|
King
of Pop
Elvis Costello's collaborative CDs make you think he can't go it
alone anymore. Wrong!
By DAVE FERMAN
Star-Telegram, Oct. 04, 2002
Over the past several years, Elvis Costello
has been quite the busy fellow.
He's teamed up with Lucinda Williams for
a CMT special; collaborated with, among others, Burt Bacharach,
The Mingus Orchestra and the Brodsky Quartet; contributed a song
written with his wife (and former Pogues bassist) Cait O'Riordan
for the highly regarded comeback CD by soul singer (and Rock 'n'
Roll Hall of Famer) Solomon Burke; and he's toured Europe with Nanci
Griffith, John Prine and Steve Earle promoting landmine awareness.
For a while there, it looked like ol'
Elvis -- born Declan Patrick MacManus -- was going to do anything
and everything but put out what we might think of as a "normal"
Elvis Costello CD.
This past spring's When I Was Cruel, however,
was just that, and a welcome, sometimes raw, return to form. Informed
by distorted vocals and guitar, Cruel is, Costello told Time Out
this past March, "forward-moving."
"It certainly feels like a bolder
step," he told the magazine. "And it came out exactly
as I hoped it would. There's no one album of mine that it sounds
like, but there is a sort of thread that stems from Watching the
Detectives and runs through Pills and Soap, Clubland, My Dark Life
and In the Darkest Place from the Burt record. They all have the
potential to be in this particular bag. They're more rhythmic, swinging,
rooted in bass and not so heavily dominated by harmony."
Calling Cruel "darker-hued music,"
Costello said that the CD was rooted in playing alone with a guitar
and a beat-box, and that he was led to producer Leo Pearson by U2
drummer Larry Mullen.
The result is a CD that sounds modern,
but not old-guy-trying-to-keep-up modern; there are some samples
and modern touches, yes, but there are also some fine songs to support
them.
"I guess this record will appeal
to people who perhaps didn't really accept my more experimental
sounds and collaborations," Costello said during the same interview.
"I mean, it's good to have two or more threads of music, but
people who might have thought the pop side of my career is over
are wrong. It isn't. It really isn't."
For this tour, Costello has enlisted former
Attractions members Steve Nieve (keyboards) and Pete Thomas (drums)
as well as former Cracker bassist Davey Faragher.
Thanks to John Foyle
|