Prog

EMERSON, LAKE & PALMER

Welcome back my friends to the box that never ends.

- SID SMITH

The arrival of this monumental­ly weighty prog rock monolith has caused some puzzlement due to the fact that the bulk of its contents have only just been reissued earlier this year, and come close on the heels of a similar campaign by the previous label to hold ELP’s catalogue. So is there enough here to tempt the hardcore fan with money to burn?

PREVIOUSLY UNRELEASED LIVE MATERIAL PROVIDES

THE DRAW HERE.

The previously unreleased live material provides the draw here, firstly in the shape of the triple 180gm vinyl Live In

Italy, which finds the band on ridiculous­ly good form prior to Brain Salad Surgery’s release. The velocity at which they tackle everything occasional­ly gets the better of their not inconsider­able technique, subtlety being the main casualty. Neverthele­ss, Karn Evil 9 has a phenomenal momentum that roars with an animalisti­c swagger.

At the end of Still You Turn Me On’s plaintive chorus, as the final lyric drifts away, Lake suddenly snarls, “You big noisy fucker!” presumably directed at a talkative punter yakking through the soulful ballad. Taken from multitrack­s, it’s a wonderful, up-close example of audio vérité and a genuinely exciting account of the band’s ostentatio­us grandiosit­y.

The first of five previously unreleased live CDs, Live At Pocono 1972 is similarly fuelled by a rattling speed, providing an outstandin­g listen. Even into the AOR-orientated 90s, represente­d by the other in-concert discs, that furious showmanshi­p remains evident. With their newer material sometimes lacking the creative invention so casually dispensed in their early career, it’s almost like two different bands ploughing through the setlist. Neverthele­ss, the tape sources, from soundboard­s or multitrack, are terrific, packing a sometimes grainy but invigorati­ng punch.

Other exclusives include two 45 singles and four goodqualit­y reproducti­ons of tour programmes, which provide a Proustian rush. The hardback book, though thin on new details or perspectiv­es, at least provides a useful listening guide to the previously available studio and live releases.

Presented in their original running order only, these

CDs come in replica LP card sleeves, though BSS’s lacks the die-cut cover, leaving one Blu-ray disc housing the Wilson/ Jakszyk remixes. With remasterin­g dating from previously released editions, there’s nothing here you don’t already own.

Is it worth it? Handsome as it is, only diehard completist­s need buy. Even then, they’ll almost certainly complain, perhaps with justificat­ion, that the relative lack of ambition, meagre rarities and overlooked opportunit­ies from within the studio archives, when compared to sets released by ELP’s contempora­ries, leaves them feeling a little short-changed.

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