Chicago Reader, August 16, 1996: Difference between revisions

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{{:US publications by state index}}
{{:US publications by state index}}
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<center><h3> Critic's choice </h3></center>
<center><h3> Elvis Costello & The Attractions </h3></center>
<center>''' Elvis Costello & The Attractions </center>
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<center> Bill Meyer </center>
<center> Bill Meyer </center>
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'''Critic's choice
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{{Bibliography text}}
Both the Sex Pistols and Elvis Costello & the Attractions play sold-out shows this Saturday, a circumstance that provokes consideration of how well the class of 1977 has kept its early promise to reinvent pop music. The Pistols' Johnny Rotten once represented a genuinely frightening antisocial impulse; he talked about the death of rock music, but he sounded like he was rooting for humanity's extinction. Now the Pistols are a joke, and their willingness to telegraph the punch line by proclaiming that they're only touring for the money (like the Eagles?) raises the question, Why watch a scheduled train wreck? Unlike Rotten, when Costello was an angry young man he was interested in reforming music, not destroying it. The deliberately stripped-down approach of his earliest records never concealed his unabashed embrace of songwriting as a craft. For most of the 90s, the latter tendency has overshadowed the former: Costello has churned out album after frustrating album of overwritten, overarranged songs that lack the simple indelibility of his early work. His new album, ''All This Useless Beauty'', reverses the trend. The songs, mostly written with or for other artists, are more lyrically direct and overtly melodic than anything he's done since 1989's ''Spike''. (Costello's too proud of his writing to give other performers opaque material.) The reunited Attractions' flexible accompaniment provides him with a sonic palette that's just as colorful as the army of hired guns he's used in the past decade, but much more empathic. And the Attractions' familiarity with their early material, which is now old enough to vote, has yet to breed contempt.
Both the Sex Pistols and Elvis Costello & the Attractions play sold-out shows this Saturday, a circumstance that provokes consideration of how well the class of 1977 has kept its early promise to reinvent pop music. The Pistols' Johnny Rotten once represented a genuinely frightening antisocial impulse; he talked about the death of rock music, but he sounded like he was rooting for humanity's extinction. Now the Pistols are a joke, and their willingness to telegraph the punch line by proclaiming that they're only touring for the money (like the Eagles?) raises the question, Why watch a scheduled train wreck?
 
Unlike Rotten, when Costello was an angry young man he was interested in reforming music, not destroying it. The deliberately stripped-down approach of his earliest records never concealed his unabashed embrace of songwriting as a craft. For most of the 90s, the latter tendency has overshadowed the former: Costello has churned out album after frustrating album of overwritten, overarranged songs that lack the simple indelibility of his early work. His new album, ''All This Useless Beauty'', reverses the trend. The songs, mostly written with or for other artists, are more lyrically direct and overtly melodic than anything he's done since 1989's ''Spike''. (Costello's too proud of his writing to give other performers opaque material.)
 
The reunited Attractions' flexible accompaniment provides him with a sonic palette that's just as colorful as the army of hired guns he's used in the past decade, but much more empathic. And the Attractions' familiarity with their early material, which is now old enough to vote, has yet to breed contempt.


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'''Saturday, 8 PM, Rosemont Theatre, 5400 N. River Road, Rosemont
'''Saturday, 8 PM, Rosemont Theatre, 5400 N. River Road, Rosemont
{{tags}}[[Concert 1996-08-17 Rosemont|Rosemont Theatre]] {{-}} [[Rosemont]] {{-}} [[IL|Illinois]] {{-}} [[The Attractions]] {{-}} [[Ron Sexsmith]] {{-}} [[All This Useless Beauty]] {{-}} [[Spike]] {{-}} [[The Sex Pistols]] {{-}} [[Johnny Rotten]]
{{cx}}


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{{Bibliography notes}}
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{{Bibliography next
|prev = Chicago Reader, August 4, 1995
|next = Chicago Reader, August 22, 1996
}}
'''Chicago Reader, August 16, 1996
'''Chicago Reader, August 16, 1996
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[[Bill Meyer]] profiles Elvis Costello ahead of his concert with [[The Attractions]] and opening act [[Ron Sexsmith]], Saturday, [[Concert 1996-08-17 Rosemont|August 17, 1996]], Rosemont Theatre, Rosemont, IL.
[[Bill Meyer]] profiles Elvis Costello ahead of the concert, Saturday, [[Concert 1996-08-17 Rosemont|August 17, 1996]], Rosemont Theatre, Rosemont, Illinois.


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[[image:1996-08-16 Chicago Reader clipping 01.jpg|360px|border]]
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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/elvis-costello--the-attractions/Content?oid=891263 ChicagoReader.com]
*[https://chicagoreader.com/music/elvis-costello-the-attractions/ ChicagoReader.com]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Reader Wikipedia: Chicago Reader]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Reader Wikipedia: Chicago Reader]



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Elvis Costello & The Attractions


Bill Meyer

Critic's choice

Both the Sex Pistols and Elvis Costello & the Attractions play sold-out shows this Saturday, a circumstance that provokes consideration of how well the class of 1977 has kept its early promise to reinvent pop music. The Pistols' Johnny Rotten once represented a genuinely frightening antisocial impulse; he talked about the death of rock music, but he sounded like he was rooting for humanity's extinction. Now the Pistols are a joke, and their willingness to telegraph the punch line by proclaiming that they're only touring for the money (like the Eagles?) raises the question, Why watch a scheduled train wreck?

Unlike Rotten, when Costello was an angry young man he was interested in reforming music, not destroying it. The deliberately stripped-down approach of his earliest records never concealed his unabashed embrace of songwriting as a craft. For most of the 90s, the latter tendency has overshadowed the former: Costello has churned out album after frustrating album of overwritten, overarranged songs that lack the simple indelibility of his early work. His new album, All This Useless Beauty, reverses the trend. The songs, mostly written with or for other artists, are more lyrically direct and overtly melodic than anything he's done since 1989's Spike. (Costello's too proud of his writing to give other performers opaque material.)

The reunited Attractions' flexible accompaniment provides him with a sonic palette that's just as colorful as the army of hired guns he's used in the past decade, but much more empathic. And the Attractions' familiarity with their early material, which is now old enough to vote, has yet to breed contempt.

Saturday, 8 PM, Rosemont Theatre, 5400 N. River Road, Rosemont


Tags: Rosemont TheatreRosemontIllinoisThe AttractionsRon SexsmithAll This Useless BeautySpikeThe Sex PistolsJohnny Rotten

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Chicago Reader, August 16, 1996


Bill Meyer profiles Elvis Costello ahead of the concert, Saturday, August 17, 1996, Rosemont Theatre, Rosemont, Illinois.

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Photo by James Crump.
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