Jeff Lynne’s ELO – Alone In The Universe (2015) [Deluxe Edition]
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 37:15 minutes | 826 MB | Genre: Rock
Studio Master, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | @ Columbia
Known as one of the most iconic forces in music history, ELO delivers the new album, ‘Jeff Lynne s ELO Alone In The Universe , which will be the first new ELO music in a decade. As with ELO’s previous chart-topping albums, Jeff Lynne continues to serve as ELO’s producer, songwriter, arranger, lead singer and guitarist. Jeff Lynne was the creative genius behind ELO which sold more than 50 million albums worldwide, had more than 20 Top 40 Hits across the U.S. and the U.K. and received countless awards and accolades. At the time of ELO’s formation, Lynne had said the goal was to create modern rock and pop songs. A goal that remains true some 30 years later with the creation of this new material.
Alone in the Universe isn’t the first Jeff Lynne album of the 21st century, nor is it the first Electric Light Orchestra of the 21st century. That honor belongs to Zoom, a 2001 comeback that faded quickly into history books, its lack of success blamed in some quarters on Lynne’s reluctance to tour. If Jeff didn’t want to hit the road, his old bandmate Bev Bevan had no problem constituting a lineup and touring under the name ELO Part II, whose presence somewhat explains why Alone in the Universe is credited to the somewhat convoluted Jeff Lynne’s ELO — a truncation of the band’s full name that also assigns credit where it’s due, as most listeners associate this majestic post-Abbey Road pop with Lynne alone. Certainly, Alone in the Universe is recognizably the work of Lynne: harmonies so sweet they’d induce cavities, stately midtempo marches that just avoid the appearance of pomp, a devotion to both McCartney-esque melody and Martin-esque production, spiked by an ode to George Harrison’s slide guitar. At 32 minutes, Alone in the Universe is remarkably devoid of excess — notably, it’s just five minutes longer than his breezy 2012 covers album Long Wave — but it doesn’t feel shrugged off, nor does it feel especially attached to its time. Lynne abandons some of the clean-cut sharp edges of his early-’90s productions so he can happily live in the late ’70s — there are echoes of disco on “One Step at a Time” and the entire enterprise carries a sci-fi aura, even if it never is fantastical or prog — and there’s an appeal to his long looks back because he’s not pandering to nostalgia: he’s simply embracing who he is. If he hasn’t written a knockout single — a high bar for a craftsman of 67 to clear — he’s nevertheless sculpted ten strong songs, each one containing a sturdy melodic foundation and dressed in the handsomest threads of 1978. For many longtime followers of Lynne and ELO, that will be all they need from Alone in the Universe.
Tracklist:
01 – When I Was a Boy
02 – Love and Rain
03 – Dirty to the Bone
04 – When the Night Comes
05 – The Sun Will Shine on You
06 – Ain’t It a Drag
07 – All My Life
08 – I’m Leaving You
09 – One Step at a Time
10 – Alone in the Universe
11 – Fault Line [Bonus Track
12 – Blue [Bonus Track]
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