Cedar Rapids Gazette, May 9, 2002: Difference between revisions

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(+image link)
(+more text)
Line 19: Line 19:
But the 47-year-old singer insists ''When I Was Cruel'' isn't a retreat, it's just the latest step on a long, zigzagging career path.
But the 47-year-old singer insists ''When I Was Cruel'' isn't a retreat, it's just the latest step on a long, zigzagging career path.


"This isn't the record where I say, 'OK, people — now we're back to good ol' rock 'n' roll.' like rock 'n' roll is some predictable brand," he says, calling from his home in Dublin.
"This isn't the record where I say, 'OK, people — now we're back to good ol' rock 'n' roll,' like rock 'n' roll is some predictable brand," he says, calling from his home in Dublin.


"I'm just trying to find new ways to make music. just as  
"I'm just trying to find new ways to make music, just as I've always done. I've written, like, 300 songs (in his career), so I'm never going to stay fixed in one place and time."


Recorded with former Attractions drummer Pete Thomas and keyboardist Steve Nieve, among others, ''Cruel'' boasts several fast, jagged rockers in the vein of late-'70s classics like "Pump It Up" and "Radio, Radio." But the disc also features more experimental pieces: The brooding "When I Was Cruel No. 2," for example, tips its hat to the trip-hop band Portishead.


"We squeezed and crushed and distorted the rhythms in all sorts of ways on this album," Costello says. "That was attractive to me after the work I'd been doing with Burt Bacharach, which was gentler music that was more about melody and harmony."


''When I Was Cruel'' also finds Costello thrashing and throttling his electric guitar as never before. He chalks up the dissonant textures and guitar riffs to this "poor, funny little amplifier that I found in a junk shop."


<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
"It was the strangest thing, like a rare orchid or a butterfly. ... It lived until the last day of recording, and just keeled over and died." he says. "And then, three months later, it literally drowned in my storage space when there was this huge flood in Dublin. So I don't know if I'll ever be able to play like that again."
 
That eagerness to continually climb out on a limb sets him apart in the mostly tried-and-true world of rock. In the early '80s, as his punk and new wave peers were fast turning into self parodies, Costello set off to explore country music on ''Almost Blue''.
 
In the early '90s, he switched directions again, recording an entire album of classical music, ''The Juliet Letters'', with the Brodsky Quartet.
 
For all the attention given to his ever-evolving music, Costello is also one of rock's greatest lyricists, penning spectacular riddles about society, politics and the human psyche. While he's always been famous for his caustic wit, several tunes on ''When I Was Cruel'' find his acid tongue mellowing.
 
The epic "When I Was Cruel No. 2" describes a high-society wedding sans the venom and ridicule Costello would have spewed on the story in years past.
 
"It's a true song, a true telling of the tension between your disdain for people who wield and abuse power, and your instinct to forgive people," he says.
 
Yet, perhaps the boldest tale on the album is "Dust 2...," which finds the former Catholic schoolboy confronting his thoughts about the afterlife. The tune ends with the line ''"I believe we just / Become a speck of dust."''
 
"I didn't say I believe we become nothing. I'm saying we become the smallest part of everything, and that's pretty great. That's much better than what we all think we are: The most important thing in the world."


{{cx}}
{{cx}}
<!-- Elvis Costello performs at CBS Studios in New York in April. The 47-year-old's new album is When I Was Cruel. -->


{{tags}}[[When I Was Cruel]] {{-}} [[:image:2002-05-00 CMJ New Music Monthly page 05 advertisement.jpg|First Loud Album Since 199?]] {{-}} [[Burt Bacharach]] {{-}} [[Anne Sofie von Otter]]
{{tags}}[[When I Was Cruel]] {{-}} [[Burt Bacharach]] {{-}} [[Anne Sofie von Otter]] {{-}} [[Dublin]] {{-}} [[The Attractions]] {{-}} [[Pete Thomas]] {{-}} [[Steve Nieve]] {{-}} [[Pump It Up]] {{-}} [[Radio, Radio]] {{-}} [[When I Was Cruel No. 2]] {{-}} [[Portishead]] {{-}} [[Almost Blue]] {{-}} [[The Juliet Letters]] {{-}} [[The Brodsky Quartet]] {{-}} [[Dust 2...]] {{-}} [[:image:2002-05-00 CMJ New Music Monthly page 05 advertisement.jpg|First Loud Album Since 199?]] {{-}} [[My Aim Is True]] {{-}} [[Blood & Chocolate]]
{{cx}}
{{cx}}



Revision as of 20:10, 27 July 2019

... Bibliography ...
727677787980818283
848586878889909192
939495969798990001
020304050607080910
111213141516171819
202122232425 26 27 28


Cedar Rapids Gazette

Iowa publications

US publications by state
  • ALAKARAZCA
  • COCTDCDEFL
  • GAHI   IA      ID      IL
  • IN   KSKYLA   MA
  • MDME   MIMNMO
  • MSMTNC  ND  NE
  • NHNJNMNVNY
  • OHOKORPARI
  • SCSDTNTXUT
  • VAVTWAWIWY

-

Elvis Costello rages again


Thor Christensen / Dallas Morning News

This time, rocker's introspection thrown into mix

Most stories about Elvis Costello in the last six years lamented the death of punk's angry young man and touted the arrival of Elvis the Mellow Old Crooner.

