Boulder Weekly, June 4, 2009

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Elvis Costello, Secret, Profane and Sugarcane

(Hear Music)

Dan DeLuca

Elvis Costello's third collaboration with T Bone Burnett splits the difference between his first two: It's better than 1989's all-over-the-place Spike, but not as good as 1986's sharply focused King of America. It's a set of ballads with subtle acoustic country and bluegrass backing, not quite so atmospheric as Burnett's most recent noteworthy production, Robert Plant and Alison Krauss' Raising Sand.

The cable talk-show host is never at a loss for words or new songs, but here he also reinterprets tunes previously targeted for other projects. The standout, and one welcome up-tempo cut, "Hidden Shame," for instance, originally was written for Johnny Cash and also was released as a demo version on Costello's 2001 album All This Useless Beauty.

Emmylou Harris sings harmony on the quite lovely fiddle-fired "The Crooked Line," co-written by Burnett, and "I Felt the Chill" is a choked and touching lament co-written with Loretta Lynn that's a comeback, of sorts, to Lynn's "When the Tingle Becomes A Chill." Too many mid-tempo tunes lined up back-to-back, but otherwise a solid addition to the Costello oeuvre.


Tags: Secret, Profane & SugarcaneT Bone BurnettSpikeKing Of AmericaRobert PlantAlison KraussHidden ShameJohnny CashAll This Useless BeautyEmmylou HarrisThe Crooked LineI Felt The ChillLoretta Lynn

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Boulder Weekly, June 4, 2009


Dan DeLuca reviews Secret, Profane & Sugarcane.
This review was also published in the Philadelphia Inquirer.


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