| Electric Light
Orchestra Part II |

|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Birmingham, England |
| Genre(s) |
Rock
Pop
Music |
| Years active |
1990 - 1999
2000 - Present
(As "The Orchestra") |
| Label(s) |
Scotti
Brothers, Volcano Records, Curb
Records & Edel Music |
Associated
acts |
Electric Light Orchestra
OrKestra
The Orchestra |
ELO Part II were an offshoot band formed by
former Electric Light Orchestra
drummer Bev
Bevan.
|
Contents
- 1 Unfinished
Symphony
- 2 Band
Members
- 3 Discography
- 3.1 Live
Albums
- 3.2 Singles
and highest chart positions
- 3.3 Videos
- 4 The
Orchestra
- 4.1 Band
members
- 4.2 Discography
- 4.3 Live
Lineup History
- 5 Notes
- 6 External
links
|
Unfinished Symphony
In 1988,
ELO drummer Bev
Bevan approached Jeff Lynne, wanting to do
another ELO album. After
Lynne declined to participate, Bevan intended to continue the band
without him. Lynne objected, and lawyers were soon involved. The legal
agreement reached between Lynne and Bevan resulted in ELO officially
disbanding and Bevan forming a new band, initially called Electric
Light Orchestra Part Two. Bevan recruited longtime ELO string conductor
and co-arranger Louis Clark into his new band,
along with Eric Troyer (keyboards and vocals), Pete Haycock (guitar and
vocals) and Neil Lockwood (guitar and vocals). ELO
Part Two released a self-titled album in 1990 which featured former ELO violinist Mik
Kaminski on one track. The album was intended to harken back
to ELO's classic sound of the mid-to-late 1970s, but opinion is
strongly divided as to whether or not it succeeded. The first tour
featured the band performing live with The Moscow Symphony Orchestra,
and was well-received in the UK. Approximately two-thirds of the songs
performed were ELO hits. The concert in ELO's home town of Birmingham
was captured on video and on the live album with the long-winded title Performing
ELO's Greatest Hits Live Featuring The Moscow Symphony Orchestra.
Kaminski, former ELO cellist Hugh McDowell, and former ELO bassist Kelly
Groucutt were part of the live band, with Groucutt sharing lead and
backing vocals with Troyer, Haycock and Lockwood. Kaminski and Groucutt
were initially appearing as guest artists from another ELO offshoot
band they had formed called OrKestra, but eventually they ended their
own band and joined ELO Part Two full-time. McDowell's tenure with the
band was short, as some personality conflicts emerged and he was let
go. Plans to tour the USA with the MSO were cancelled, as costs became
prohibitive.
The band continued to tour Germany and the UK in 1992 with Louis Clark
playing keyboards to duplicate the strings of the absent orchestra. In 1993, Haycock and
Lockwood left the band, and were replaced by guitarist/vocalist Phil
Bates, who had been in the band Trickster which were the opening act
for ELO's 1978 world tour. An ambitious world tour was undertaken by
ELO Part Two in 1993, including dates in the USA and Eastern Europe.
Now a six-piece band with a slightly altered name, Electric
Light Orchestra Part II recorded a second studio album, Moment
Of Truth, which was released in 1994. The album was not a commercial success,
but was generally considered superior to their first album. The band
continued its rigorous tour schedule over the following years,
sometimes augmenting the core band with a backing orchestra. On these
occasions, they took only a small number of string players on the road
and added local musicians to the orchestra at each venue to cut down
costs. This was one of the features that distinguished ELO
Part II from ELO, as the original band never played live with
orchestral accompaniment. Another live album with orchestral backing
was recorded in Sydney, Australia in 1995 and was released the following year in
Germany as a double album One Night, and the year
after that in the USA as a single album One Night - Live In
Australia. The band sold the master tapes of this album, and
it has since been remixed, remastered, and re-released under so many
guises that the original CD may prove difficult to acquire.
Bates remained with the band until 1998 and was replaced by Parthenon Huxley
(guitar, vocals). As the decade progressed, the percentage of original
material in the band's set list tended to decrease, and their concerts
often consisted of 90 per cent ELO songs. Bevan started to get
frustrated, especially with their inability to break through in the
United States, where the band sometimes performed in bars or at
festivals where they were not the centre of attention. In November 1999, Bevan played his
last show with the band at the Sands Hotel in Atlantic City.
Unlike the original ELO, which were under the creative control
of writer/producer Lynne, ELO Part II were often
portrayed as more of a democracy, with various band members sharing
songwriting and lead vocals. But Bevan was still the leader of the
band, and he issued a press release in early 2000 indicating that ELO
Part II were disbanded.
