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From Out of Nowhere
Barnes and Noble
From Out of Nowhere
Current price: $14.99


Barnes and Noble
From Out of Nowhere
Current price: $14.99
Size: CD
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Unlike either its predecessor
Alone in the Universe
or 2001's
Zoom
,
From out of Nowhere
didn't appear after a prolonged period of silence from
Jeff Lynne's ELO
. It arrived in November of 2019, nearly exactly four years after
, a rapid turnaround that recalls
Lynne
's work schedule as a bandleader and producer in the 1970s and '80s. That's not the only way
conjures memories of the past. From the spaceship hovering on its record cover to the song title "Sci-Fi Woman" stirring up the ghost of "Evil Woman," the album is designed to sound and feel like an
Electric Light Orchestra
album from the late 1970s. That was true of
too, but
makes that album seem fresher in retrospect. Here, there is no clever embrace of digital technology or even nods to disco: it's all immaculate orchestrated pop punctuated with some old-time rock & roll. Listen not too closely and it may be possible to mistake these tunes for outtakes from
A New World Record
or
Out of the Blue
, since they have a similar pomp lushness. Listen a bit closer and the seams emerge. As elegant as they are, the melodies don't easily lodge in the subconscious, but the bigger problem is that the production -- by
, who plays virtually every note on the record -- is airless and precise. This dryness is a remnant of the digital age, where every element in a recording is exactly in the right place, and if it's not quite a drawback, it does mean
can be a bit of an uncanny valley: it's close enough to a genuine item to satisfy, yet different enough to disarm. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Alone in the Universe
or 2001's
Zoom
,
From out of Nowhere
didn't appear after a prolonged period of silence from
Jeff Lynne's ELO
. It arrived in November of 2019, nearly exactly four years after
, a rapid turnaround that recalls
Lynne
's work schedule as a bandleader and producer in the 1970s and '80s. That's not the only way
conjures memories of the past. From the spaceship hovering on its record cover to the song title "Sci-Fi Woman" stirring up the ghost of "Evil Woman," the album is designed to sound and feel like an
Electric Light Orchestra
album from the late 1970s. That was true of
too, but
makes that album seem fresher in retrospect. Here, there is no clever embrace of digital technology or even nods to disco: it's all immaculate orchestrated pop punctuated with some old-time rock & roll. Listen not too closely and it may be possible to mistake these tunes for outtakes from
A New World Record
or
Out of the Blue
, since they have a similar pomp lushness. Listen a bit closer and the seams emerge. As elegant as they are, the melodies don't easily lodge in the subconscious, but the bigger problem is that the production -- by
, who plays virtually every note on the record -- is airless and precise. This dryness is a remnant of the digital age, where every element in a recording is exactly in the right place, and if it's not quite a drawback, it does mean
can be a bit of an uncanny valley: it's close enough to a genuine item to satisfy, yet different enough to disarm. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine