Electric Light Orchestra
, commonly abbreviated ELO
, formed to accommodate Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne's desire to create modern pop songs with heavily classical overtones, but falling under a light rock category. However, the band's direction for most of their existence was set by Lynne who, after the band's debut record, wrote and arranged all of the group's original compositions and produced every album.
The band was first successful in the United States, billed as 'The English guys with the big fiddles'. [1] They soon gained a cult following despite lukewarm reviews back in their native United Kingdom. They were managed by agent Don Arden, father of Sharon Osbourne.
By the mid-1970s, they had become one of the biggest selling bands in music. From 1972 to 1986, ELO accumulated twenty-seven Top 40 hit single appearances in both the UK and the US. The group also scored twenty Top 20 U.K. hit singles, as well as nineteen Top 20 hit singles in the U.S. Billboard charts, with fifteen in the Hot 100. The band also holds the record for having the most Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 hits of any band in US chart history without ever having a #1 single. [2]
Despite the fact that the majority of the group's material was never researched, audited and certified, ELO collected 21 RIAA awards, 38 BPI awards, [3] [4] and sold well over 100 million records worldwide, not including singles; 50 million of those being sold in a period of only eleven years, from 1971 to 1982. [5]
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ELECTRIC LIGHT ORCHESTRA TICKETS
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History
Birth of the band
In the late 1960s,
Roy Wood, guitarist, vocalist songwriter of
The Move, had an idea to form a new band that would use
cellos,
violins,
horns and
woodwinds to give their music a
classical sound, taking rock music in the direction "that
The Beatles had left off." Jeff Lynne, frontman with fellow
Birmingham band
The Idle Race, was excited by the concept. In January 1970, when
Carl Wayne left The Move, Lynne accepted Wood's second invitation to join the band 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. To help finance the fledgling band, two more Move albums were released during the lengthy ELO recordings. The resulting debut album
The Electric Light Orchestra
was released in 1971 (1972 in the United States as
No Answer
) and "10538 Overture" became a UK top ten hit.
thumb
US album cover portrait of ELO by
Richard Avedon
However, tensions soon surfaced between Wood and Lynne due to problems with management.
[6] Amid the recordings for the band's second LP, Wood left the band, taking cellist
Hugh McDowell and horn player Bill Hunt with him to form
Wizzard. 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
Bev Bevan remaining on
drums, joined by
Richard Tandy on the
Moog synthesizer,
Mike de Albuquerque on bass,
Mike Edwards and
Colin Walker adding cello and
Wilfred Gibson replacing Steve Woolam on violin.
The new lineup performed at the 1972
Reading Festival. Barcus Berry
pickups, now sported by the band's string trio, allowed them to dance on stage with their instruments. The band released their second album,
ELO 2
in 1973, which produced their first US chart hit, a hugely elaborate version of the
Chuck Berry classic "
Roll Over Beethoven". ELO also made their first appearance on
American Bandstand.
During the recording of the third album, Gibson and Walker left the band.
Mik Kaminski joined as violinist, while remaining cellist Edwards finished the cello parts before McDowell returned to ELO from Wizzard. The resulting album,
On the Third Day
was released in late 1973, with the American version featuring the hit "
Showdown" along with an unusual photograph, seen at right, taken by famed photographer
Richard Avedon which had ELO's
"Do It With the Light On Tour" lineup exposing their navels.
Global success
For the band's fourth album,
Eldorado, A Symphony
, a concept album about dreams, Lynne was finally able to stop overdubbing strings, and hire an orchestra and choir.
Louis Clark joined the band as string arranger.
[7] The first single off the album, "
Can't Get It Out of My Head", became their first US
Billboard charts Top 10 hit, and
Eldorado, A Symphony
became ELO's first
gold album.
After the release of
Eldorado, A Symphony
, bassist and vocalist
Kelly Groucutt and cellist
Melvyn Gale joined, replacing de Albuquerque and Edwards respectively. The lineup stabilised as the band took to a decidedly more accessible sound.
Face the Music
was released in 1975, producing the hit singles "
Evil Woman" and "
Strange Magic". The opening instrumental "
Fire On High", with its mix of strings and blazing acoustic guitars, saw heavy exposure as background music on
CBS Sports Spectacular montages, though most viewers had no idea of the song's origins.
