Only after instrumental tracks were complete would lyrics be written and sung. Electronic keyboards would come next, finishing with guitar solos.” Sometimes Bevan would meticulously double his drum parts, getting the “big, heavy, powerful” sound he was known for. We always built up an album in the same way: drums and bass first, then piano, followed by rhythm guitar. As usual, he had done it with a piano, guitar and by humming the tune. Blue Sky.’ I just kept coming up with songs…about 14 in two weeks.”ĭrummer Bev Bevan, who had been Lynne’s partner-in-crime ever since their days with the Move, told journalist Johnny Black in 2014, “Jeff had every song for that album on tape. The weather had been really bad and then one day I got up and it was fantastic, the sun was brilliant and shining, all the mountains were lit up and this mist had gone away. “For two weeks, I came up with nothing, and I only had four weeks to write this double album! I was sort of thinking, bloody hell, maybe I can’t come up with anything. He brought his guitar, and hired a Revox tape recorder and electric piano from a little shop. Total music, and probably most of the beer gardens in Munich, just by way of distraction.”īefore heading to Munich, where he intended to record the album at Giorgio Moroder’s Musicland Studios in May, Lynne rented a chalet in the village of Bassin, just beyond Lake Geneva in the Swiss Alps. It was a time of total music for me, and once I’d got rolling, the songs just kept on coming. “ Out of the Blue was probably the hardest work I’ve ever done,” Lynne later wrote, “But also the most satisfying. Lynne found that tight deadlines motivated him, and he actually liked “chaining himself to a desk” to write lyrics, which he tended to do only after being satisfied with the music he’d create. Lynne liked the challenge of producing a new two-disc set as long as he could record it in the studio, and his boss gave him the go-ahead, but it had to be done fast. The head of United Artists Records told ELO leader Jeff Lynne he wanted him to deliver a double live album in the mold of Frampton Comes Alive! as ELO’s follow-up to their latest album, A New World Record. The saga of Electric Light Orchestra’s massively successful double-LP Out of the Blue (over 10 million albums sold, spawning four hit singles and a hugely popular world tour), began in early 1977 Los Angeles. Edgar Winter Wins Grammy For All-Star Tribute Album, ‘Brother Johnny’.Willie Nelson, 89, Wins Grammy For Best Country Album.Kenny Loggins Adds to Final Tour, ‘This Is It’.10 Grammy Best New Artist Winners & Losers.Ozzy, Paul Stanley, Joan Jett Poke Fun at Term ‘Rock Stars’ in Super Bowl Ad.Henry Diltz Tours His Rock Photo Exhibit at L.A.‘The London Howlin’ Wolf Sessions’: When Clapton, the Stones, Winwood & Starr Helped Out a Blues Hero.Alan Parsons Project Gets ‘Friendly Card’ Box Set.Stray Cats’ Debut Album & the Rockabilly Revival.Mick Fleetwood: Fleetwood Mac Are D-U-N Done.Mike Tramp to Release ‘Songs of White Lion’.
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