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Costello Reissues
Roll On
By Barry A. Jeckell, billboard.com
Three decades of Elvis Costello's career
will be represented with Rhino's third batch of reissued albums,
due Nov. 19. Like the two previous volleys, 1979's "Armed Forces,"
1982's "Imperial Bedroom," and "1991's "Mighty
Like a Rose" will all be released as two-disc sets -- one featuring
a remixed and remastered version of the original album, the other
filled with bonuses including B-sides, live material, and demo recordings.
Each title will also include new detailed liner notes penned by
the artist and lyrics for all of the songs.
"Armed Forces," Costello's third
Columbia studio album, is perhaps best known for the tracks "Oliver's
Army," "Accidents Will Happen," and a cover of Nick
Lowe's "(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love and Understanding?"
The set spent 25 weeks on the Billboard album chart, peaking at
No. 10. Among the bonus tracks on the new version's second disc
includes the B-side "Tiny Steps," alternate recordings
of "Busy Bodies" and "Big Boys," as well as
nine live tracks from a 1978 concert at Hollywood High School, six
of which have never been released.
An album that reached No. 30 on the Billboard
chart, "Imperial Bedroom" saw a shift away from Costello's
trademark "angry young man" image, with such contemplative
gems as "Almost Blue" and "Man Out of Time."
The Columbia set was produced by Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick
and featured arrangements by Steve Nieve, keyboardist of Costello's
band, the Attractions, and a career-long collaborator. The second
disc is bursting with 23 tracks, a heady 16 of which have never
before been issued, including demos or alternate takes of nearly
every track on the original album. Other bonuses include the album's
title track, recorded after its completion and never included on
the set.
"Mighty Like a Rose," originally
issued via Warner Bros., is the sole album among these three that
has not been previously reissued with bonus material ("Armed
Forces" and "Imperial Bedroom" were reissued as expanded
single discs by Rykodisc in 1993 and 1994, respectively). Although
it reached a mere No. 55 on The Billboard 200, the ambitious and
dense album features the single "The Other Side of Summer,"
and the Paul McCartney/Costello-penned songs "So Like Candy"
and "Playboy to a Man." A live take of "Couldn't
Call It Unexpected No. 4" is among the added disc's 17 tracks,
as are collaborations with Rob Wasserman, Mary Coughlan, and the
Chieftains, three songs recorded during the artist's 1991 episode
of MTV's "Unplugged," and eight home demo recordings.
Promising to deliver expanded versions
of every one of Costello's albums, the reissue train's next stop
is tentatively set for April 2003. That payload will be comprised
of updated versions of a trio of 1980s-era albums: "Get Happy!!"
(1980), "Trust" (1981), and "Punch the Clock"
(1984).
In February, Rhino re-released "This
Year's Model" (1978), "Blood and Chocolate" (1986),
and "Brutal Youth" (1994). The label kicked off the reissue
campaign last summer with the release of expanded versions of "My
Aim Is True" (1977), his Warner Bros. bow, "Spike (1989),
and his final Warner studio set, "All This Useless Beauty"
(1996).
Even as his career's work is mined, Costello
continues to make new music. His latest album, "When I Was
Cruel" (Island), debuted in May at No. 20 on The Billboard
200. "Cruel Smile," a new album of remixes and live tracks
recorded while touring in support of "When I Was Cruel,"
was released earlier this week.
Thanks to leonard Hodgkinson
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