ELO had become successful in the United States at this point and they were a star attraction on the stadium and arena circuit, as well as regularly appearing on
The Midnight Special (1973, 1975, 1976 & 1977). They were still largely ignored in the United Kingdom until their sixth album,
A New World Record
, hit the top ten there in 1976. It contained the hit singles "
Livin' Thing", "
Telephone Line", "
Rockaria!" and "
Do Ya", a rerecording of a Move song.
A New World Record
was followed by another 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
space ship 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 80,000 people seeing them at
Cleveland Stadium.
The Big Night
went on to become the highest-grossing live concert tour in music history up to that point (1978).
[8] The band also played at the
Wembley Arena for eight straight sold-out nights during the tour as well, another record at that time. The first of these shows was recorded and televised, and later released as a
CD and
DVD.
In 1979, the multi-
platinum album Discovery
(or "Disco? Very!", as fans refer to it), was released. Although the biggest hit on the album (and ELO's biggest hit overall) was the hard-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", "
Last Train to London", "
Confusion" and "
The Diary of Horace Wimp".
Although there would be no live tour associated with
Discovery
, the band recorded the entire album in
video form. The
Discovery
music videos would be the last time the "classic" late 1970s lineup would be seen together, as the violinist,
Mik Kaminski, and the two cellists,
Hugh McDowell and
Melvyn Gale, were shortly dismissed.
The Electric Light Orchestra finished 1979 as the biggest selling act in the United Kingdom. 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
.
In 1980, Jeff Lynne was asked to write for the soundtrack of the musical film
Xanadu
, with the other half written by
John Farrar and performed by the film's star
Olivia Newton-John. The movie 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," #1 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 singles chart in the United Kingdom.
[9] Xanadu was turned into a surprising hit Broadway Musical that opened on 10 July 2007 at the Helen Hayes Theatre to uniformly good reviews and received 2
Tony Award nominations.
The Electric Light Orchestra Story
, Bev Bevan's memoirs from his early days and throughout his career with The Move and ELO, was also published in 1980.
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 laid off, synthesisers took a dominating role, as was a trend in the larger music scene.
Time
topped the U.K. charts for two weeks and was the last ELO studio album to date to be certified platinum in the United Kingdom. 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." The band embarked on their last world tour to date to promote the LP. It was the first ELO tour without cellists, although Mik Kaminski returned to play his famous "blue violin." The live line-up was completed with Louis Clark and newcomer Dave Morgan playing the string parts on synthesisers, and "Fred the Robot" voicing the "Prologue" and "Epilogue".
Decline
Jeff Lynne wanted to follow
Time
with a double album, but CBS blocked his plan, claiming it would be too expensive. The new album was edited down from double album to a single disc and released as
Secret Messages
in 1983 (many of the outtakes were later released on "
Afterglow" or as b-sides of singles). The album was an instant hit in the UK reaching the top 5. The album's release was dampened by a string of bad news—that there would be no tour to promote the LP, that drummer Bevan was to play drums for
Black Sabbath, and that bassist Kelly Groucutt had left the band (Groucutt later sued Lynne, Bevan, and ELO's management for alleged lost royalty fees, and the matter was settled out of court). Rumours from fans about the group disbanding were publicly denied by Bevan. Although
Secret Messages
debuted at number four in the United Kingdom, it fell off the charts, failing to catch fire with a lack of hit singles and a lukewarm media response.
By 1983, Bevan was expressing a desire to join
Black Sabbath permanently, Lynne and Tandy were recording tracks for the
Electric Dreams
soundtrack under Jeff Lynne's name, and, with Groucutt's departure, ELO was assumed to be finished. However, Lynne was contractually obligated to make one more ELO album.
Lynne, Bevan and Tandy returned to the studio in 1985 as a three-piece (with Christian Schneider playing
saxophone on some tracks) to record ELO's final album of the 20th century,
Balance of Power
, released early in 1986. Though the single "
Calling America" placed in the Top 30 in the United Kingdom (#28) and Top 20 in the
States, subsequent singles failed to chart. The album was absent of actual strings, replaced once again by synthesisers, this time played by Tandy. The album also shed the customary ELO logo that had appeared on every album since 1976.
