Review of concert from 2002-05-28: Los Angeles, CA, Ackerman
Grand Ballroom - with Imposters
LA Times, 2002-05-30
- Richard Cromelin
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Singer-songwriter Elvis Costello, performing at UCLA's
Ackerman Grand Ballroom Tuesday, will play tonight at the Kodak
Theatre.
ROBERT GAUTHIER / LAT |
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POP MUSIC REVIEW
Classics and Newer Tunes, a Full-Circle Mix by Elvis
Costello, embracing rock again, battles sound woes in a charming blend
of recent songs and favorites.
By RICHARD CROMELIN, Times Staff Writer
"You must all be singing majors," Elvis Costello said to
his audience Tuesday at UCLA's Ackerman Grand Ballroom, gently teasing
the crowd after luring it into a sing-along on one of his new songs,
"Tart."
This geniality was a far cry from whatever was eating Costello that
night in the late '70s when he stormed off the stage of the Santa Monica
Civic Auditorium and ended the show after a few songs (something about
the audience not getting the point). But the evening's overall energy
might not have matched the night in 1978 at the Hollywood High School
Auditorium when his concert was recorded for a promotional disc.
Still, Ackerman will be filed with those memorable events because it
was billed as Costello's first dance hall show in 20 years. (It was
a late addition to the performer's term as UCLA's "artist in residence,"
a position that has now been extended into next season after his spotty
service--in part due to recording a new album--over the past year.)
And it did have its character and its charms.
The latter flowed from the veteran singer-songwriter's recent return
to raw rock 'n' roll after several years of slumming with old-line pop
icons (Tony Bennett, Burt Bacharach), classical collaborators (mezzo-soprano
Anne Sofie von Otter, the Brodsky Quartet) and various genres (jazz
with the Charles Mingus Orchestra, a still-pending ballet score).
The new album, "When I Was Cruel," has been embraced as the
47-year-old Englishman's strongest work since his late-'70s heyday,
and it does seem like a conscious effort to shed all subsequent influences
and home in on the mix of verbal alacrity, pop catchiness and rock intensity
that once made Costello the hottest thing around.
Indeed, such "Cruel" songs as "45," "15 Petals,"
"Tear Off Your Own Head (It's a Doll Revolution)" and "Dust"
slid in easily among the classics Tuesday. In fact, they shaped and
dominated the show, allowing the singer-guitarist to evoke the golden
era without embalming the show in nostalgia. It helped that he was accompanied
by a three-piece band, the Imposters, that's essentially his old Attractions,
with a different bassist, Davey Farragher, joining drummer Pete Thomas
and keyboardist Steve Nieve.
Costello didn't seem to tailor the set to the idea of a dance hall.
He devoted long stretches to slow and mid-tempo material that emphasized
his soulful touch and emotional range. The new album's vampy title song
segued perfectly into "Clowntime Is Over," a balladic one-two
punch that risked losing the crowd's attention but ended up as a spellbinding
epic.
In the new songs, Costello also returns to his signature themes, depicting
personal relationships and social-political arrangements as tense battlegrounds
teeming with deceivers and manipulators. These scenarios, in such songs
as "Dust" and "Alibi," inspired especially vehement
vocals from one of rock's most distinctive singers.
The show's sonic character was more a mixed bag, thanks to its placement
in the giant shoebox of the student union ballroom. The sound sometimes
clumped together like a ball of mud, then seemed to scatter in different
directions. Frequencies bounced off the flat, squared surfaces, and
there was always the disconcerting sensation that an additional drummer
sat tapping away at the back of the room. The Kodak Theatre, where Costello
plays tonight, has taken some heat for its sound, but there's nothing
like Ackerman.
But it also sounded exhilarating and real, Costello's vocals were surprisingly
audible, and the old-fashioned, un-slick feel (there weren't even any
spotlights that could follow him when he stalked around the stage) suited
the twang and snarl of the distorted attack.
* * *
Elvis Costello & the Imposters, with Autolux, tonight at the Kodak
Theatre, 6801 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, 8:15 p.m. $30-$77.50. (323)
308-6363.