Macau Daily Times, October 12, 2018

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
... Bibliography ...
727677787980818283
848586878889909192
939495969798990001
020304050607080910
111213141516171819
202122232425 26 27 28


Macau Daily Times

Asian publications
  • China      Hong Kong
  • Indonesia      Israel
  • Japan      Macau
  • Malaysia      Pakistan
  • Philippines      Singapore
  • South Korea      Taiwan
  • Thailand      Turkey
  • UAE

Newspapers
-

ELVIS COSTELLO VIEWS MISERY ON SUMPTUOUS ‘LOOK NOW’


Pablo Gorondi

Like in “Anna Karenina,” the characters in “Look Now,” Elvis Costello’s sumptuous new album with The Imposters, are each unhappy in their own way.

A woman who laments her deteriorated marriage while doing some renovations around the house (“Stripping Paper”); a dilapidated music-hall singer whose return to showbiz may be brief (“Under Lime”); a daughter pondering her dad’s infidelity (“Photographs Can Lie”); someone grieving the end of the British empire (“I Let the Sun Go Down”) and so on.

What make it easy to be sympathetic with even the most pitiable of those in these very human songs are Costello’s elegant melodies and arrangements, which result in a kind of silkier, even more debonair version of “Imperial Bedroom,” his 1982 album produced by recently departed Beatles recording engineer Geoff Emerick.

Costello’s guitars are mostly in a supporting role. Horns, woodwinds and strings — as well as some of the liveliest backing vocals on an EC album since Afrodiziak lit up “Punch the Clock” — plus the deft hands of The Imposters and Argentine-born co-producer Sebastian Krys, turn “Look Now” into one of his most sonically gratifying records.

Burt Bacharach composed some of the music and Costello also dusted off “Burnt Sugar Is So Bitter,” another tale of domestic gloom, written years ago with Carole King. But there are several others, including “Why Won’t Heaven Help Me” and “Stripping Paper,” which show how deeply those 1960s sounds, from pop to soul.

Costello said he recorded the lead vocals as he was recovering from a cancer scare and it made him feel invigorated instead of depressed.

-

Macau Daily Times, October 12, 2018


Pablo Gorondi reviews Look Now. This review also appeared in the New Jersey Herald, the Huntington Herald Dispatch, the National Post, the New Zealand Herald, the Washington Post and the Winona Daily News.

Images

Look Now album cover.jpg
Elvis Costello & The Imposters, “Look Now” (Concord Records)

-



Back to top

External links