Hot Press, December 14, 1984: Difference between revisions

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Bill Graham shares tea, beer and conversation with the Fabulous Coward Brothers, better known as Elvis Costello and T-Bone Burnett.
Bill Graham shares tea, beer and conversation with the Fabulous Coward Brothers, better known as Elvis Costello and T-Bone Burnett.
Albania. Whisper the word carefully. It is a immutable law of the cosmos that once someone invokes Albania , craziness is bound to follow. At the National Stadium, it was the destruction of 'San Francisco'.
Those two stand-up comics, self-confessed members of the Albanian Motherhood, an obscure Eastern sect of acoustic guitar stranglers and Tirana's answer to Tennessee . the fabulous Coward Brothers stood on the stage and merrily mugged both Tony Bennett's and Scott McKenzie's versions of " San Francisco ".
Few knew the form of Texan dark horse T-Bone Burnett but from long-distance stayer , Elvis Costello, it was a revelation - particularly to those who had previously accounted him a rather dour nag. Elvis singing: " If you're going to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair",,,,,well, as Sam Snort later quipped good naturedly : " All that was missing was the keyboard player from Blancmange".
Elvis Costello also quipped good-naturedly. Earlier he'd sat stage right at his piano and drolly apologized for not facing the audience.:" It just might make me look like Russ Conway when I smile".  Then he mocked an over-inflated review that had praised "the Debussyean ambiguities of my piano playing" and hit the bone in the marrow with "Shot With His Own Gun".
Elvis ad-libbed because he had to. Different shows require different strokes. Bereft of the protective covering of a band, he and Burnett were venturing into waters rarely explored recently, as they learnt how audiences would take to the bare essentials of their songs. In that discipline, performances must be spontaneous.
The concert also confirmed just how far Costello has moved from his original tensely rebellious and aloof character. He still plays hard but there's been an increasing relaxation within Costello throughout the eighties. He may have come to realize how spurious veneration can destry decency. Certainly he seems even more prepared to acknowledge the bond between himself, and his devoted audience, in a friendlier spirit.
It was a most absorbing night. The lyrics now took the forefront - an intriguing situation for those like myself who've never approached Costello like a scholar and who value him for his tunes, the cleverness of his arrangements and his attitude of independence. Thus stripped bare , the imperative was to seek the intensity that originally motivated the song's creation.
The conclusion was that the Fabulous Coward Brothers Reunion Tour gave full value - and then some - almot three hours of music and the number of songs , surely over 40, must have broken the Stadium record. If one passed on one course, there was always another dish to savour . Costello may give on his own terms but none can claim he doesn't give.
In truth , the encore's were almost a scond concert. At the break , he'd slowly left the stage , prowling away from the microphone , whispering 'you can make me' and the ice, all that sense of concentration at a seminar, seemed to crack on his return.
We got 'Angels Want To Wear My Red Shoes', 'Alison' and an aching version of Bob Dylan's 'I Threw It All Away', which like the earlier 'Almost Blue' showed of Costello's interpreter's affinity for the country ballad.
Then the Fabulous Coward Brothers, their tag-team to challenge the Everleys served their sweet 'n' sour dessert. By now the audience had forgotten protocol, surged to the front and breached all psychological barriers. Harmonising over covers like Bobby Charles' 'Tennessee Blues', it was now street busking time. The only missing element was promoter Paul Charles passing 'round the hat.
Costello returned alone. 'Inch By Inch'  was perfect as he mimed some silly guitar poses without ever losing grip of the emotional core of the song. Then 'Shipbuilding' as elegy and a closing 'Peace In Our Time'. He could have sung even more and there were many missed late buses. A most succesful , most useful engagement.
But Elvis Costello isn't the only Coward Brother. After all my original assignment had been to interview T-Bone Burnett.
Our beliefs about Texans can be travesties. They aren't necessarilly the stetson racketeers of 'Dallas' as T-Bone Burnett proves.
He'd had the unenviable task of playing support , coping with a crowd generally unfamiliar with his songs and still filling in from the bars. Did they expect a man with a stalky basketball player's frame in baggy but debonair light grey pants singing a learned, laconic song about 'Art Movies'?
Possibly not . Burnett's music derives from traditional Texas sources but he isn't a man who's limited his curiosity to the latest studio engineering techniques or the matrix numbers of grimey blues '78's.
Nor does he oversell himself or his associations. For example, he modestly refused to milk the audience when he introduced 'Having A Wonderful Time, Wish You Were Her' saying only it was co-written with an Irishman and omitting to mention Bono by name.
A man long on his own personal road , Mr Burnett. He started as a producer 'in a little studio in Fort Worth , Texas, doing r'n'b bands, that sort of darker than blue music'.
'I also did a lot of esoteric, real regional Southern stuff' , he recalls. ' I liked rock'n'roll then because it was real regional and it was a music of possibilities. Like a band like ? and the Mysterions could just go in for a 100 dollars and cut a record and be....? and the Mysterions'.
In '72 he made his first move as a performer as J Henry Burnett but 'The B-52 Band & The Fabulous Skylarks' album got shoved into a siding due to the volatility of music business politics.
'It lasted about three weeks. It was one of those situations when Russ Regan who was president of MCA left the day after the record was released. So when  the new regime came in, nothing happened'.
He next emerged playing guitar among the cast of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder tour and with colleagues , David Mansfield and Steven Soles formed the Alpha Band who released three albums for Arista between '76 and '78. He has mixed feelings about that project.
'I don't remember that period very well if you can call it a period', he wryly responds. ' The Alpha Band was just like a magazine. There were about 15 people involved in it and it was like a magazine with 15 contributing editors. It never went in any particular direction.
'But it was good fun. We did manage to spend a couple hundred million dollars of Clive Davis' money. Actually we were hired by CBS to see if we could break Arista!'
He liberated himself in '80 and through Chrysalis , put out his first genuine solo album 'Truth Decay'. It was a genuinely independent work. While the New York acts were playing rock'n'Rimbaud or latching on to the art-disco shapes of Blondie and Talking Heads, 'Truth Decay' was music from the American heartland with incisive lyrics happily free of rock'n'roll cliche. Furthermore , it lacked any LA studio fraudulence.
'I wrote this bunch of songs and sent them to my publisher' he says. ' And Denny Bruce who owned Takoma Records (then distributed through Chrysalis) said 'let's put them out'. They were really demos'.
Subsequently he released a 6-song EP. 'Trap Door' on WEA followed late last year by an album 'Proof Through The Night' featuring the stellar but most unindulgent contributions of Pete Townshend, Ry Cooder and Tom Petty's Stan Lynch.
Says Mr Burnett: 'All my records have been done live. We just sing them and play them. I feel that with 'Proof Through The Night', I tried too hard to make a record rather than just singing the songs'. In contrast , his new EP 'Behind The Trap Door', on Demon, 'has some of the qualities of 'Trap Door' '. Again there's no elaborate gameplan.
'I was living to vicarious a existence' he says. 'In the studio , you tend to get really insular. I never knew if my songs really connected with anybody. It was like shouting into a void.
'It's a terrifying thought, stepping on a stage. First you're admitting a couple of things that you're completely, wildly, uncontrollably insecure, and you're admitting you need approval, a lot of it'.
Spoken like a true Coward Brother. And sipping tea beside us and occasionally interjecting was the other F.C.B. , Elvis Costello. Hereabouts all interview etiquette ended and it became an informal chat over tea and beer. Neither was stretching out to tell his life story but there are insights in the anecdotes and opinions of two men on the road.
( rest of text to follow)
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Two of a kind


