In recent years, although not religious, I’ve considered that the lyrics might also depict a lonely angel, sent to report on Earth, but unable to intervene lest he interfere with humans’ free will. As a child I told people that I came from Pluto, and it has often felt like I’m an alien watching the world go by, unable to act to improve it. “Mission (A World Record),” remains one of my favorite songs, as I relate to the loneliness of its protagonist. I once asked Linda if she or Gita still listened to ELO, but got no reply, which I took to mean that what had, thanks to them, become a staple in my life, turned into just a passing fancy in theirs! In a sense I haven’t since I still love ELO some half a century later, and never really stopped listening to it in between. ![]() As the first ROCK song opened with an ORCHESTRA, I felt drawn into some strange, new world (without the aid of soma) from which I might never return. A vibe of desolate beauty, of being left behind, linked with a prophecy or the ramblings of a seer, a paranoid android or a subterranean homesick alien.Ī New World Record came out my junior year of high school, and as it was popular with two girls I liked, Gita and Linda, I took a detour from my accustomed classical and Beatles music to give ELO a try. But, astral projection or interstellar travel aside, the song concerns itself primarily with a melody, guitar line, and arrangement that read like maps of a future Radiohead. There is nothing straightforward in “Mission (A World Record),” the central lyrics of which are “watching all the world go by” and - not even printed in the liner notes - “how’s life on Earth?” The rest of it could be a starry sci-fi mini-epic or the rant of a tenant at a mission hospital, or both. From the LP lyric sheet, the (artfully incomplete) words to “Mission (A World Record)” So the album closer “Shangri-La” declares in its operatic final two minutes a return to paradise, either towards or away from the pain of love, and the last cut on side A is a puzzle that resolves in a lyrical, gorgeous sadness. But it’s at the end of the album’s sides where the sweetness isn’t so much cleansed as qualified, adding a complex finish to the confections preceding. And so the album is packed with genuine chart hits: “Telephone Line,” “Livin’ Thing,” the odd and wonderful “Do Ya,” the dopey but tolerable “Rockaria!” Pop done and undone to the level of the avant-garde, it’s so ridiculous. Always the hooks, the insanely catchy melodies. ![]() Lynne’s achievement in 1976 was to make this happen succinctly, in service of his writing, which produced the best kinds of love songs - those without the hey babies - full of heartbreak, hope, and hooks. While many fans cite ELO’s next record, 1977’s Out of the Blue, as the masterpiece (and in some ways it is), that double album’s aesthetic really gestated on A New World Record: late-era Beatles laid across heavy accents of American R&B and soul, filtered through an army of instruments and tracks. Launched on record in 1971, by 1976 ELO had five albums under their belt and their sixth, A New World Record, would distill Jeff Lynne’s profound ambition into a back-to-front nine-song pop-prog epic 36 minutes long. In the words of the old ad, this stuff was good and good for you. But along with that fun came a musicality and seriousness of songwriting that could get you scratching your head, too. My age privileges me in remembering hearing new ELO songs on the radio when I was a kid - it was almost impossible I think for DJs to screw up their set with ELO, as their music straddled so many genres at one time - and although I never owned any of their albums until I was in my 40s (I can’t believe it either), not liking their music would be akin to not liking having any fun. This song seems to have two meanings: One referring to a loved one that is never going to come or never come back, the other being that it could be the main characters referring to the mystical lands itself.I never knew anyone who wasn’t at least a little bit of a fan of Electric Light Orchestra. Gone are the days when you dreamed of that car ![]() In the UK, “Shangri-La” was released as a single in September, 1969, a month before the album came out. The album Or The Decline And Fall Of The British Empire was a commercial flop, which contributed to many problems the band faced. Album: Arthur (Or the Decline and Fall of the British Empire) – 1969
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