Glorious Noise, April 24, 2012

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Glorious Noise

US online publications

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Costello: On with the show


Stephen Macaulay

Elvis Costello & the Imposters
Caesar's Windsor

In 1986 — I think, as that was a long time ago, after all — the year that Elvis Costello and the Attractions put out Blood & Chocolate, they went out on tour in support of the record. I saw them at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor.

Costello took on the guise of Napoleon Dynamite — his character, which (obviously) preceded that of the film of that name — during the show. He allowed audience participation. There was a large roulette-style wheel set up with names of songs on it. Spin the wheel and get your tune performed.

And now Elvis Costello and the Imposters are out on tour in support of The Return of the Spectacular Spinning Songbook!!!

I have seen Costello play umpteen times. I know that as a GloNo participant I should have that number down cold. But it is a number sufficiently high that I had written here back in 2005 that I'd seen a show done so well that I probably wouldn't see him again.

Guess what? Saturday night was better by a big factor.

Napoleon Dynamite made a return appearance.

There was the spinning wheel. There was audience participation.

There was a go-go dancer who is drop-dead gorgeous. I'd never seen a go-go dancer live before. She was so incredible, I don't need to see another one again. Not that I'd mind. But "Dixie De La Fontaine" moved so exceedingly well, that it would be hard to imagine her being bested.

There was a hostess, "Katarina Valentina Valentine," who brought participants to the stage.

There was a set, including a black-and-white rabbit-ear-equipped TV showing static. (Costello claimed it was tuned to Fox News.)

Yes, there was the band up there, as well — Nieve, Thomas, Faragher — and they did a spectacular job, as this was a spectacle (no, not referencing Costello's chat show of that name).

The crowd at the venue in the Caesar's Windsor Casino was appreciative and engaged, yet polite and reserved: They watched the show, as a show it was.

It occurs to me that when we talk about "going to see a band play" we often say, "I'm going to a concert." But for the most part, that's really not right. Isn't a "concert" more along the lines of what a symphony plays? Then there is "I'm going to see a performance of __________." For example, when Steely Dan was out on tour and played a complete version of a given album, that was a "performance."

And in the case of what Costello did, it was a "show," and he gets the whole vaudevillian aspect of what that means, all the way to talking patter when doing setups between the bits.

The music. Here I go back to This Year's Model and Trust and Imperial Bedroom and Punch the Clock and. . . .

Costello has a fulsome catalog. A rich variety of music. But in this case, it was a show of the rock and roll done slow (e.g., "Alison") and fast ("Radio, Radio") and all tempos in between. It was the stuff of then. And for many of us, then was better than now.

But it didn't seem like a revival tour, a retro act. It seemed very much of the moment. It seemed like this year's model.

But it wasn't.

But it was damn good.

And I sure as hell hope that in 2019 I don't write "this could be the last time."

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Glorious Noise, April 24, 2012


Stephen Macaulay reviews Elvis Costello & The Imposters, Saturday, April 21, 2012, The Coloseum at Caesars, Windsor, Ontario, Canada.


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