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Works Volume I is a 1977 album by progressive rock band Emerson, Lake & Palmer. It is a two-disc set divided into four major sections, one each highlighting each band member, and one for combined works.
OverviewThe album was highly anticipated, as it had been four years since the release of ELP's last studio album, Brain Salad Surgery. However, it was extremely different from the synthesizer-driven music that most fans had expected. The main reason was the constant disagreements about the direction ELP should go.[citation needed] Side 1 of the first disc was the Keith Emerson side, a classical concerto for piano and orchestra in three movements. Side 2 was the Greg Lake side, and consisted of acoustic ballads, most of which were written by Lake & Peter Sinfield. Side 3 (disc 2, side 1, the Carl Palmer side) was considered at that time to be the best of the three "solo" sides[citation needed], as it was the closest to prior ELP compositions. Palmer's side included a remake of "Tank" (from ELP's eponymous first album), with orchestral accompaniment. Another track on Palmer's side which was the rocker "L.A. Nights", featuring Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh on lead and slide guitar and scat vocal. Also, two arrangements of classical pieces figure on the Palmer side: one of Bach's Two-Part Invention in D minor, another, titled 'The Enemy God Dances With The Black Spirits', an excerpt of 2nd movement of "The Scythian Suite" by Sergei Prokofiev. Side 4 (disc 2, side 2) featured the entire band together, and consists of another classical piece re-arranged for rock band, Aaron Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man, and the long-form song "Pirates". Because the sound was so different from their past albums, reaction was mixed. Works Volume I attracted new fans to Emerson, Lake and Palmer, but turned off many others.[citation needed] Track listingDisc oneKeith Emerson
Greg Lake
Disc twoCarl Palmer
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Bonus Tracks
Singles
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