Eldorado did not have a symphonic ending for every song on the record. But then, no E.L.O. album that I know of did. Jeff Lynne didn't incorporate the full symphony until Eldorado. He stopped using it after Out Of The Blue. That means Eldorado, Face The Music, A New World Record and Out of the Blue.
Eldorado was definitely the closest with an orchestral ending to many of the tracks. But a few songs did not end that way. Nobody's Child for example and definitely not on Illusions in G Major which is a 50's style rocker start to finish.
Replies for this Forum Topic
Eldorado did not have a symphonic ending for every song on the record. But then, no E.L.O. album that I know of did. Jeff Lynne didn't incorporate the full symphony until Eldorado. He stopped using it after Out Of The Blue. That means Eldorado, Face The Music, A New World Record and Out of the Blue.
Eldorado was definitely the closest with an orchestral ending to many of the tracks. But a few songs did not end that way. Nobody's Child for example and definitely not on Illusions in G Major which is a 50's style rocker start to finish.
I believe the album you're speaking of is Eldorado (1974). It was basically a rock-opera-symphony work...very unique and enjoyable.
HELLO
VERY VERY GOOD QUESTION MEN
I DON`T KNOW BUT IF YOU KNOW SOMETHING, TELL ME PLEASE
BYE