Love Beach is the seventh studio album by English progressive rock band Emerson, Lake & Palmer. It was released on 17 November 1978 by Atlantic Records as their final studio album released prior to their split in the following year. By the end of their 1977–1978 North American tour internal relations had started to deteriorate, but the group were contractually required to produce one more album. They retreated to Nassau, Bahamas as to record Love Beach with lyricist Peter Sinfield who is credited as a co-writer of each track. After Greg Lake and Carl Palmer had finished recording their parts they left the island, leaving Keith Emerson to finish the album himself.
The album received negative reviews from critics. It reached No. 48 on the UK Albums Chart and No. 55 on the US Billboard 200 where it reached gold certification by the Recording Industry Association of America in January 1979 for selling 500,000 copies. It spawned one single released in the UK, Lake and Sinfield's track "All I Want is You". The album was not supported with a tour and in early 1979, Emerson, Lake & Palmer disbanded.
The band had become and decided to record in Nassau in the Bahamas where Emerson and Lake were renting homes. Recording took place in 1978 at Compass Point Studios without a dedicated producer—Lake having produced all of their previous albums. Early pressings of Love Beach carried no producer credit, but production and mixing of the album were largely carried out by Emerson. Jack Nuber and Karl Pitterson were engineers. The sessions were difficult due to the increasingly strained relations between the three musicians. Emerson's increasing drug use had additionally started to affect his ability to work or collaborate with others.
Lyricist Peter Sinfield, who had worked with Lake in King Crimson and on his collection of songs on Works Volume 1, was asked by band manager Stewart Young to join them in Nassau and assist Lake in writing the lyrics. Though frictions had arisen between Sinfield and Lake by this time Sinfield thought a break would be good for him and accepted; however, because of the limited amount of time he had, he requested that he work alone. Upon arrival, Sinfield found the group were barely talking to each other and he left the island when he was finished working on the album. Lake and Palmer followed suit after they had put down their parts, leaving Emerson who put "the whole album together ... and sent it off".Keith Emerson, quoted by Milano, Contemporary Keyboard magazine, September 1980, p. 17.Macan, Edward (2006). Endless Enigma: A Musical Biography of Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Open Court, , p. 418-19.
Emerson was particularly upset about the album's title, which Atlantic Records had taken from one of the album's tracks by Lake and Sinfield, itself named after a stretch of beach on Nassau. The front cover was taken on an island off Salt Cay, depicting the group as biographer Edward Macan described as "bare-chested late-seventies disco stars". Emerson then organised a booth at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport to conduct a survey on the public's opinion on the album with a questionnaire. The overall opinion was of disagreement of the title which Emerson presented back to Atlantic, but the label refused to change.
Side two consists of "Memoirs of an Officer and a Gentleman", a 20-minute track in four distinct parts. It is a concept piece that tells a story of a romance between a soldier and his fiancée during World War II, a shift from their previous fantasy-inspired epics such as "Tarkus" and "Karn Evil 9". Sinfield wrote all of the lyrics and later felt relieved to find a lyrical theme that worked for the song given the limited amount of time he had to work. Emerson considered the words "a bit gross".
Within the suite, Emerson quotes two classical compositions. He begins "Love at First Sight" by playing the first eight bars of Frédéric Chopin's Étude Op. 10, No. 1, and he uses Chopin's harmonic structure for the song. In "Honourable Company", Emerson plays several militaristic signals including "Rule, Britannia!".
Critical and fan appraisal of the album is mainly negative; some consider it the nadir of ELP's output, while others consider the reunion album In the Hot Seat to be worse. Writing in Rolling Stone at the time of the album's release, reviewer Michael Bloom said that " Love Beach isn't simply bad; it's downright pathetic. Stale and full of ennui, this album makes washing the dishes seem a more creative act by comparison". The Globe and Mail noted that "the most interesting fusion of styles occurs on the raunchy 'Taste of My Love', which is reminiscent of Roxy Music". Emerson later called the album "an embarrassment against everything I've worked for".
In 2021, Classic Rock wrote: "More than the efforts of Johnny Rotten and Joe Strummer, Love Beach was the thing that killed prog in the 70s. ’Nuff said."
2017 Deluxe Edition
Additional personnel
Technicial personnel
|
|