Midweek, April 27, 1989

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Revision as of 20:51, 3 August 2020 by Zmuda (talk | contribs) (formatting)
Jump to navigationJump to search
... Bibliography ...
727677787980818283
848586878889909192
939495969798990001
020304050607080910
111213141516171819
202122232425 26 27 28


Midweek

UK & Irish magazines index

-

The Beloved Entertainer


Andy Spinoza

Elvis Costello describes other lyric writers as "a race of pygmies". One of the few survivors of the 1977 New Wave, Costello has just produced Spike, possibly his finest work, and collaborated with Roy Orbison and Paul McCartney. Midweek meets the great singer/songwriter.

Baby Boomers will remember their youth as a time when what drove ambitious pop artists was not escapism and empty headedness, but the need to complain about the state of things. It was a time when an Elvis Costello interview would leave a tape recorder practically corroded by a cassette full of vitriol.

These days his intensity is disciplined by an under-stated, almost self-effacing public personality. The blunt truth, for instance, that pop lyric writers are "a race of pygmies" has often tripped off his tongue. But these days he's not so keen to complete the equation — that in comparison he is a colossus bestriding the whole ridiculous lot of them. That he can leave to the rest of us to say.

Costello has been away since his two 1986 albums, but he's back with a clear head, a fast mouth, and a new alter ego in The Beloved Entertainer and his schizo-greasepaint grin. And a brilliant LP in Spike, a showcase of musical styles which employs the guitars of Roger McGuinn and Paul McCartney, the piano of Allen Toussaint, the New Orleans jazz of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, and the cream of Ireland's modern folk musicians. It's been hailed as his most brilliant LP since . . . well, the last one.

Through that distinctive gap in the front teeth, and in his transatlantic Scouse accent, a stream of intelligent thoughts show that he's taking nothing for granted. He's keen to talk — not that it was always this way.

"For along time I was quite defensive about speaking to people," he says, sitting in the Dublin hotel room where most of Spike was written — he and wife ex Pogue Cait O'Riordan have just bought a house in the Irish capital. "Then it gets to a point where that doesn't serve your purposes any more, and you have to find a new way. The absence of communication from yourself becomes a void, and people stop looking into it with interest and go and look somewhere else."

Have they looked away because pop's molecules have been radically rearranged, and he doesn't get into today's chart scene? "It's just what I do, it either appeals to you or it doesn't," he says, in the spirit of his new modesty.

"But it doesn't really exclude it from being a pop record because a pop record is by definition a record that's popular. And I've had a few of those, and then I've had other records that I think are better that have meant a lot more to people, but there's been less of them, there hasn't been enough of it to register as a pop success. But it hasn't made it a creative failure because it lacked popular success."

These days, says Costello, he's not in a race with anybody. Apart from his contemporaries who have retired, everyone else who surfed ashore with their skinny ties and straight jeans on 1977's New Wave have long ago disappeared up their own bank accounts. So where does his inspiration stem from?

"Oh, I don't know, it's not the sort of thing you even want to question. I it ain't broke don't fix it. I'm not even gonna tempt fate by assuming that it's even inspiration. Sometimes it's just hard work. . . I do work hard, because I enjoy it and it doesn't bother me. It hasn't got stale, ‘cos I've changed it every time I started to get tired of it.

"I sort of turned round one day and I was a veteran. I always feel like I'm just starting out, I hadn't noticed the time going by. I don't feel out of step. It's not like at Christmas — they had Top of the Pops with all these old bands on and it becomes nostalgia. Well, I can't really become nostalgia because I don't have an identifiable audience, who have grown up with me and look back at it with a rosy glow."

One place he popped up between 1986 and Spike was the Roy Orbison and Friends TV special, which could have been a tacky tribute but turned out to be a classy homage, with the man himself surrounded by legendary US pop names. . . and Costello. He contributed rhythm guitar, organ and "a bit of bad harmonica", and says "the idea was to keep it very very sparse on the backslapping — you know, we all love each other even though we only met five minutes ago backstage.

"It was just really hip," he says. "They shot in a moody kind of way, on high quality film, they kept the lighting appropriate, they kept the room dark, it seems like you've always seen him in black and white. And the ballads at least are pretty serious music. His ballads, they're like little opera pieces, you wanna play them really seriously, and they're fuckin' difficult to play — we were all reading charts!

"I was really glad that we did that show and there's something that's really contemporary so that people can say he wasn't just good in the Sixties, he was still really good. And he was a very nice man.

