Record Mirror, December 12, 1987: Difference between revisions

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[[Pete Paisley]] reviews [[Steve Nieve]]'s ''Playboy''.
[[Pete Paisley]] reviews [[Steve Nieve]]'s ''Playboy''.
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The chart page features a photo of EC.
The chart page features a [[Chalkie Davies]] photo.


{{Bibliography images}}
{{Bibliography images}}


[[image:1987-12-12 Record Mirror clipping 02.jpg|x350px|border]]
[[image:1987-12-12 Record Mirror clipping 02.jpg|x350px|border]]
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[[image:1987-12-12 Record Mirror photo 01 cd.jpg|x350px|border]]
<br><small>Clipping and photo.</small>
<br><small>Photo by [[Chalkie Davies]].</small>


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Revision as of 16:36, 2 September 2019

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Record Mirror

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Out Of Our Idiot

Various artists (Elvis Costello)

Roger Morton

Or perhaps it should be called Now That's What I Call Schizophrenia Volume One, for here we have the idiot/genius, mad/not mad Declan McManus taking the piss out of those nasty lumpen-pop compilation LPs with an album of old B-sides and lesser known singles, recorded under a variety of pseudonyms, from the Coward Brothers to the Emotional Toothpaste.

The 17 tracks span the years of Our Idiot 1979-87. including such oddities as "The People's Limousine" with T-Bone Burnett, "Seven Day Weekend" with Jimmy Cliff, "Walking On Thin Ice" by Yoko Ono, and the previously unreleased "So Young" (1979). From the peppy, acerbic pop of "Baby's Got A Brand New Hairdo" through the imitation Stax soul of "Blue Chair" to the country style "Shoes Without Heels" this, then, is a splendidly eccentric, eclectic album, brilliant in parts ("Black Sails In The Sunset") and occasionally average. As a collection of obscure Costello, it's powerful enough to make claims that George Michael is "the complete pop craftsman of the decade" look rather ridiculous.

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Record Mirror, December 12, 1987


Roger Morton reviews Out Of Our Idiot.


Pete Paisley reviews Steve Nieve's Playboy.


The chart page features a Chalkie Davies photo.

Images

1987-12-12 Record Mirror clipping 02.jpg 1987-12-12 Record Mirror photo 01 cd.jpg
Photo by Chalkie Davies.


Playboy

Steve Nieve

Pete Paisley

1987-12-12 Record Mirror clipping 03.jpg

Flushed with fame from being Declan McManus's very own ivory tickler and Johnny Ross's orchestra leader, Steve "Bryan Ferry justaboutlookalike" Nieve has seen fit to compose an album of short solo piano pieces. He reworks some strangely mixed modern covers — Sting's "Russians," the Specials' "Ghost Town," George Michael's "Careless Whisper" — and pitches in some moody self-penned romantic numbers himself, like "Loveboat" and "Divided Heart."

Hard to know what else to say; the joanna in question has a lovely tone, Nieve has a sure touch, and any of these numbers would make perfect background music for a Torville and Dean TV skating session. Polished, proficient and puzzling.


1987-12-12 Record Mirror cover.jpg 1987-12-12 Record Mirror page 03.jpg 1987-12-12 Record Mirror clipping 01.jpg
Cover, contents page and chart page clipping.

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