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Format: CD
 May 2006
 Record Label: Legacy Recordings
 Recording Type: Studio
 UPC: 696998542228 |
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$12.94 |
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woodysbook (7499 ) 97%
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Excellent customer service. May ship from alternate location depending on... |
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Track Listing A NEW WORLD RECORD: 1. Tightrope 2. Telephone Line 3. Rockaria! 4. Mission (A World Record) 5. So Fine 6. Livin' Thing 7. Above the Clouds 8. Do Ya 9. Shangri-La 10. Telephone Line - (alternate vocal, bonus track) 11. Surrender - (bonus track) 12. Tightrope - (Early Rough mix, instrumental, bonus track) 13. Above the Clouds - (Early Rough mix, instrumental, bonus track) 14. So Fine - (Early Rough mix, instrumental, bonus track) 15. Telephone Line - (instrumental, bonus track)
| Details | | Producer: | Jeff Lynne | | Distributor: | Sony Music Distribution ( | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | AAD |
Album Notes Also available in a 3-pack with FACE THE MUSIC and DISCOVERY. Electric Light Orchestra: Jeff Lynne, Bev Bevan, Richard Tandy, Kelly Groucutt, Mik Kaminski, Hugh McDowell, Melvyn Gale. Electric Light Orchestra: Jeff Lynne (vocals, guitar); Kelly Groucutt (vocals, bass guitar); Richard Tandy (guitar, piano, Clavinet, Moog synthesizer); Mik Kaminsky (violin); Hugh McDowall, Melvin Gale (cello); Bev Bevan (drums, percussion, background vocals). Recording information: 1976. 1976's A NEW WORLD RECORD is both a classic of commercial '70s pop and an archetypal ELO album. From the outer-space synths and rich orchestrations that open the album to Jeff Lynne's meticulous production and Beatlesque melodies, A NEW WORLD RECORD is magnificent ear candy. Both ambitious enough to appeal to "serious" rock fans and ultra-catchy enough to sound terrific on Top 40 radio (the plaintively gorgeous, McCartney-like "Telephone Line" and the anthemic "Livin' Thing" were well-deserved smashes), ELO was one of the few '70s bands whose appeal covered both the FM and AM spectrums. The album even resurrects "Do Ya," a classic single by Lynne's former band, the Move, in a splashy new version. The next ELO album, 1977's elaborate double-album OUT OF THIS WORLD, was probably the band's commercial high point, but A NEW WORLD RECORD is the group's artistic high-water mark.
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