Lynne, with the 7-piece lineup that supported
Time
(with Martin Smith replacing Groucutt on bass), played a small number of live ELO performances in 1986, including shows in England and Germany along with US appearances on
American Bandstand,
Solid Gold, then at
Disneyland that summer. The
Birmingham Heart Beat Charity Concert 1986 was a charity concert organized by Bevan in ELO's hometown of Birmingham on 15 March 1986. A hint of Lynne's future was seen when
George Harrison appeared onstage during the encore at Heartbeat, joining in the all-star jam of "
Johnny B. Goode". ELO's last performance of the century occurred on 13 July 1986 in
Stuttgart, Germany.
ELO essentially 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)
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1
were released. Bevan approached Lynne to make another ELO album in 1988. Lynne was not interested and went on to announce that ELO was no more.
ELO Part II
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 except Clark. ELO Part II released their debut album
Electric Light Orchestra Part Two
in 1991. Mik Kaminski, Kelly Groucutt and Hugh McDowell joined the band for the first tour in 1991. McDowell left after that tour. Bevan, Groucutt, Kaminski and Clark recorded a second album,
Moment Of Truth, in 1994 and toured extensively until 1999. Bevan retired from the lineup in 1999 and sold his share of the ELO name to Jeff Lynne in 2000. The remaining members continue to tour and record, renamed as
The Orchestra.
Reformation in 2000
Jeff 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 outtakes 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. Though billed and marketed as an ELO album, the only returning member other than Jeff Lynne was Richard Tandy, who performed on one track.
Zoom
took on a more organic sound, with less emphasis on strings and electronic effects. 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. Former ELO member
Richard 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
, that was released on DVD. The planned tour was cancelled.
[10] Lynne, a close friend of George Harrison, was also terribly affected by Harrison's illness and later death in November 2001. The ELO tour was not rescheduled.
Harvest Records and Epic/Legacy released ELO's back catalogue from 2001–07. Included amongst the remastered album tracks were unreleased songs and outtakes, including 2 new singles "
Surrender" which registered on the lower end of the
UK Singles Chart at #81, some 30 years after it was written in 1976. Another unreleased recording, "Latitude 88 North," was released as the third bonus track on the 2007 remastered version of their 1977 album Out of the Blue. The song was written in 1977, but existed only as a demo recording of the chorus. Jeff Lynne returned to the song and finished it in preparation for the remastered version of Out of the Blue.
Current releases
Although there has been no news on any forthcoming new ELO projects, ELO's core studio albums have now all been remastered and expanded with bonus tracks, leaving only
The Night the Light Went On (in Long Beach)
,
ELO's Greatest Hits
,
Xanadu
,
Zoom
and
ELO's Greatest Hits Live
AKA
Zoom Tour Live
to be done. Latest in the Epic/Legacy series were
Out of the Blue
and
Balance of Power
which were released in February, 2007. A lost demo from 1977 was finished and released in the United Kingdom as a download single on 6 February 2007, titled "
Latitude 88 North".
All the original ELO albums were released in mini replica sleeves in Japan. Among the many features was the original
Jet Records label on the disc and original inner sleeves and lyrics.
To further cash in on the success of the remasters, another ELO compilation hit the German, then UK shops in October 2007, and was also released in the US 5 February 2008. It's the follow-up to
All Over the World: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra
and is called
Ticket to the Moon: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra Volume 2
.
An eco-friendly repackage of
The Essential Electric Light Orchestra
called
Playlist: The Very Best of Electric Light Orchestra
was released on 2 September 2008.
Band name and logo
The group's name is an intended pun based not only on
electric light
(as in a light bulb as seen on early album covers) but also using "electric" rock instruments combined with a "light orchestra" (orchestras with only a few cellos and violins that were popular in Britain during the 1960s).
