"Calling America" is a song by the rock music group Electric Light Orchestra (ELO) released as a single from their 1986 album Balance of Power. The single reached number 28 in the United Kingdom, making it their 26th and final Top 40 hit single in their native country and peaked at number 18 on the Billboard singles chart, making it their 20th and final Top 40 hit single in the United States.
Overview
Like most of the songs on Balance of Power, "Calling America" is musically upbeat and bright. Lyrically, the song can be considered an update to ELO's 1976 single "Telephone Line". In both songs, the narrator is attempting to contact a lover by telephone, although "Calling America" also discusses satellite communication. Appropriately, the song pays homage to the track "Telstar", which had celebrated the communication satelliteof the same name, in the instrumental break. In his column Real Life Rock (published in The Village Voice), Greil Marcus called the song an "answer record to [the] 24-year old hit".[1] Fellow American music journalist Chuck Eddy said, "Greil Marcus was the only person besides me who realized that 'Calling America' by ELO was one of the most brilliant records of last year. I thought it was really neat that it ended up on both our top 10s."[2]
Epic Records released a three-track 12-inch single in the UK, with "Destination Unknown" as the B-side.
The promotional music video was shot in Paris, and contains shots of the band playing in front of Centre Georges Pompidou.
Reception
Cash Box called it a "bright, cleanly done bit of pop sheen from the masters of the genre" with a "very hooky lyric."[3]Billboard said that it has ELO's "familiar wall of sound and sci-fi predilections."[4]