Cleveland Scene, September 24, 2003

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
... Bibliography ...
727677787980818283
848586878889909192
939495969798990001
020304050607080910
111213141516171819
202122232425 26 27 28


Cleveland Scene

Ohio publications

Newspapers

University publications

Magazines and alt. weeklies


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

-

North

Elvis Costello

Carlo Wolff

Last year, Elvis Costello released When I Was Cruel, one of his best recordings since the '80s. This year, the mercurial, pop-besotted Costello seems to want to be taken seriously, and North is serious indeed. It also sounds like a collection of love songs memorializing his engagement to Diana Krall, the Canadian chanteuse who's made jazz sexy all over again.

The album boasts ornate arrangements and unusually careful vocals. North sounds like money; if nothing else, it attests to the clout befitting an artist in his third decade of genre-hopping and -influencing. Unfortunately, North is also monochromatic. Even though the instrumentation spans solo piano and a 48-piece ensemble, the tunes blend into one another and are resolutely slow. Perhaps that's part of Costello's strategy: Corral "serious" music lovers with albums like North and his many collaborations, then reconnect with his old audience with albums like Cruel. Maybe next year, he'll choose invention over craft and grace his patient fans with an album that's serious and playful.

-

Cleveland Scene, September 24, 2003


Carlo Wolff reviews North.

Images

North album cover large.jpg

-



Back to top

External links