All This Useless Beauty Reviews
All-Music Guide (Stephen Thomas Erlewine)
Following his second covers album, Kojak Variety, Elvis Costello set
out to assemble a collection of songs he had written for other artists, but he
never recorded himself -- sort of a reverse covers album. As it turned out,
that idea was only used as a launching pad -- the resulting album, All This
Useless Beauty, is a mixture of nine old and three new songs. Given its
origins, it's surprising that the record holds together as well as it does.
The main strength of All This Useless Beauty is the quality of the
individual songs -- each song can stand on its own as an individual entity, as
the music is as sharp as the lyrics. Although the music is certainly eclectic,
it's accessible, which wasn't the case with Mighty Like A Rose.
Furthermore, the production is more textured and punchier than Mitchell
Froom's botched job on Brutal Youth. All This Useless Beauty
doesn't quite add up to a major statement, but the simple pleasures it offers
makes it one of the more rewarding records of the latter part of Costello's
career.