The official band logo (left), designed in 1976 by artist
Kosh, was first seen on their 1976 album
A New World Record
and is based on a 1946
Wurlitzer jukebox speaker, model 4008. The 4008 speaker was, itself, based upon the upper cabinet of the most popular
jukebox of all time, the
Wurlitzer model 1015. The band's previous logo (right) was similar to the
General Electric logo. The new logo has appeared on most of the band's albums in various forms. For instance, on 1977's
Out of the Blue
, the logo was turned into a huge flying saucer space station, an enduring image that is now synonymous with the band. Again, on the follow up
Discovery
, the logo became a small glowing artifact on top of a treasure chest. Bev Bevan usually displayed the logo on his drum kit.
Tributes
Randy Newman recorded a parody/tribute to the band titled "The Story of a Rock and Roll Band" for his 1979 album
Born Again
.
A tribute album was released by Not Lame Records on 31 August 2004. Titled
Lynne Me Your Ears
, this cover anthology featured ELO standards performed by former Lynne band mate Carl Wayne,
Todd Rundgren,
Sixpence None the Richer,
Neilson Hubbard and
Venus Hum,
The Shazam, and a host of others.
Parthenon Huxley, former lead guitar and vocalist for ELO Part 2 and The Orchestra under
Bev Bevan, released a CD entitled
Homemade Spaceship: The Music of ELO Performed by P. Hux.
, also covering a dozen ELO tunes, and enlisting the aid of former member
Mik Kaminski.
A tribute to ELO,
L.E.O., features original material written by devotees of Lynne's unique orchestrated sound. American musician
Bleu brought together various musicians to record this "tribute" in 2007. Andy Sturmer, of seminal ELO/Queen/Beatles influenced band
Jellyfish, co-wrote and provided some vocals for the project. The songs are written entirely in Lynne's style and mimic ELO's orchestration and production.
Personnel
Members on studio albums
- Jeff Lynne – vocals, guitars, bass guitar, keyboards, drums, cello, producer, songwriter, composer, arranger (1970–1986, 2000–01)
- Roy Wood – vocals, guitar, bass guitar, cello, clarinet, bassoon, oboe, drums, recorder, producer, songwriter, arranger (1970–1972)
- Bev Bevan – drums, percussion, vocals (1970–1986)
- Richard Tandy – keyboards, vocals, bass guitar, guitar, arranger (1972–1986, 2000–01)
- Kelly Groucutt – bass guitar, vocals (1975–1983)
- Mik Kaminski – violin (1973–1979, 1983)
- Hugh McDowell – cello (1973–1979)
- Melvyn Gale – cello (1975–1979)
- Mike Edwards – cello (1972–1974)
- Mike de Albuquerque – bass guitar, vocals (1972–1974)
- Wilfred Gibson – violin (1972–1973)
- Colin Walker – cello (1972–1973)
- Bill Hunt – keyboards, French horn, hunting horn (1970–1972)
- Steve Woolam – violin (1970–1971)
- Louis Clark – orchestra arranger, conductor (1974–1979, 1983)
- Mack – engineer (1975–1981, 1986)
- Bill Bottrell – engineer (1981, 1983, 1986)
- Marc Mann – guitar, keyboards, vocals, arranger (2000–01)
Guest musicians on studio albums
- Rick Price – bass guitar (1970) The Electric Light Orchestra
involved initially with some early tracks
- Carl Wayne – vocals (1973) ELO 2 The Lost Planet
- Marc Bolan – guitar (1973) On the Third Day
- Ellie Greenwich – uncredited vocals (1975) Face the Music
- Susan Collins – uncredited vocals (1975) Face the Music
- Nancy O'Neill – uncredited vocals (1975) Face the Music
- Margaret Raymond – uncredited vocals (1975) Face the Music
- Mary Thomas – operatic vocals (1976) A New World Record
- Patti Quatro – uncredited vocals (1976) A New World Record
- Thomas Donnelly - uncredited vocals (1976) "Telephone Line"
- Olivia Newton-John – vocals (1980) "Xanadu"
- Rainer Pietsch – arranger, conductor (1981) Time
- Dave Morgan – backing vocals (1983) Secret Messages
- Christian Schneider – saxophone (1986) Balance of Power
- George Harrison – slide guitar, vocals (2001) Zoom
- Ringo Starr – drums (2001) Zoom
- Suzie Katayama – cello (2001) Zoom
- Roger Lebow – cello (2001) Zoom
- Dave Boruff – saxophone (2001) Zoom
- Laura Lynne – backing vocals (2001) Zoom
- Rosie Vela – backing vocals (2001) Zoom
- Kris Wilkinson – arranger (2001) Zoom
Live lineups
1972 Debut Tour
Roy Wood's only live ELO tour. After the tour, Wood, Hunt and McDowell leave ELO and form Wizzard.
