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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ELO's Brilliance, October 15, 2003
By A Customer
Read the reviews up above and then this one and you'll get an ida of why ELO is brilliant.They mean a thousand different things to a thousand different people. While some one else might think Horace Wimp is "horrid" songwriting, I think it's an absolutely brilliant example of Jeff Lynne's reverence and appreciation for the Beatles and Absurdist Brit humor. Ironically, "Don't Bring me Down" the biggest "hit" on the record, is probably my least favorite on this albumn. Although catchy at first, It's repetative and boring to me. The song has a short relistenability lifespan. Other songs like "I need her love" and "last train to london" remain fun and interesting years after you first hear them. If ELO bridges Pop and Prog (and many suggest that it does) Discovery is certainly more to the Pop side (while the next albumn, Time, leans more to the prog side). Personally I feel as though this stretch of time between out of the blue through time (including the xanadu soundtrack songs) are the most interesting and exciting period of Jeff Lynne and ELO's catalog. If you liked out of the blue or new world record, don't hesitate to get either discovery or xanadu (but never rent the movie because it's god awful... unless your into god awful, in which case, cheers!). If you want a real treat that will challenge you and open you up to a world of beautifully brilliant intelligent yet poppy while simultaneously progressive sounding music, I suggest you look into TIME. From a musical standpoint, Time is groundbreaking in it's production and it's conception. The problem is that no one noticed it at the time because it's also ve fun (and since Pink Floyd's "The Wall" was dominating charts at the time, fun wasn't exactly what folks were listening to in the post punk pop world. But don't snub discovery either. It's a blast you won't regret (or at least shouldn't regret!)
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