Uncut, January 2012

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Ultimate Music Guide


UK & Ireland magazines

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The Return Of The Spectacular Spinning Songbook

Elvis Costello & The Imposters

Terry Staunton

Napoleon Dynamite is back, and keeping it wheel
4 stars (out of 5) reviews4 stars (out of 5) reviews4 stars (out of 5) reviews4 stars (out of 5) reviews4 stars (out of 5) reviews

Elvis Costello wasn't himself 25 years ago, the musician credits on the two albums he released in 1986 listing him as Little Hands Of Concrete (King Of America) and Napoleon Dynamite (Blood & Chocolate) respectively. While the former was a self-mocking reference to his habit of breaking guitar strings, the latter was a more boastful persona who made his stage bow as the mad-eyed master of ceremonies at fairground-like live shows.

Revived in summer 2011 on a lengthy series of dates across America (and coming to the UK in May 2012), The Spectacular Spinning Songbook is a novel way for Costello to take requests. A giant, multicoloured wheel resembling a pie chart dominates the stage, containing the names of about 40 songs. Random audience members are plucked from their seats and invited to give the wheel a spin. Wherever it stops determines which number Costello and his Imposters will play next.

This elaborate boxset comprises a CD and DVD (plus a bonus 10-inch vinyl "encore" disc) of two shows from the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles. The location raises questions about quite how random the selection of audience spinners might be. Can it really be just by chance that Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner and Sideways / Grey's Anatomy actress Sandra Oh made the journey from stalls to stage the night the cameras were there?

Whoever spins the wheel, though, it still results in unpredictable sequences of songs, never guaranteeing that big hits or long-term live favourites get an airing. Elvis — or rather, Napoleon Dynamite, an over-the-top circus barker making the alliterative declarations in keeping with Costello's guest introductions on his Spectacle TV show — follows the raucous garage of "Stella Hurt" from 2008's Momofuku with the baroque lament "All Grown Up" from 1991's Mighty Like A Rose. Of course, the song has to be on the wheel in the first place, but it leads to some intriguing inclusions.

A soulful cover of the Stones' "Out Of Time" gives The Imposters (and the manically dextrous Steve Nieve in particular) an opportunity to pretend they're Booker T & The MGs. "Tear Off Your Own Head" enables special guests The Bangles to croon away on the comeback hit Costello wrote for them. But the real surprise is the fatalistic ballad "Earthbound," one of 10 tracks that Elvis allegedly knocked out in a single weekend for a Wendy James album in 1993. "Of all the songs I've ever written, I think this is the truest," he tells us.

As a performing unit, The Imposters take everything thrown at them in their stride, all pomp and majesty on "Man Out Of Time," lean and hungry on a cover of Nick Lowe's "Heart Of The City." And Nieve's delicate new arrangement of "God Give Me Strength" more than compensates for the lack of lush orchestration from the original Burt Bacharach collaboration. The wheel spins, and the mood swings; in the space of an hour and a half, Elvis gets to be the surly aggressor of his youth, the wordy troubadour of the Imperial Bedroom era, and the deep baritone crooner of more recent times.

Before 2011, Costello had been averaging an album of new songs every 12 months. Five years ago, he brokered a lucrative deal with Universal, allowing them to exploit his first decade of releases in any way they see fit, in return for leaving him alone to make records at his own pace and as often as he wanted.

Cynics may suggest that while the Allen Toussaint collaboration The River In Reverse, the aforementioned, noisy Momofuku, the bluegrass-tinged Secret, Profane & Sugarcane and last year's National Ransom have hardly had the label's sales teams popping champagne corks, by staying away from the studio this year and once again gamely pitching his back pages, Elvis is opening the door for further marketing of former glories.

Certainly, another re-upholstered My Aim Is True or Punch The Clock may ultimately shift more units than this bespoke offering, a deluxe limited edition of 1,500 copies which, despite the top-notch music, lavish packaging and poster/book/diary/postcard extras, might struggle to justify its £200 price tag.


Tags: The Return Of The Spectacular Spinning SongbookThe ImpostersSteve NieveLittle Hands Of ConcreteKing Of AmericaNapoleon DynamiteBlood & ChocolateWiltern TheatreLos AngelesSpectacular Spinning SongbookSpectacleStella HurtMomofukuAll Grown UpMighty Like A RoseThe Rolling StonesOut Of TimeBooker T. & the M.G.'sTear Off Your Own Head (It's A Doll Revolution)The BanglesEarthboundWendy JamesMan Out Of TimeNick LoweHeart Of The CityGod Give Me StrengthBurt BacharachUniversalAllen ToussaintThe River In ReverseMomofukuSecret, Profane & SugarcaneNational RansomMy Aim Is TruePunch The Clock

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Uncut, No. 176, January 2012


Terry Staunton reviews The Return Of The Spectacular Spinning Songbook.


Also includes a quarter page ad for the 2012 UK leg of The Revolver Tour.

Images

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Page scan.


Advertisement for UK Revolver tour dates.
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Cover and contents page.
2012-01-00 Uncut cover.jpg 2012-01-00 Uncut page 03.jpg 2012-01-00 Uncut page 123.jpg

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