Bill Graham

Bill Graham shares tea, beer and conversation with the Fabulous Coward Brothers, better known as Elvis Costello and T-Bone Burnett.

Albania. Whisper the word carefully. It is a immutable law of the cosmos that once someone invokes Albania , craziness is bound to follow. At the National Stadium, it was the destruction of 'San Francisco'.

Those two stand-up comics, self-confessed members of the Albanian Motherhood, an obscure Eastern sect of acoustic guitar stranglers and Tirana's answer to Tennessee . the fabulous Coward Brothers stood on the stage and merrily mugged both Tony Bennett's and Scott McKenzie's versions of " San Francisco ".

Few knew the form of Texan dark horse T-Bone Burnett but from long-distance stayer , Elvis Costello, it was a revelation - particularly to those who had previously accounted him a rather dour nag. Elvis singing: " If you're going to San Francisco, be sure to wear some flowers in your hair",,,,,well, as Sam Snort later quipped good naturedly : " All that was missing was the keyboard player from Blancmange".

Elvis Costello also quipped good-naturedly. Earlier he'd sat stage right at his piano and drolly apologized for not facing the audience.:" It just might make me look like Russ Conway when I smile". Then he mocked an over-inflated review that had praised "the Debussyean ambiguities of my piano playing" and hit the bone in the marrow with "Shot With His Own Gun".

Elvis ad-libbed because he had to. Different shows require different strokes. Bereft of the protective covering of a band, he and Burnett were venturing into waters rarely explored recently, as they learnt how audiences would take to the bare essentials of their songs. In that discipline, performances must be spontaneous.

The concert also confirmed just how far Costello has moved from his original tensely rebellious and aloof character. He still plays hard but there's been an increasing relaxation within Costello throughout the eighties. He may have come to realize how spurious veneration can destry decency. Certainly he seems even more prepared to acknowledge the bond between himself, and his devoted audience, in a friendlier spirit.

It was a most absorbing night. The lyrics now took the forefront - an intriguing situation for those like myself who've never approached Costello like a scholar and who value him for his tunes, the cleverness of his arrangements and his attitude of independence. Thus stripped bare , the imperative was to seek the intensity that originally motivated the song's creation.

The conclusion was that the Fabulous Coward Brothers Reunion Tour gave full value - and then some - almot three hours of music and the number of songs , surely over 40, must have broken the Stadium record. If one passed on one course, there was always another dish to savour . Costello may give on his own terms but none can claim he doesn't give.