In reality, the spit and snarl never vanished — he was just stockpiling it for When I Was Cruel, his new CD.

Cruel is likely to be hailed as a rebirth of the rockin' Elvis of yore, coming in the wake of his records with easy-listening pop guru Burt Bacharach and Swedish mezzo-soprano Anne Sofie von Otter. Print ads are playfully touting the new CD as his "First Loud Album Since 1996."

But the 47-year-old singer insists When I Was Cruel isn't a retreat, it's just the latest step on a long, zigzagging career path.

"This isn't the record where I say, 'OK, people — now we're back to good ol' rock 'n' roll,' like rock 'n' roll is some predictable brand," he says, calling from his home in Dublin.

"I'm just trying to find new ways to make music, just as I've always done. I've written, like, 300 songs (in his career), so I'm never going to stay fixed in one place and time."

Recorded with former Attractions drummer Pete Thomas and keyboardist Steve Nieve, among others, Cruel boasts several fast, jagged rockers in the vein of late-'70s classics like "Pump It Up" and "Radio, Radio." But the disc also features more experimental pieces: The brooding "When I Was Cruel No. 2," for example, tips its hat to the trip-hop band Portishead.

"We squeezed and crushed and distorted the rhythms in all sorts of ways on this album," Costello says. "That was attractive to me after the work I'd been doing with Burt Bacharach, which was gentler music that was more about melody and harmony."

When I Was Cruel also finds Costello thrashing and throttling his electric guitar as never before. He chalks up the dissonant textures and guitar riffs to this "poor, funny little amplifier that I found in a junk shop."

"It was the strangest thing, like a rare orchid or a butterfly. ... It lived until the last day of recording, and just keeled over and died." he says. "And then, three months later, it literally drowned in my storage space when there was this huge flood in Dublin. So I don't know if I'll ever be able to play like that again."

That eagerness to continually climb out on a limb sets him apart in the mostly tried-and-true world of rock. In the early '80s, as his punk and new wave peers were fast turning into self parodies, Costello set off to explore country music on Almost Blue.

In the early '90s, he switched directions again, recording an entire album of classical music, The Juliet Letters, with the Brodsky Quartet.

For all the attention given to his ever-evolving music, Costello is also one of rock's greatest lyricists, penning spectacular riddles about society, politics and the human psyche. While he's always been famous for his caustic wit, several tunes on When I Was Cruel find his acid tongue mellowing.

The epic "When I Was Cruel No. 2" describes a high-society wedding sans the venom and ridicule Costello would have spewed on the story in years past.

"It's a true song, a true telling of the tension between your disdain for people who wield and abuse power, and your instinct to forgive people," he says.

Yet, perhaps the boldest tale on the album is "Dust 2...," which finds the former Catholic schoolboy confronting his thoughts about the afterlife. The tune ends with the line "I believe we just / Become a speck of dust."

"I didn't say I believe we become nothing. I'm saying we become the smallest part of everything, and that's pretty great. That's much better than what we all think we are: The most important thing in the world."


Tags: When I Was CruelBurt BacharachAnne Sofie von OtterDublinThe AttractionsPete ThomasSteve NievePump It UpRadio, RadioWhen I Was Cruel No. 2PortisheadAlmost BlueThe Juliet LettersThe Brodsky QuartetDust 2...First Loud Album Since 199?My Aim Is TrueBlood & Chocolate

-

The Gazette, May 9, 2002


Thor Christensen profiles Elvis Costello.


John Kenyon reviews When I Was Cruel.

Images

2002-05-09 Cedar Rapids Gazette page 1W.jpg 2002-05-09 Cedar Rapids Gazette page 9W.jpg
Page scans.


'When I Was Cruel' comes close,
but not quite there


John Kenyon

Elvis Costello's career can be seen as split into halves, and depending on how you react to his new album. it could fall on either side of the line.

The first part of Costello's career was a furious blast of brilliant rock 'n' roll — 11 albums released in nine years, not a clunker in the bunch. From My Aim is True through Blood & Chocolate, he recorded a batch of albums that had few equals.

The second half followed with uneven rock albums and forays into soundtracks,


-



Back to top

External links