This lineup toured extensively up to 1999 Bevan retired from the lineup in 1999 and sold his share of the ELO name to Jeff Lynne in 2000 after Lynne had expressed his dismay that in certain areas the band were billed as ELO rather than with Part II added suggesting it was the original outfit citation needed After Bevan left the band continued after they changed its name to The Orchestra In 2001 The Orchestra released their debut album No Rewind 2000 2001 Reformation Edit Lynne s comeback with ELO began in 2000 with the release of a retrospective box set Flashback containing three CDs of remastered tracks and a handful of out takes and unfinished works most notably a new version of ELO s only UK number one hit Xanadu In 2001 Zoom ELO s first album since 1986 was released 41 Though billed and marketed as an ELO album the only returning member other than Lynne was Tandy who performed on one track Guest musicians included former Beatles Ringo Starr and George Harrison Upon completion of the album Lynne reformed the band with completely new members including his then girlfriend Rosie Vela who had released her own album Zazu in 1986 and announced that ELO would tour again Tandy rejoined the band a short time afterwards for two television live performances VH1 Storytellers and a PBS concert shot at CBS Television City later titled Zoom Tour Live and released on DVD Besides Lynne Tandy and Vela the new live ELO lineup included Gregg Bissonette drums backing vocals Matt Bissonette bass guitar backing vocals Marc Mann guitars keyboards backing vocals Peggy Baldwin cello and Sarah O Brien cello However the planned tour was cancelled reportedly due to poor ticket sales 42 2001 2013 Non performing work reissues and miniature reunions Edit The Orchestra during a performance in 2013 From 2001 to 2007 Harvest and Epic Legacy reissued ELO s back catalogue Included amongst the remastered album tracks were unreleased songs and outtakes including two new singles The first was Surrender which registered on the lower end of the UK Singles Chart at number 81 some 30 years after it was written in 1976 The other single was Latitude 88 North In August 2010 Eagle Rock Entertainment released Live The Early Years in the UK as a DVD compilation that included Fusion Live in London 1976 along with previously unreleased live performances at Brunel University 1973 and on the German TV show Rockpalast 1974 43 The Essential Electric Light Orchestra artwork was re jigged to feature two different covers The US and Australian releases shared one design while the rest of the world featured the other for a new double album release in October 2011 44 Mr Blue Sky The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra was released on 8 October 2012 It is an album of re recordings of ELO s greatest hits performed by Lynne exclusively along with a new song titled Point of No Return Released to coincide with Lynne s second solo album release Long Wave 45 these new albums contained advertisement cards announcing the re release of expanded and remastered versions of both the 2001 album Zoom and Lynne s debut solo album Armchair Theatre originally released in 1990 Both albums were re released in April 2013 with various bonus tracks Also released was the live album Electric Light Orchestra Live showcasing songs from the Zoom tour All three releases also featured new studio recordings as bonus tracks 46 Lynne and Tandy reunited again on 12 November 2013 to perform under the name Jeff Lynne and Friends Livin Thing and Mr Blue Sky at the Children in Need Rocks concert at Hammersmith Eventim Apollo London The backing orchestra was the BBC Concert Orchestra with Chereene Allen on lead violin 47 2014 present Jeff Lynne s ELO Edit Jeff Lynne s ELO performing at Hyde Park September 2014 The success of the Children in Need performance was followed by support from BBC Radio 2 DJ Chris Evans who had Lynne as his on air guest and asked his listeners if they wanted to see ELO perform The 50 000 tickets for the resulting BBC Radio 2 s Festival in a Day in Hyde Park on 14 September 2014 sold out in 15 minutes Billed as Jeff Lynne s ELO Lynne and Tandy were backed by the Take That Gary Barlow band from the Children in Need concert led by Mike Stevens 48 and the BBC Concert Orchestra Lynne chose to use the name as a response to ELO offshoots ELO Part II and The Orchestra 49 Chereene Allen 47 was again the lead violinist for the band The development of modern digital processing added a smoother