Liverpool Echo, February 17, 2005: Difference between revisions

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There was something to please all his fans in a sensational two and -a- half hour set.
There was something to please all his fans in a sensational two and -a- half hour set.
==Internal links==
*[[Concert 2005-02-16 Liverpool| Concert at Royal Court Theatre, 16 February 2005]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 09:27, 27 May 2013

Review: Elvis lives and he's sensational

PAUL SNOWDON

17 February 2005

Liverpool Echo


ELVIS still lives - and as a live act, he just gets better with every passing year.

Liverpool's Royal Court theatre was Elvis Costello's latest stop on a whirlwind European and American tour promoting The Delivery Man.

But there's so much more to a gig with Declan Patrick McManus than plugging a critically acclaimed LP.

Backed by The Imposters, featuring long-established pals Steve Nieve on keyboards and drummer Pete Thomas, Costello plucked some real gems from a back catalogue now numbering more than 300 songs.

Uncomplicated, Deep, Dark, Truthful Mirror and a new take on Everyday I Write The Book were early highlights, while Good Year For The Roses still lingers with raw emotion more than two decades after he first recorded it.

A lifelong Liverpool fan, Costello cheekily dedicated (I Don"t Want To Go To) Chelsea to Steven Gerrard and followed up with blistering versions of Mystery Dance, Watching The Detectives, Pump It Up, High Fidelity and, of course, Oliver"s Army.

He also had the audience spellbound with the moving anti-war song Shipbuilding, while the rocking What"s So Funny "Bout Peace, Love and Understanding still has tremendous power.

There was something to please all his fans in a sensational two and -a- half hour set.

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