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- Roy Wood – vocals, cello, bass guitar, guitar, woodwind
- Jeff Lynne – vocals, lead guitar, piano, bass guitar
- Bev Bevan – drums, percussion
- Wilfred Gibson – violin
- Richard Tandy – guitar, bass guitar, keyboards
- Mike Edwards – cello
- Bill Hunt – keyboards, French horn
- Hugh McDowell – cello
- Andy Craig – cello
- Trevor Smith – (occasional cello)
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1972–1973 ELO 2 Tour
Bassist Mike de Albuquerque and cellist Colin Walker join ELO after the departure of Wood, Hunt, McDowell, Craig and Smith.
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Edwards
plus
- Mike de Albuquerque – bass guitar, backing vocals
- Wilfred Gibson – violin
- Colin Walker – cello
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1973–1974 Do It With The Light On Tour
Mik Kaminski replaces Gibson on violin, and McDowell returns from Wizzard to replace Walker.
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Edwards, de Albuquerque
plus
- Mik Kaminski – violin
- Hugh McDowell – cello
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1974–1975 Eldorado Tour
Kelly Groucutt replaces de Albuquerque.
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Kaminski, Edwards, Hugh McDowell
plus
- Kelly Groucutt – bass guitar, backing vocals
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1975–1978 Classic Lineup, touring in support of the albums Face The Music
, A New World Record
and Out Of The Blue
Edwards is replaced by cellist Melvyn Gale. The band's most successful period.
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Groucutt, Kaminski, McDowell
plus
- Melvyn Gale – cello
- Jake Commander – additional backing vocals (offstage) on Out Of The Blue Tour
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1981–1982 Time Tour
Cellists McDowell and Gale are replaced with "Technology", Dave Morgan, longtime orchestral arranger Louis Clark and "Fred"
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Groucutt, Kaminski
plus
- Louis Clark – synthesiser
- Dave Morgan – guitar, vocoder
- Fred the Robot – Spoken Prologue and Epilogue
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1986 Balance Of Power Tour
Martin Smith replaces Groucutt, and no "Fred"
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Lynne, Bevan, Tandy, Kaminski, Clark, Morgan
plus
- Martin Smith – bass guitar
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2001 Zoom Tour
Featuring a whole new band save for Lynne and Tandy. The only time the band has not featured a violinist although the cellos return.
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Lynne, Tandy
plus
- Marc Mann – lead guitar, rhythm guitar, keyboards
- Matt Bissonette – bass guitar, backing vocals
- Gregg Bissonette – drums, backing vocals
- Peggy Baldwin – electric cello
- Sarah O'Brien – electric cello
- Rosie Vela – backing vocals
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Discography
This is a simple text-only list; For a full discography with chart placings and alternative titles please see Electric Light Orchestra discography.
- The Electric Light Orchestra (UK) / No Answer (US)
(1971/1972)
- ELO 2 (UK) / Electric Light Orchestra II / ELO II (US)
(1973)
- On the Third Day
(1973)
- Eldorado, A Symphony
(1974)
- Face the Music
(1975)
- A New World Record
(1976)
- Out of the Blue
(1977)
- Discovery
(1979)
- Xanadu
(1980)
- Time
(1981)
- Secret Messages
(1983)
- Balance of Power
(1986)
- Zoom
(2001)
References
- Electric Light Orchestra: Eldorado
- Electric Light Orchestra - The USA Singles
- RIAA
- The Bpi
- The Citizen
- A Recent interview with Roy Wood in Mojo magazine
- Eaton Music - Louis Clark
- Electric Light Orchestra -- Out Of The Blue Tour: An in-depth look at the 1978 tour
- Guinness World Records: "British Hit Singles 14th Edition", page 195. 0-85112-156-X
- ELO a no-go