finish to the work which led Lynne to reconsider his preference for studio work hinting at a UK tour in 2015 50 On 8 February 2015 Jeff Lynne s ELO played at the Grammy Awards for the first time 51 They performed a medley of Evil Woman and Mr Blue Sky with Ed Sheeran who introduced them as A man and a band who I love 52 On 10 September 2015 it was announced that a new ELO album would be released The album was to be under the moniker of Jeff Lynne s ELO with the band signed to Columbia Records 53 Alone in the Universe was released on 13 November 2015 The album was ELO s first album of new material since 2001 s Zoom 54 The first track and single When I Was a Boy was made available for streaming on the same day and a music video for the song was also released 54 A small promotional tour followed the album s release which saw Jeff Lynne s ELO perform a full concert for BBC Radio 2 along with their first two shows in the United States in 30 years both which sold out very quickly Jeff Lynne s ELO also made rare US television appearances on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Jimmy Kimmel Live and CBS This Morning 55 A 19 date European tour was announced for 2016 56 with the band playing the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury Festival on 26 June 2016 57 In 2017 they played their Alone in the Universe tour 58 59 That same year on 7 April they played at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as they were inducted during the 32nd Annual Induction Ceremony 60 The band continued to tour in 2018 in North America and Europe A video was created for the City of Birmingham which used the original recording of Mr Blue Sky as its music this was played at the Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games Closing Ceremony during the handover presentation of Birmingham 2022 61 On 3 August 2018 Secret Messages was reissued as originally conceived as a double album It included several cut tracks such as the CD exclusive bonus track Time After Time B side exclusives Buildings Have Eyes and After All the Afterglow exclusives Mandalay and Hello My Old Friend and the 2001 reissue exclusives Endless Lies and No Way Out 62 On 22 October 2018 Lynne announced that Jeff Lynne s ELO would embark on a 2019 North American tour from June to August 2019 63 ELO released their 14th album From Out of Nowhere on 1 November 2019 64 While a tour from the album was announced to begin in October 2020 the official Jeff Lynne s ELO Twitter page then later announced that the tour was cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 65 Legacy and influence EditAccording to music journalist Simon Price ELO wasarguably the most uncool even defiantly anti cool of the lot and have been the slowest to be rehabilitated since They ve been sampled by dozens upon dozens of acts from Company Flow to the Pussycat Dolls if you go looking Every now and then in my journalistic career it s been possible to coax a contemporary band to admit to an ELO influence the Flaming Lips and Super Furry Animals being two examples But the band in whom I perceive the greatest amount of ELO DNA are outside the rock genre altogether Daft Punk 66 In November 2016 Jeff Lynne s ELO won Band of the Year at the Classic Rock Roll of Honour Awards 67 In October 2016 ELO were nominated for the 2017 class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for the first time 68 It was the first time the Hall had announced in advance the members of bands who would be inducted the members of ELO listed were Jeff Lynne Roy Wood Bev Bevan and Richard Tandy 69 On 20 December 2016 it was announced ELO had been elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2017 17 Members EditMain article List of Electric Light Orchestra members Principal members Jeff Lynne lead and backing vocals guitars bass piano keyboards cello drums percussion 1970 1983 1985 1986 2000 2001 2014 present Roy Wood lead and backing vocals guitars bass cello oboe bassoon 1970 1972 Bev Bevan drums percussion backing vocals 1970 1983 1985 1986 Richard Tandy piano keyboards synthesizer bass guitar backing vocals 1972 1983 1985 1986 2000 2001 2014 2016 2019 present 70 Discography EditMain articles Electric Light Orchestra discography and recorded songs The Electric Light Orchestra 1971 ELO 2 1973 On the Third Day 1973 Eldorado 1974 Face the Music 1975 A New World Record 1976 Out of the Blue 1977 Discovery 1979 Xanadu 1980 with Olivia Newton John soundtrack album Time 1981 credited as ELO