| Elvis Costello trots out his not-so-great
oldies at Taft Theatre 2002
By Chris Varias, The Cincinnati Enquirer
Elvis Costello almost had us fooled.
The English singer-songwriter crafted
his near-two-hour show at the Taft Theatre in such a way that newer
material came off as presentable as the older stuff he played. It
was as if his artistic heyday, which began with his 1977 debut,
didn't really end in the very early "80s (or mid-"80s
if you want to be more generous about it) and instead carries on
to the present.
But when he closed with three old and
classic tunes, it was a reminder that he hasn't recorded anything
like those in a long time. More to the point, most of the old stuff
he played earlier in the night wasn't his best old stuff.
Back by the Imposters, a band that included
two of the original Attractions, Mr. Costello navigated between
power pop and Trans-Atlantic soul balladry through most of the show.
Keyboardist Steve Nieve provided the hooks on the up-tempo, poppy
stuff, as well as enough instrumental weirdness to keep things interesting,
such as a theremin solo during Tear Off Your Own Head (It's
A Doll Revolution) from Mr. Costello's latest studio album
When I Was Cruel.
Mr. Costello, 48, was in fine voice. Except
for his contribution to the theremin bit in Doll Revolution,
he didn't move from his spot at center stage. He was all about the
vocals, digging into R&B-tinged material like his long-time
version of Sam & Dave's I Can't Stand Up for Falling Down
and playfully reworking the phrasing of the ballads like a new-wave
George Jones.
Although When I Was Cruel material received
enthusiastic responses, there was a spike in the energy level of
the near-sellout crowd each time Mr. Costello dug into the past
for songs like Accidents Will Happen, (I Don't
Want To Go To) Chelsea and Party Girl.
They weren't what would be called smash
hits. Mr. Costello was definitely looking to highlight not only
newer material but also the darker corners of his back catalog.
This might have pleased his biggest fans but alienated those expecting
Alison and such.
Alison was delivered in the
first encore. The second encore began with When I Was Cruel's 45,
followed by three of Mr. Costello's biggest hits and greatest songs:
Watching the Detectives which featured Mr. Costello's
best guitar playing of the night during an extended dub breakdown
Radio Radio and Pump It Up.
Thanks to John Foyle
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