Face the Music is more fine work from the Electric Light Orchestra, which rather quietly has evolved into a most consistent septet. Leader Jeff Lynne remains one of a few Sixties rockers who has developed a new and more adventurous style with a minimum of chaff in the process. In this setting he has successfully integrated a recognizable string trio (an achievement in itself) with his own melodic strings, producing a stately music without being stuffy or saccharine. Nor do the cellos and violin seem a mere afterthought.
All eight compositions are strong and fully realized: "Poker" with its
hard rock guitar explosions, the oddly workable C&W flirtation "Down Home Town" and an
instrumental with lavish but spirited orchestration. The seven outdo themselves, however, on "One Summer Dream," a beautiful and evocative tune sung touchingly by Lynne. A trifle sentimental perhaps, but lyrically and musically, it displays more emotion (not to mention pure ability) than one ordinarily hears from a
rock group. Most importantly the song, and the rest of Face the Music as well, reiterates that
rock can be complex, ambitious and "arty," yet still remain
rock.
(Charley Walters, Rolling Stone, 1-1-76.)
The Electric Light Orchestra, led by former Move member Jeff Lynne, is better than most groups who try to combine
rock with classical motifs. At least the ELO is skillful and unpretentious. But what is the sense of mixing whiskey and wine? The powers, techniques, effects, and schematics of
rock and classical music are at polar odds with one another. Outside of relief from the boredom of playing the twang-thump of
rock, there doesn't seem to be any valid reason to try to achieve this mutant sound. And, even though ELO's classical orchestrations are neatly done, they cannot disguise the basic weakness of the
rock material.
(Joel Vance, Stereo Review, 2/76.)
Another beautiful set from the seven Brits who helped pioneer the merger of classical and
rock on a mass basis. Divided fairly equally into smooth, flowing melodies fronted by equally relaxing singing and easy rockers, the guitar, vocals and writings of Jeff Lynne remain dominant. New to the group, however, is Kelly Groucutt, who handles bass and takes over on lead vocals from time to time. With a softer voice than Lynne's, Groucutt provides the balance that has been missed in past albums. Guitars, violins and cellos melt together easily under Lynne's production, and the unlikely combination works as well as anything the band has ever done. Musically, a truly beautiful LP. Best cuts: "Waterfall," "Evil Woman," "Poker," "Down Home Town."
(Billboard, 1975.)
Superb production and a good song lineup featuring "Evil Woman" and "Strange Magic."
(Bruce Eder, The All-Music Guide to
Rock, 1995.)
ELO's formula first jelled into a sleek hit-making machine with Face The Music, an album on which Jeff Lynne's producing chops first match his songwriting prowess -- fueled by songs such as the radio staple "Evil Woman" and dreamy ballad "Strange Magic."
(Eric Deggans, Musichound
Rock: The Essential Album Guide, 1996.)
01. Fire On High (05:31)
02. Waterfall (04:11)
03. Evil Woman (04:29)
04. Nightrider (04:26)
05. Poker (03:32)
06. Strange Magic (04:29)
07. Down Home Town (03:54)
08. One Summer Dream (05:51)
09. Fire On High Intro (Early Alt Mix) (03:23)
10. Evil Woman (Stripped Down Mix) (05:00)
11. Strange Magic (U.S. Single Edit) (03:27)
12. Waterfall (
Tracks 9, 10, 12 Previously Unreleased.