Emerson Lake and Palmer Love Beach (Vinyl, Atlantic Records, 1978) ** Emerson Lake and Powell Emerson Lake and Powell (Vinyl, Polydor Records, 1986) ***
Emerson Lake and Palmer Black Moon (CD, Manticore Records, 1992) ***
Emerson Lake and Palmer In The Hot Seat (CD, Manticore Records, 1994) ***
Emerson Lake and Palmer Welcome Back My Friends To The Show That Never Ends - Ladies and Gentlemen, Emerson Lake and Palmer (Vinyl, Manticore Records, 1974) *****
Emerson Lake and Palmer In Concert (Vinyl, Atlantic Records, 1979) ****
Emerson Lake and Palmer Works Live (CD, Manticore 2017) ****
Genre: Prog
Places I remember: Real Groovy for Welcome Back My Friends; In Concert (Passionate About Vinyl); Emerson Lake and Powell and the CDs (Slow Boat Records); Love Beach (Spellbound Wax Company)
Fab, and all the other pimply hyperboles: Hoedown (Welcome back my friends...)
Gear costume: Fanfare For The Common Man (In Concert)
Active compensatory factors: This collection wraps up the Emerson Lake and Palmer and Emerson Lake and Powell efforts from 1978 onwards.
It's a mixed bag so buckle up.
Love Beach gets a bad press because of the cover. Yes it's cringe inducing. So let's move on...if we can.
It's a tough ask - the lyrics on songs like Love Beach and Taste Of My Love are pretty embarrassing (come ride on my rocket?).
On the plus side we have a return to writing succinct songs and musically it's pretty good - recognizably ELP, and Greg Lake does his best to sell Pete Sinfield's lyrics. But it should have all been a lot better given their outrageous talent.
After Carl Palmer was busy with Asia, E and L next enlisted friend Cozy Powell to fill in for a one-off 1986 album.
It gets off to a great start with The Score, Cozy seems right at home in this setting (I tend to think of him as a hard rock drummer from his time in Rainbow) and Greg Lake's lyrics are much better than Sinfield's.
Being 1986 it does have those mid eighties production ticks but the songs are there this time.
Into the 90's now and Carl Palmer has returned to the band for Black Moon.
My CD copy of this comes with a bonus disc of the band live at the Royal Albert Hall in 1992.
Black Moon is quite impressive - big, confident and full sounding, but I can't help comparing this to their seventies albums. For some reason the big drum sound on the album is not as appealing as the more organic seventies drum sound.
In The Hot Seat was their final studio album. It was affected by health concerns to Palmer and Emerson, but you'd never know it. It sounds like a suitable end to the ELP journey.
My CD copy of this one has a live show from the Now tour of 1997-1998.
Highlight: Thin Line (a good nineties upgrade on the ELP sound with guitar and horns supplementing the regular guys doing what they do best).
A round up of the live albums:
Welcome Back My Friends...is the definitive statement on their seventies live show. A triple LP, it covers everything pretty much, starting with a blinding version of Hoedown and ending with two sides of Karn Evil. Tarkus also appears as well as other songs from their glorious early seventies albums.
This really is a moment in time - they'd never sound like this again. Better? A matter of opinion, but definitely different. Although it's 6 sides - it just speeds by in a brilliant rush of great sounds.
In Concert is a single album released in 1979, while the expanded concert is called Works Live released in 1993. The actual concert was in 1977 in Montreal's Olympic stadium. Got all that?
I like both versions but probably the succinct single disc is the way to go.
Where do they all belong? And that's all folks. A massive canon that like all massive canon's has its peaks and troughs.
No comments:
Post a Comment