Electric Light Orchestra

ELOElectric Light Orchestra‘s self-titled debut album is released in the UK, though it proves to be the last released collaboration between founders (and former Move members) Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne; Wood leaves the band after an unpromising live debut. The album is released in the US in March 1972, where a phone call to clarify the album’s title results in a misunderstood written note that leads to the American release going out under the unintentional title No Answer. Read more


Order this CD in the StoreGet ready for a very long stretch of ELO reviews, for these guys, as you probably well know, are my all-time favorites. This first album of theirs offers few hints of their future sound, and is probably the most atypical ELO album of all. The reasons for this abound, ranging from the crude studio technology available to the band at the time, to the schizophrenic feel of the album resulting from the presence of then-lead singer/musician Roy Wood, who had also fronted the Move. In many ways, ELO’s first album sounds much like a Move record – and in many cases the Move’s recordings were better engineered. That aside, the music is strikingly different enough to leave a lasting impression. Wood’s “Whisper In The Night” has an almost religious feel, and the early Jeff Lynne tunes “Queen Of The Hours” and “Mr. Radio” deliver his inimitable gift for composing a good song in 2 out of 4 starsthe Beatles mold. Other pieces, such as the cello-saturated “10538 Overture” and “Nellie Takes Her Bow”, both of them also Lynne’s creations, leave quite a bit to be desired in terms of being able to discern voices, instruments, lyrics, or much of anything else. The final verdict – an uneven but promising collection.

  1. 10538 Overture (5:30)
  2. Look At Me Now (3:17)
  3. Nellie Takes Her Bow (6:01)
  4. The Battle Of Martson Moor / July 2nd, 1644 (6:04)
  5. First Movement (3:00)
  6. Mr. Radio (5:04)
  7. Manhattan Rumble / 49th St. Massacre (4:23)
  8. Queen Of The Hours (3:23)
  9. Whisper In The Night (4:48)

Released by: Jet
Release date: 1971
Total running time: 41:30

1996 music review by Earl Green