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On Sept. 23, more than half a century after co-founding Electric Light Orchestra in Birmingham, England, lead singer Jeff Lynne took the stage to thunderous applause at TD Garden in Boston. The impending show would be part of the aptly named âOver and Outâ Tour, which marks the end of Lynneâs long performing career.
Formed in 1970 by Lynne and his collaborators Bev Bevan and Roy Wood, Electric Light Orchestra, or ELO for short, found its niche in a unique style that fuses rock with classical components, often featuring orchestral strings. During the 1970s and 1980s, the group released a series of top 10 singles and albums, including their most successful album, âOut of the Blue,â in 1977.
After disbanding the group in 1986, Lynne reformed it with original keyboardist Richard Tandy in 2014, together rebranding themselves as Jeff Lynneâs ELO. Tandy tragically died in May 2024, just after the âOver and Outâ Tour was announced in March. In a post on social media, Lynne called Tandy âa remarkable musician and friend,â and he no doubt headed into the bandâs final tour feeling his absence.
With Tandyâs passing and a broader feeling of finality lingering, the tourâs stop in Boston was a fittingly emotional ride through the groupâs greatest songs. Despite the occasional delayed vocal entry, Lynneâs performance was as strong as it couldâve been, considering that the 76-year-old has been playing shows for over 50 years. With vital support from backing vocalists Melanie Lewis-McDonald and Iain Hornal, and a robust string section composed of Amy Langley, Jess Murphy, and Jess Cox, the group did justice to its diverse suite of hits, which range from upbeat rock tunes to slower love songs and ballads.
Lynne and company wasted no time getting to some of their most well-known titles. Their second song out of the gate was âEvil Woman,â whose famous introductory piano riff instantly had the audience energized and clapping along. Slightly later, they rounded out the first half of the setlist with âStrange Magic,â whose creeping pace, flanged acoustic guitar, and rich instrumentation coalesced to create an otherworldly mood.
The best back-to-back combination of the night came in the second half of the setlist, when the group played âLivinâ Thingâ and âTelephone Lineâ in succession. Violinist Jess Murphy stood out during a solo at the start of âLivinâ Thing,â a song whose pairing of solo string lines with traditional rock elements makes it perhaps the most direct embodiment of ELOâs unique range of styles.
The group then changed things up with âTelephone Line,â a slow song whose narrator waits in agony for someone â presumably his ex-lover â to pick up the phone. Lynneâs words convey the narratorâs loneliness and desperation in an incredibly effective way, eventually combining with strings and gorgeous harmonies in a sweeping chorus to make âTelephone Lineâ one of the bandâs very best songs. Just as the song became ELOâs biggest single success in the U.S. upon its release in 1977, the TD Garden crowd was nothing short of enchanted, as the thousands of voices made Lynneâs lonely words ironically communal.
As the group prepared to finish up, they played âDonât Bring Me Down,â their most traditional rock tune, driven by its dominant drumbeat and identifiable melodies. They then concluded the night with âMr. Blue Sky,â an upbeat pop song that became popular among newer listeners as the intro dance sequence to the film âGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.â
The songâs sheer vitality made it a great ending for the show, especially given that it dramatically alters its mood in its final minute to make way for a slow, grand finale characterized by strings, piano, and operatic voices. Such a conclusion matched the emotion warranted by the simultaneous realization that this moment, for the Boston audience, meant the end of Jeff Lynneâs career on stage.
The âOver and Outâ Tour will finish on Oct. 25 in Los Angeles, and Lynne has been unambiguous about this tour being the bandâs last. While it may be their final time in concert, if the Boston show was any indication, the legendary songs of Electric Light Orchestra â and the impassioned support of fans â will live on.
âStaff Writer Kieran J. Farrell can be reached at [email protected].
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