Band Members
- Bev
Bevan - drums, percussion, backing vocals (1990—1999)
- Louis Clark - keyboards,
orchestra arranger and conductor (1990—1999)
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals, guitar (1990—1999)
- Pete Haycock - guitar, bass guitar, vocals (1990—1993)
- Neil Lockwood - guitar, vocals (1990—1993)
- Kelly Groucutt - bass guitar, vocals (1991—1999)
- Mik Kaminski - violin (1990—1999)
- Hugh McDowell - cello (1991—1992)
- Phil Bates - guitar, vocals (1993—1998)
- Parthenon Huxley - guitar, vocals (1998—1999)
Discography
- Electric
Light Orchestra Part Two (1990) #34 UK
Albums Chart
- Moment of Truth
(1994)
Live Albums
- Performing ELO's Greatest Hits Live Featuring The
Moscow Symphony Orchestra (1992)
- One Night (1996) 2 CD UK release
- One Night - Live In Australia (1997) 1 CD US release
Singles and highest chart
positions
| Release Date |
Single |
UK |
US |
Album |
| 1991,
March |
Honest
Men |
#60 |
- |
Electric
Light Orchestra Part Two |
| 1991 |
Thousand
Eyes |
- |
not released |
Electric
Light Orchestra Part Two |
| 1991 |
For
The Love Of A Woman |
not released |
- |
Electric
Light Orchestra Part Two |
| 1994 |
Power
Of A Million Lights |
- |
not released |
Moment of Truth |
| 1994 |
Breakin'
Down The Walls |
- |
not released |
Moment of Truth |
Videos
- Performing ELO's Greatest Hits Live Featuring The
Moscow Symphony Orchestra (VHS), (1992)
- Electric Light Orchestra - Part II - One Night
Live in Australia '95 (DVD), (1995)
- Access All Areas (DVD/VHS), (1997)
The Orchestra
By 2000
Bev
Bevan had sold his 50% share of the Electric Light Orchestra
name as well as the rights to the ELO Part II name
also to Jeff
Lynne, and Lynne, now the full owner of the ELO name, took
legal action to prevent the band from continuing to call themselves ELO
Part II. They initially tried to call themselves ELO2,
but they eventually submitted and changed their name to The
Orchestra. In 2001
The Orchestra released a limited number of their CD No
Rewind which was produced and released without involvement
from a major record label (but was later released in Argentina by
Art Music in 2005).
The album contains The Orchestra's best known non-ELO song, Over
London Skies, and a cover of Twist and Shout
which begins in a slow, plaintive minor key with arpeggiated chords
before building to the familiar, rocking major progression. With the
release of No Rewind, The Orchestra
worked more original material into their set, with Jewel
& Johnny and the album's title song becoming staples.
The band continues to tour and regularly sells out shows in Chile,
Argentina, the UK, Eastern Europe and elsewhere around the world.
In late 2004, a legal dispute almost erupted between The
Orchestra and a Florida-based rock band called theOrchestra, but the
issue was settled out-of-court.
The Orchestra toured the UK extensively in 2006. The band were
promoted using the descriptive phrase "Electric Light Orchestra Part II
Former Members". Lynne, owner of the names Electric Light Orchestra
and ELO Part II, sued The Orchestra,
claiming copyright infringement. The matter went to litigation and in
August, 2006, a Los Angeles judge ruled in favor of the members of The
Orchestra.
Band members
- Louis Clark - keyboards,
orchestral arranger and conductor - (2000- present)
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals, guitar - (2000- present)
- Kelly Groucutt - bass guitar, vocals (2000- present)
- Mik Kaminski - violin - (2000- present)
- Parthenon Huxley - guitar, vocals - (2000- 2007)
- Gordon Townsend - drums - (2000- present)
- Phil Bates - guitar, vocals (2007- present)
Discography
No Rewind (2001)
Live Lineup History
| 1991-93 |
- Bev Bevan - drums, percussion
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals
- Neil Lockwood - guitar, vocals
- Pete Haycock - guitar, vocals
- Louis Clark - keyboards, conductor
- Kelly Groucutt - bass, vocals
- Mik Kaminski - violin, keyboards
(* Hugh McDowell - cello)
|
| 1993-98 |
- Bev Bevan - drums, percussion
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals
- Phil Bates - guitar, vocals
- Louis Clark - keyboards, conductor
- Kelly Groucutt - bass, vocals
- Mik Kaminski - violin, keyboards
|
| 1998-99 |
- Bev Bevan - drums, percussion
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals
- Parthenon Huxley - guitar, vocals
- Louis Clark - keyboards, conductor
- Kelly Groucutt - bass, vocals
- Mik Kaminski - violin, keyboards
|
| 2000-07 |
- Gordon Townshend - drums, percussion
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals
- Parthenon Huxley - guitar, vocals
- Louis Clark - keyboards, conductor
- Kelly Groucutt - bass, vocals
- Mik Kaminski - violin, keyboards
|
| 2007-present |
- Gordon Townshend - drums, percussion
- Eric Troyer - keyboards, vocals
- Phil Bates - guitar, vocals
- Louis Clark - keyboards, conductor
- Kelly Groucutt - bass, vocals
- Mik Kaminski - violin, keyboards
|
Notes
-
http://www.parthenonhuxley.com/chronicles/issue_009.html
External links