Secret Messages 1983 Balance of Power 1986 Zoom 2001 Alone in the Universe 2015 credited as Jeff Lynne s ELO From Out of Nowhere 2019 credited as Jeff Lynne s ELO Notes Edit The band did reach No 1 on the Radio amp Records chart with Shine a Little Love in 1979 15 16 References Edit a b Breithaupt Don Breithaupt Jeff 2000 Night Moves Pop Music in the Late 70s St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 19821 3 Ankeny Jason Electric Light Orchestra Part II AllMusic a b Ankeny Jason Electric Light Orchestra AllMusic The following references cite the band as either orchestral pop or symphonic pop Macan Edward 1997 Rocking the Classics English Progressive Rock and the Counterculture Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509887 7 Music review Jeff Lynn s ELO The Scotsman 2018 Retrieved 16 October 2022 Araimo Catherine 2018 Listen to ELO Play the Ultimate Anti Love Song on Valentine s Day 1976 Paste Retrieved 16 October 2022 DeRiso Nick How ELO Slimmed Down Then Went Disco on Discovery Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 11 March 2023 Lecaro Lina 7 August 2018 Live in L A Jeff Lynne s ELO Prove That Spacy Pop Rock Is Still a Livin Thing LA Weekly Ray Michael ed 2012 Classical Influences Art Rock and Progressive Rock Disco Punk New Wave Heavy Metal and More Music in the 1970s and 1980s Britannica Educational Publishing p 105 ISBN 978 1 61530 912 2 Center Event Tickets 22 October 2018 Jeff Lynne s ELO Announces 2019 Headlining Tour Medium com Retrieved 23 August 2019 Electric Light Orchestra Band History Elo biz Archived from the original on 11 May 2010 Retrieved 2 October 2011 RIAA RIAA Archived from the original on 4 October 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2011 Home Bpi co uk Retrieved 2 February 2013 Electric Light Orchestra Chart History Billboard com Retrieved 23 August 2019 E L O full Official Chart History Official Charts Company Officialcharts com Retrieved 23 August 2019 Robert Porter Electric Light Orchestra The USA Singles Jeff Lynne Song Database Retrieved 27 July 2007 ELO Wweb uta edu Retrieved 23 August 2019 Charts Wweb uta edu Retrieved 23 August 2019 a b Sisario Ben 20 December 2016 Pearl Jam Tupac Shakur and Joan Baez Will Join the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame NYTimes com The New York Times Retrieved 20 December 2016 Picking up where the Beatles left off Jeff Lynne and ELO Photograph Andre Csillag Rex Alan McGee 16 October 2008 ELO The band the Beatles could have been The Guardian Retrieved 9 December 2014 Electric Light Orchestra s No Answer snopes com Retrieved 31 January 2011 Bevan Bev 1980 The Elo Story Mushroom Publishing p 174 ISBN 0907394000 Roy Wood talks about ELO BBC 2007 Kielty Martin Why Roy Wood Really Left the Electric Light Orchestra Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 8 June 2020 Larkin Colin 20 July 2016 Electric Light Orchestra Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 20 July 2016 a b c d ELO UK Chart History Official Charts Company Retrieved 9 February 2015 Eaton Music Louis Clark Web archive org 5 June 2008 Retrieved 31 January 2011 ELO Livin Thing American Music Awards 31 Jan 1977 Full YouTube 25 February 2011 Bornino Bruno 62 000 see ELO s UFO Cleveland Press 17 July 1978 Robert Porter Electric Light Orchestra Out Of The Blue Tour An in depth look at the 1978 tour Jeff Lynne Song Database Retrieved 27 July 2007 Cashbox Magazine PDF Billboard 4 March 1978 p 42 Retrieved 12 November 2021 via World Radio History ELO Wweb uta edu Retrieved 8 November 2018 Charts Wweb uta edu Retrieved 8 November 2018 Guinness World Records British Hit Singles 14th Edition page 195 0 85112 156 X Sara Benn 20 August 2015 Xanadu gets UK premiere Theatre news Retrieved 20 August 2015 Electric Light Orchestra Time Popmatters com Retrieved 23 August 2019 Sweeting Adam 25 February 2021 Louis Clark obituary The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 March 2023 Van Der Kiste John 2015 Jeff Lynne The Electric Light Orchestra Fonthill Media Deriso Nick 17 February 2021 35 Years Ago Electric Light Orchestra Blow Apart On Balance of Power Ultimate Classic Rock Ultimate Classic Rock Retrieved 29 March 2021 ELO Calling America AB 5 Jul 1986 YouTube 31 May 2011 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 ELO Disney s Summer Vacation Party TV Show 1986 YouTube 17 October 2012 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Electric Light Orchestra ELO Concert at Birmingham NEC 1986 Heartbeat 