In truth , the encore's were almost a scond concert. At the break , he'd slowly left the stage , prowling away from the microphone , whispering 'you can make me' and the ice, all that sense of concentration at a seminar, seemed to crack on his return. We got 'Angels Want To Wear My Red Shoes', 'Alison' and an aching version of Bob Dylan's 'I Threw It All Away', which like the earlier 'Almost Blue' showed of Costello's interpreter's affinity for the country ballad.

Then the Fabulous Coward Brothers, their tag-team to challenge the Everleys served their sweet 'n' sour dessert. By now the audience had forgotten protocol, surged to the front and breached all psychological barriers. Harmonising over covers like Bobby Charles' 'Tennessee Blues', it was now street busking time. The only missing element was promoter Paul Charles passing 'round the hat.

Costello returned alone. 'Inch By Inch' was perfect as he mimed some silly guitar poses without ever losing grip of the emotional core of the song. Then 'Shipbuilding' as elegy and a closing 'Peace In Our Time'. He could have sung even more and there were many missed late buses. A most succesful , most useful engagement.

But Elvis Costello isn't the only Coward Brother. After all my original assignment had been to interview T-Bone Burnett. Our beliefs about Texans can be travesties. They aren't necessarilly the stetson racketeers of 'Dallas' as T-Bone Burnett proves.

He'd had the unenviable task of playing support , coping with a crowd generally unfamiliar with his songs and still filling in from the bars. Did they expect a man with a stalky basketball player's frame in baggy but debonair light grey pants singing a learned, laconic song about 'Art Movies'? Possibly not . Burnett's music derives from traditional Texas sources but he isn't a man who's limited his curiosity to the latest studio engineering techniques or the matrix numbers of grimey blues '78's.

Nor does he oversell himself or his associations. For example, he modestly refused to milk the audience when he introduced 'Having A Wonderful Time, Wish You Were Her' saying only it was co-written with an Irishman and omitting to mention Bono by name. A man long on his own personal road , Mr Burnett. He started as a producer 'in a little studio in Fort Worth , Texas, doing r'n'b bands, that sort of darker than blue music'.

'I also did a lot of esoteric, real regional Southern stuff' , he recalls. ' I liked rock'n'roll then because it was real regional and it was a music of possibilities. Like a band like ? and the Mysterions could just go in for a 100 dollars and cut a record and be....? and the Mysterions'. In '72 he made his first move as a performer as J Henry Burnett but 'The B-52 Band & The Fabulous Skylarks' album got shoved into a siding due to the volatility of music business politics.

'It lasted about three weeks. It was one of those situations when Russ Regan who was president of MCA left the day after the record was released. So when the new regime came in, nothing happened'.

He next emerged playing guitar among the cast of Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder tour and with colleagues , David Mansfield and Steven Soles formed the Alpha Band who released three albums for Arista between '76 and '78. He has mixed feelings about that project. 'I don't remember that period very well if you can call it a period', he wryly responds. ' The Alpha Band was just like a magazine. There were about 15 people involved in it and it was like a magazine with 15 contributing editors. It never went in any particular direction. 'But it was good fun. We did manage to spend a couple hundred million dollars of Clive Davis' money. Actually we were hired by CBS to see if we could break Arista!'

He liberated himself in '80 and through Chrysalis , put out his first genuine solo album 'Truth Decay'. It was a genuinely independent work. While the New York acts were playing rock'n'Rimbaud or latching on to the art-disco shapes of Blondie and Talking Heads, 'Truth Decay' was music from the American heartland with incisive lyrics happily free of rock'n'roll cliche. Furthermore , it lacked any LA studio fraudulence. 'I wrote this bunch of songs and sent them to my publisher' he says. ' And Denny Bruce who owned Takoma Records (then distributed through Chrysalis) said 'let's put them out'. They were really demos'.

Subsequently he released a 6-song EP. 'Trap Door' on WEA followed late last year by an album 'Proof Through The Night' featuring the stellar but most unindulgent contributions of Pete Townshend, Ry Cooder and Tom Petty's Stan Lynch. Says Mr Burnett: 'All my records have been done live. We just sing them and play them. I feel that with 'Proof Through The Night', I tried too hard to make a record rather than just singing the songs'. In contrast , his new EP 'Behind The Trap Door', on Demon, 'has some of the qualities of 'Trap Door' '. Again there's no elaborate gameplan.

'I was living to vicarious a existence' he says. 'In the studio , you tend to get really insular. I never knew if my songs really connected with anybody. It was like shouting into a void.

'It's a terrifying thought, stepping on a stage. First you're admitting a couple of things that you're completely, wildly, uncontrollably insecure, and you're admitting you need approval, a lot of it'.

Spoken like a true Coward Brother. And sipping tea beside us and occasionally interjecting was the other F.C.B. , Elvis Costello. Hereabouts all interview etiquette ended and it became an informal chat over tea and beer. Neither was stretching out to tell his life story but there are insights in the anecdotes and opinions of two men on the road.

( rest of text to follow)


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Hot Press, December 14, 1984


Bill Graham interviews Elvis Costello and T Bone Burnett.

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