Review of Rhino re-release of My AIm Is True, Spike and All
This Useless Beauty
Q, 2001-11-01
- Paul Du Noyer
Geek
Mythology
Legendary lyricism from the unlikeliest rock 'n `roller in town.
Elvis Costello |
My Aim Is True
EDSEL MANUS 101 *****
Spike
WSM/RHINO R2 74286 ***
All This Useless Beauty
WSM/RHINO R2 742 **** |
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A WHILE AGO Elvis Costello considered binning his whole back catalogue
in the year 2000. "That would be kind of cool," he mused.
"There comes a time when you have to acknowledge that every record
has sold as many as it should." He's presumably decided there's
life in the old tunes yet, however, and now presents this new fusillade
of deluxe reissues. In the first batch are his debut from 1977 and two
from his spell on Warner Brothers - the first, 12th and 18th albums,
to be exact, and to hell with chronological order. The Warner CDs receive
a sonic upgrade, while every CD in the series has a bonus disc of related
tracks, plus a 28-page booklet of lyrics, pictures and Costello's own
commentary on the songs. The final and definitive editions, then? Your
wallet would like to think so, but you wouldn't want to bet on it.
A blast of My Aim Is True is always bracing. It might have looked unpromising
on paper - gawky strummer is teamed with passing American country band
to wrest attention from punk rock with detailed ditties of peevish discontent
and squinting self-disgust. But such songs. From the atypically tender
ballad Alison to the precision-targeted fury of Less Than Zero, there
was no mistaking the record's power. Meanwhile, in Memphis, the real
Elvis responded by dying just four weeks after its release. Contemporary
demos, rarities and out-takes complete the treat - indeed it's these
second discs that, in general, comprise the most compelling case for
trading up your Costello collection.
Standout Tracks |
Alison
Watching The Detectives
This Town
Deep Dark Truthful Mirror
All This Useless Beauty
Complicated Shadows
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By the time of Spike, in 1989, our Elvis was a respected sage, not
a chippy upstart, but his new songs were as dark as ever. For all that,
Spike remains a record more admired than enjoyed. It reeks of ingenuity
and the malice is positively forensic (Tramp The Dirt Down, for example),
but the experience feels more tiring than inspiring. More welcome, really,
is the second coming of All This Useless Beauty, from 1996. Though it
features some songs he'd written for others, it's an uncommonly confessional
set by Costello's standards - direct, affecting, and largely overlooked
in its day.
Paul Du Noyer
Influenced By... |
Van Morrison
Moondance WARNER BROS. 1970 |
Influence On... |
David Grey
White Ladder EAST WEST 1999 |
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