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Eldorado, A Symphony, also known as simply Eldorado, is the fourth studio album and a concept album by the Electric Light Orchestra released in 1974.
ConceptEldorado is the first complete ELO concept album, and Jeff Lynne conceived of the entire story before he wrote any music.[1] The story follows a Walter Mitty-like character who mentally journeys into fantasy worlds via dreams, to escape a mundane reality he can't tolerate. RecordingOn this album Jeff Lynne stopped overdubbing strings, as he had on the first three ELO albums, and instead hired an orchestra.[1] Louis Clark co-arranged and conducted the strings, and would become a full member.[1] Mike de Albuquerque departed before recording, leaving Lynne to play bass and provide all vocals for the album, though de Albuquerque was credited. Kelly Groucutt replaced de Albuquerque for the subsequent tour, when cellist Melvyn Gale also joined. "Eldorado Finale" is heavily orchestrated much like "Eldorado Overture". Jeff Lynne said of the song, "I like the heavy chords and the slightly daft ending, where you hear the double bass players packing up their basses, because they wouldn't play another millisecond past the allotted moment."[1] Reception"Can't Get It Out of My Head" was released as a single (with "Illusions in G Major") and was a success in the US, however the second single, an edited version of "Boy Blue" failed to make any impact. The album was soon certified Gold there. However, the album and singles failed to find a wide audience in the band's native United Kingdom. Cover artworkThe front cover, designed by Sharon Arden, comprises a still from the popular 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. Track listingAll songs written by Jeff Lynne. Side one
Side two
ReissueThe album was remastered and reissued in 2001 with two bonus tracks, "Eldorado Instrumental Medley", a suite of the album's orchestral parts, plus "Dark City", an early draft of the track "Laredo Tornado".
Use as SoundtrackIn 1978, the avant-garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger recreated his classic 1954 film Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome, using this album as the soundtrack. Chart Positions, Chart Runs
Personnel
References
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