86 YouTube 28 May 2013 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Zoom AllMusic Retrieved 23 August 2019 ELO a no go The Philadelphia Inquirer 18 August 2001 pp E8 The off switch has been flipped on the Electric Light Orchestra Or at least its tour which was wired to illuminate the First Union Center on 15 Sept Electric Light Orchestra Live The Early Years Coming to DVD August 24th BraveWords 13 August 2010 Retrieved 14 October 2022 Face The Music HERE IS THE NEWS Ftmusic com Archived from the original on 13 November 2015 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Releases elo Elo biz 5 October 2012 Retrieved 2 February 2013 Do Ya Want More Reissues From Electric Light Orchestra and Jeff Lynne The Second Disc Theseconddisc com Archived from the original on 13 January 2013 Retrieved 2 February 2013 a b Chereene Allen Twitter com Caroline Sullivan 15 September 2014 Jeff Lynne s ELO review school disco joy for 1970s maximalism The Guardian Miller Joshua 10 November 2015 Jeff Lynne s Long Awaited Return to Electric Light Orchestra Pastemagazine com Review and setlist Jeff Lynne s ELO Hyde Park London Birminghammail co uk 15 September 2014 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Lynch Joe 8 February 2015 Grammys 2015 Ed Sheeran Joins Jeff Lynne s ELO for Mr Blue Sky Billboard Retrieved 18 April 2016 Grow Kory 9 February 2015 Ed Sheeran Performs With ELO at the Grammys Rolling Stone JEFF LYNNE S ELO TO RELEASE FIRST ALBUM OF ALL NEW ELO MUSIC IN OVER A DECADE Electric Light Orchestra and Jeff Lynne Archived from the original on 7 June 2019 Retrieved 18 April 2016 a b Electric Light Orchestra Returns In Fine Form Npr org 24 September 2015 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Livin Thing Jeff Lynne s ELO Triumph at First U S Show in 30 Years Rolling Stone 21 November 2014 Jeff Lynne s ELO playing intimate U S release shows this month touring Europe in 2016 dates Brooklynvegan com 17 November 2014 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Jeff Lynne s ELO to Play Pyramid Stage Sunday Teatime Slot Glastonbury Festival Retrieved 1 February 2016 Jeff Lynne s ELO announce Wembley Stadium show NME 27 June 2016 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Tom Chaplin and the Shires To Support Jeff Lynne s ELO on UK Dates Stereoboard com Retrieved 5 July 2017 Joe Lynch 8 April 2017 11 Unforgettable Moments From the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2017 Ceremony Billboard com Retrieved 13 November 2017 ELO to have role in Birmingham 2022 handover at Gold Coast 2018 alongside rap artist and cast of youngsters Insidethegames biz SECRET MESSAGES 35TH ANNIVERSARY 2LP ELO US Retrieved 11 July 2020 permanent dead link Jeff Lynne s ELO Route 2019 North American Summer Tours Rolling Stone Reed Ryan 26 September 2019 Jeff Lynne s ELO Ready New LP From Out of Nowhere Issue Title Track Rolling Stone Retrieved 26 September 2019 JeffLynnesELO 15 May 2020 It s with deep regret and sadness that I have to cancel my upcoming October UK tour Tweet Retrieved 11 July 2020 via Twitter Price Simon 16 September 2014 The Jesus of Uncool Is Risen ELO Live By Simon Price The Quietus Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 Retrieved 23 August 2019 Cheap Trick ELO Queen Def Leppard Jeff Beck Among Winners at Classic Rock Awards Vintage Vinyl News Archived from the original on 11 June 2017 Retrieved 15 November 2016 Minsker Evan 18 October 2016 Rock Hall 2017 Nominations Pearl Jam Tupac Depeche Mode Kraftwerk Janet Jackson Bad Brains Pitchfork Pitchfork com Retrieved 30 October 2016 Electric Light Orchestra ELO Rock amp Roll Hall of Fame Archived from the original on 23 December 2016 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Jeff Lynne Song Database Jeff Lynne s ELO From Out Of Nowhere Tour www jefflynnesongs com Retrieved 11 March 2023 Further reading EditBevan Bev The Electric Light Orchestra Story London Mushroom 1980 Van der Kiste John Jeff Lynne The Electric Light Orchestra before and after Stroud Fonthill Media 2015 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Electric Light Orchestra Jeff Lynne s ELO Electric Light Orchestra on Facebook Electric Light Orchestra Record label Legacy Recordings Electric Light Orchestra at IMDb ELO Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2017 Jeff Lynne Songs Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electric Light Orchestra amp oldid 1154421967, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.