A New World Record

by Sony

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Sales Rank:67227 (lower is better)
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Availability:
Release Date:1990-10-25
Label:Sony
UPC:074643552929
Binding:Audio CD
Published By:Sony
ASIN:B0000025DT
Category:Music

Tracks on A New World Record by Sony

  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

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Album Description

Limited Edition digitally remastered Japanese pressing of this 1976 album packaged in a miniature LP sleeve featuring six bonus tracks: Alternate Versions of 'Telephone Line', 'Surrender', 'Tightrope', 'Above The Clouds' and 'So Fine'. Sony. 2006..

Customer Reviews

Should have bought the CD sooner. - Reviewed on 2008-05-30
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Listened to the LP over and over again as a kid. Definitely one of my favorite records at the time. It sounds just as good now and I feel unfortunate to have been missing out. I have no idea what happened to my original but I don't have anything to play it with anyway. I've purchased some of the other ELO CD's but haven't yet listened to them. I also owned "Out of the Blue" back then and again now, but alas it is just OK in my opinion, not nearly as good as "A New World Record". Jeff Lynne really is a talent, and I believe this was his best effort.
Still awesome after 31 years - Reviewed on 2007-08-19
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Geez, has it been that long already? Every once in awhile, after I've listened to one of my favorite CDs, I'll think "is this really good, or is it just me?" Then I'll log into Amazon to see what other people say, just out of curiosity. "A New World Record" is one of my all-time faves, of any band. My sister had it on vinyl back when it came out, and as soon as I found it on CD I bought it. I dug it out of my collection yesterday and have listened to it 3x in the last 24 hours ... it's STILL that good. You can read all the details on the other reviews, but if you don't have this one, please get it -- you'll love it.
Outstanding effort! - Reviewed on 2007-05-28
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E.L.O. was at this point in their career, a band in transition. Having been born as an intelligent pop band called The Move, E.L.O. had veered sharply into progressive rock in the early 1970's and had some moderate success with their marriage of classical music stylings (complete with a permanent string section) and epic style rock production. After their return to commercial success with 1974's "Eldorado", they found even greater success with 1975's "Face The Music", which produced two of their signature songs, "Evil Woman" and "Strange Magic". In the face of such success, E.L.O. was on the brink of either selling out or reaching its' greatest heights. And...they chose the greatest heights.

The opening track, "Tightrope", was a journey through their career to date ("They say some days you're gonna win/They say some days you're gonna lose")and featured a perfect marriage of synthesizer blues rock married with their most energetic string section yet. It's a killer track, perhaps the moment when everything really came together for the band...the pristine moment when their progressive leanings were still vibrant, yet was now manifesting itself as something accessible to the masses.

"Telephone Line", the biggest hit from the album, is a soaring power ballad that uses some neat sonic tricks (for the 1970's) but puts on a lyrical twist that was ahead of its time (Telephone Line/Give me some time/I'm living in twilight). "Rockaria!" is a manic romp about a city going wild for rock and roll, which is on one side epic silliness, and on the other, an ear to ear grin for everything fun about rock and roll. The album is filled with progressive pop music, a forerunner of many new wave stylings that would become all the rage within 5 years, on songs like "So Fine", "Livin' Thing" and "Shangri-La"..and they even dust off an old Move song, "Do Ya", a psychedelic rocker that fits perfectly in the transitional style of this album.

Considering how easy it is to identify an E.L.O. song, it seems almost laughable to suggest that one of their albums would see them dabbling in many different styles. But that's just what they do on "A New World Record", showing the rock and blues roots, the progressive influence, and finally veering into the cutting edge of modern pop. All in all...a masterpiece of the seventies.
The Best - Reviewed on 2007-01-31
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1 customer found this review helpful.

If It Was Me On A Desert Island. This And Brad Pitt Would Be Heaven. I wore out my record stylus playing it in the 70's while in high school. Everything said about 70's music does not apply to ELO. I was there and this was a revelation.

Perfect Perfect Perfect
Best of ELO - Reviewed on 2006-08-29
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4 customers found this review helpful.

Basically, ANWR is the best of ELO in my opinion. I think so because it's a balance between the early ELO that many fans love and then the more "commercial" ELO of later years that another faction of ELO fans love so much.

Every song is a gem, nothing is filler and it's beautifully crafted by all involved. One of the best albums of the 70s in my opinion
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