Review of concert from 2003-07-23: Edmonton, AB, Northern Alberta
Jubilee Auditorium - with Steve Nieve
Calgary Herald, 2003-07-25
- Sandra Sperounes
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CREDIT: Shaughn Butts, The Journal
Elvis Costello delivered a set worthy of his status as a member
of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. |
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Welcome to the new Elvis Costello: Music that's lower, slower
Sandra Sperounes
The Edmonton Journal
Friday, July 25, 2003
Concert Review
Elvis Costello
Opening guest: Sondre Lerche
With: Steve Nieve
When: Wednesday
Where: Jubilee Auditorium
EDMONTON - One of his albums may be King of America, but Elvis Costello
is now making plans to marry the Canadian queen of jazz.
The 47-year-old Liverpudlian even hints at moving north, and based
on Wednesday's stellar performance at the Jubilee, his citizenship should
be expedited. The bespectacled chameleon was just as engaging and self-deprecating
as during his recent guest-hosting stint on Late Night with David Letterman
-- making light of himself on In The Darkest Place, Alison and All This
Useless Beauty.
And though he left much of his bumbling persona back at the Ed Sullivan
Theatre, Costello still flashed his penchant for reinvention and a deadpan
wit at the Jube, making tacit political statements about George W. Bush
while criticizing country star Alan Jackson. "He sings a song where
he doesn't know the difference between Iraq and Iran," said Costello.
"He could run for president."
Hold on, hold on. If you weren't one of the 1,900 fans at the show,
you don't really want to read about his wit or politics, do you? Until
Costello started dating jazz chanteuse Diana Krall, many Edmontonians
probably didn't even know who he was. Hint: He's not the son of comedian
Lou Costello. He's actually the offspring of British bandleader Ross
McManus and has dabbled in punk, classical and pop over his 27-year,
20-plus album career.
But all you really care about is this: Did Krall show up during his
two-hour tour de force?
Negative. She was likely tooling about Edmonton's rain-soaked streets,
splashing through puddles in her Chrysler Sebring. There was another
blond in her place, though, opener Sondre Lerche. He played a charming
set of gently strummed guitar tunes -- until his alter ego "Eddie"
crashed Sleep On Needles.
But back to the main attraction. Costello, armed mainly with an acoustic
guitar and a rich voice mixed with tenderness, regret and punkish brattiness,
delivered a phenomenal set worthy of his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame-member
status. Accompanied by Steve Nieve on piano, organ and melodica, Costello
reinvented his entire catalogue -- from 1977's Alison to 2002's 45 --
into sparse guitar numbers with flourishes of classical piano stylings.
Highlights included Watching The Detectives, a film-noirish romp with
Nieve's cat-like piano tinklings; and God's Comic, which included a
spoken-word interlude about the Almighty Being and her love of The Dixie
Chicks and ended with Costello leading the crowd in a chorus of "I'm
dead" and "I was scared."
Come to think of it, Krall's presence was felt in every one of Costello's
songs, old and new, particularly those on North, due Sept. 23. Not only
has he adopted her lower register and slower tempos, songs such as You
Left Me In The Dark and Fallen seemed to touch upon the end of his marriage
to Caitlin O'Riordan and subsequent engagement. I may be reading too
much into his lyrics, but there's no denying the meaning behind the
title track. North is a whimsical number about "the perfection
of" Canada's treasures -- moose, ice, snow, blond jazz singers.
"I'm heading north," he sang during his second encore, to
the delighted cheers of the crowd.
Welcome to Canada, Elvis. We hope you have a long and fruitful stay.
ssperounes@thejournal.canwest.com
© Copyright 2003 Edmonton Journal