"And I hadn't really wanted to say any more, ‘cos I got this bloody radio station and that bloody radio station calling me up after he died. You just get the feeling they just want to elongate the story, it's not really a sincere tribute, and they just grab anybody who may be appropriate, some talking head or Paul Gambaccini or some wanker like that, and do some platitudinous little tribute. You just go back to his records and it's all there."

Spike has an international flavour, Costello says. "I can defend every musical transition on this record . . . I didn't want to do anything where I felt I was putting on an ill-fitting suit, because there's nothing worse than these records where people go to exotic places and run around like demented tourists with that thing. . .you know when you do go on holiday and you buy a shirt that looks great when you're there and then you put it on when you get home and you look like a complete prat, well there are loads of records that are like that."

The last time we heard from him was before House. "The scene has become really really trivialised and splintered in many different directions," he comments. "It's very hard for anyone to make a career opinionating about acid house or even ordinary mainstream dance music, because it's so lacking in substance that demands words. It's all about being there.

"I'm not saying it's good or bad — it's all about the moment. It really doesn't stand up to analysis because it has no content. It is by definition anti-music, it's anti-words. It's just sound. And I don't know whether that's a revolutionary creative form or whether it's a crass, unimaginative form. I think the jury's still out. I think they have to wait for the first genius — we always wait for geniuses to turn up and save us. I don't think there are any myself."

Speculating on events and emotions that may have been drawn from Costello's own life was one thing which always made his records so queasily compelling. But Spike seems to have much less personal content.

He has a real downer on the way people chase after the details of others' personal lives. The listener picking apart his songs for titbits is, for him, on a par with tabloid voyeurism. "It's a morbid thing," he reckons, "that replaces a real emotion in your own life. And it's like you read today Sean and Madonna breaking up — what, again? There comes a point where people just lose interest.

"I've never been one for writing what may have been an honest, very personal song," says Costello, ‘and then bragging about it to reinforce it, If the song wasn't forceful, or it wasn't real enough as I wrote it, then there was something wrong with the way I wrote it. Me going on whingeing about how much it meant to me afterwards wouldn't make it a better song."

This fascination started, Costello says, with the singer-songwriter boom of the mid-Seventies. Fleetwood Mac have a lot to answer for.

‘They have made a career out of it without ever having to speak their mind on it. They've allowed it to be assumed that this was all about them, and in America that was the beginning of the Me Generation, they were the soundtrack for that. That's what made people say ‘who are these people that can bare their souls?' Well, what are they baring exactly, what are they saying? And there was a whole self-conscious era of self-publicity and self- flagellation, and I don't think I've ever done that. The song does the talking."

How has he reacted to the Costello exposés? "No-one's really done it that effectively. There's been a couple of crap books written about me and a few interviews where people have asked questions that I didn't want to answer, and I thought it was none of their business and I would just tell them so and it's their business whether they want to get in a pleasant discussion about it or whether they want to shut up, or ask another question."

Okay, point taken. News that Costello has co-written nine songs on the new Paul McCartney LP and two on Spike raised eyebrows. Macca is hardly at the cutting edge, is he?

‘I think people want him to be something he can never be," replies Costello. "What he is in my mind is a very very good musician, and he knows an awful lot about songwriting. It wasn't like we were sitting around in a rosy glow dreaming up these songs, it was good fun, it was bantering and taking the piss out of each other when we got to know each other a bit better. Just trying out ideas, it was really good fun. And I'd never written with anybody in the room before, so it was just as new to me. He'd had 10 years of it, with somebody pretty good, as well!"

Costello's career continues to inspire in a period when the phrase ‘pop artist' seems a contradiction in terms. Creative genius? He'll put it all down to hard work. "No matter how cynical anybody might ever get about me, not working hard is something I can't ever be accused of. I enjoy it and it doesn't bother me — it's not like I'm showing off.

"You've only got to watch any nostalgia programme to see how many careers are founded on one hit, on half an idea. I could have honed any one bunch of songs into a formula which I could have kept repeating, probably made a more steady, lucrative career. But I would have gone out of my mind by now."

-

Midweek, April 27, 1989


Andy Spinoza interviews Elvis Costello.

Images

1989-04-27 Midweek page 04.jpg1989-04-27 Midweek page 05.jpg
Page scans.


Cover.
1989-04-27 Midweek cover.jpg




1989-04-27 Midweek photo 01.jpg
Photographer unknown.


1989-04-27 Midweek photo 02.jpg

-



Back to top

External links