New Musical Express, April 28, 1984: Difference between revisions
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''' The Imposter <br> | |||
Peace In Our Time | |||
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A self righteously important release, an Elvis Costello protest single in the wake of the Greenham eviction. Again, it's under the moniker he adopted for his other piece of political heaviosity ("Pills And Soap") as if to underline its special nature and separate it from his regular clock punching, lexicon juggling pop. The sentiment — a swipe at the hoary, historically inconsistent Euro American pals act — is spot on, but I'm afraid you can't just praise a man for having his heart in the right place. | A self righteously important release, an Elvis Costello protest single in the wake of the Greenham eviction. Again, it's under the moniker he adopted for his other piece of political heaviosity ("Pills And Soap") as if to underline its special nature and separate it from his regular clock punching, lexicon juggling pop. The sentiment — a swipe at the hoary, historically inconsistent Euro American pals act — is spot on, but I'm afraid you can't just praise a man for having his heart in the right place. |