Turn_to_stone_2009_remaster

The 2009 remaster, part of the expanded Out of the Blue reissue, highlights the complex layering Lynne used to capture what he called a "primary and simple, but yet very evocative" sound. Core Themes & Meaning

: The song features a driving shuffle beat, swirling strings, and prominent use of the vocoder , blending rock with orchestral pop hooks. turn_to_stone_2009_remaster

"Turn to Stone" was famously born from a desperate case of writer's block during a in the Swiss Alps. Jeff Lynne had been tasked with writing a double album ( Out of the Blue ) from scratch under a tight deadline but had produced nothing for nearly the entire first two weeks. The "logjam" finally broke when he began tinkering with a Moog synthesizer , and a repetitive little riff—which became the song's backbone—appeared "by magic". The 2009 remaster, part of the expanded Out

: The lyrics use "turning to stone" as a metaphor for the numbness and paralysis felt after a devastating heartbreak. The narrator describes a "blue world" where he sits in a state of stasis, waiting for a lost love to return and bring life back to his surroundings. Musical Innovation : Jeff Lynne had been tasked with writing a

: Lynne added the famous high-speed vocal section in the middle because he felt the song needed something "daft" or "simple" to prevent it from getting boring.