Jeff Lynne's ELO to call time with farewell show
- Published
Jeff Lynne's Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) is set to say farewell with a final show next year at London's BST Hyde Park.
Festival organisers called the gig in 2025 a "final goodbye" from the band, which was founded in Birmingham in 1970 by Lynne and keyboardist Roy Wood.
Tickets will go on sale on Friday for the show that will take place on 13 July.
Richard Tandy, who had been the band’s bassist but became its keyboardist after Wood left, died earlier this year aged 76.
ELO split in 1986, but Lynne went on to reform the band as Jeff Lynne’s ELO, in 2014.
The band is known for fusing classical music, Beatles-style pop and futuristic rock visuals, with hits such as Livin' Thing, Mr Blue Sky, and Telephone Line. in the 1970s and 1980s.
They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2017.
"My return to touring began at Hyde Park in 2014," Lynne said.
"It seems like the perfect place to do our final show.
"As the song goes: we're gonna do it One More Time."
ELO's song One More Time features on the 2019 album From Out Of Nowhere.
Lynne was made an OBE in the 2020 Queen's Birthday Honours list for services to music, and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2015.
Jim King, chief executive of European festivals at AEG Presents, said "Jeff Lynne's ELO are loved the world over” and “the live shows are nothing short of extraordinary”.
Mr King added that hosting the band's final performance next summer was "a true honour".
The band are currently on a farewell US tour, which is set to end on Saturday in Inglewood, California.
Get in touch
Tell us which stories we should cover in Birmingham and the Black Country
Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, external, X, external and Instagram, external.
Related topics
- Published2 May
- Published10 October
- Published24 August