Emerson, Lake & Palmer Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Album info

Album-Release:
1971

HRA-Release:
27.07.2016

Label: Warner / Reprise

Genre: Rock

Subgenre: Classic Rock

Artist: Emerson, Lake & Palmer

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 The Barbarian 04:30
  • 2 Take a Pebble 12:32
  • 3 Knife-Edge 05:04
  • 4 The Three Fates 07:44
  • 5 Tank 06:48
  • 6 Lucky Man 04:35
  • Total Runtime 41:13

Info for Emerson, Lake & Palmer

When Keith Emerson, Greg Lake, and Carl Palmer left the Nice, King Crimson, and Atomic Rooster, respectively, they created the first prog-rock supergroup. ELP's 1971 debut was full of just as much bombast, technical facility, and brash classical-rock fusion as prog admirers could have hoped. A large part of the band's appeal was the keyboard mastery of Emerson, who shows both superhuman chops and sophisticated compositional abilities on the classically tinged instrumental "The Barbarian," which opens the album.

"Take a Pebble" and "Lucky Man" represent the more pop-oriented ballad side of the ELP sound, for which bassist and singer Greg Lake is chiefly responsible. The instrumental epics "The Three Fates" and "Tank" find all three musicians interacting at a furious level, throwing awe-inspiring licks around with uncanny ease, with plenty of octopus-armed drumming from Carl Palmer. Epic, ambitious, and overflowing with technical mastery, „Emerson, Lake & Palmer“ paved the way for the prog rock phenomenon of the '70s.

„Lively, ambitious, almost entirely successful debut album, made up of keyboard-dominated instrumentals ("The Barbarian," "Three Fates") and romantic ballads ("Lucky Man") showcasing all three members' very daunting talents. This album, which reached the Top 20 in America and got to number four in England, showcased the group at its least pretentious and most musicianly -- with the exception of a few moments on "Three Fates" and perhaps "Take a Pebble," there isn't much excess, and there is a lot of impressive musicianship here. "Take a Pebble" might have passed for a Moody Blues track of the era but for the fact that none of the Moody Blues' keyboard men could solo like Keith Emerson. Even here, in a relatively balanced collection of material, the album shows the beginnings of a dark, savage, imposingly gothic edge that had scarcely been seen before in so-called "art rock," mostly courtesy of Emerson's larger-than-life organ and synthesizer attacks. Greg Lake's beautifully sung, deliberately archaic "Lucky Man" had a brush with success on FM radio, and Carl Palmer became the idol of many thousands of would-be drummers based on this one album (especially for "Three Fates" and "Tank"), but Emerson emerged as the overpowering talent here for much of the public.“ (Bruce Eder, AMG)

Keith Emerson, Hammond organ, piano, clavinet, pipe organ, synthesizer
Greg Lake, vocals, bass, acoustic and electric guitar
Carl Palmer, drums, percussion

Recorded 1970, Advision Studios, London, England
Engineered by Eddie Offord
Produced by Greg Lake

Digitally remastered

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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