More Electric Light Orchestra
More of our favorite Art Rock Records
- These early Jet pressings of ELO’s seventh studio album boast solid Double Plus (A++) grades or BETTER from start to finish
- Side three was sonically very close to our Shootout Winner – you will be shocked at how big and powerful the sound is
- All four sides are notably smoother and richer than most of what we played, with much less of the grit and congestion that plagues the average copy
- “Out of the Blue was of a piece with its predecessor, A New World Record, as the most lavishly produced album in the group’s history… [It] was massively popular and did become the centerpiece of a huge worldwide tour for the group which earned them status as a major live attraction for a time.”
- If you’re an ELO fan, this classic double album from 1977 is surely a Must Own
- If you are new to the music of ELO and want to learn more about our pick for their best album, click here
SR Over 2
The record is actually mastered by none other than Mr. MoFi himself, Stan Ricker, at Half-Speed if you can imagine that.
Yes, the bass isn’t as tight as it would have been using real time mastering, and there is the kind of “fake richness” to the low end that you hear on many audiophile records (and practically nowhere else), but Jeff Lynne likes some artificiality in the sound of his albums, so whatever Stan Ricker brought to the table it seems Mr. Lynne was fine with it, otherwise we assume he would have had it mastered by somebody else.
Does the album need the deeper, more articulate bass it would have if someone else had mastered it using a real-time cutter? It doesn’t seem so to us. Note-like bass with its fundamental frequencies intact is always a nice thing to have on a recording, but can anyone say this music would be noticeably better for it with better bass? Again, Mr. Lynne must not have found the bass wanting enough to have the album recut by some other mastering house. Could it be a matter of trade-offs? No matter which side you are on, it’s all just speculation. You always have the option of listening to the album on CD and seeing if the bass is better there. That would be the only practical test that I can imagine having any value. And to do that test you have to play the CD, something nobody really wants to do, right?


