Sydney Morning Herald, May 30, 2009

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Elvis Costello

Secret, Profane & Sugarcane (Hear Music/Universal)

Bernard Zuel

The Coward Brothers, Howard and Henry, had a fine ol' time playing together 20-odd years ago, dancing through country and hillbilly songs true and not so true. Henry, aka T-Bone Burnett, also lent a hand producing Howard's (aka Elvis Costello) back-to-American-roots album King Of America.

Well, the brothers are back with Burnett producing an album almost as much fun as those Coward shows.

Backed by a string band, Costello plays jaunty reels, back porch ballads and ones for the late-night fireside and mixes the lovelorn and the wicked alongside yarn-spinning songs.

It won't feel surprising to long-time fans, not least because some of his older tunes are revisited, a couple from his Hans Christian Andersen song cycle we've only seen performed live, the perfectly judged harmonies of Jim Lauderdale and a brief visit from Emmylou Harris.

This is even rootsier than King Of America, more casual too, which makes for a lively, more straightforwardly entertaining album. "Maybe it's time to put aside these fictional blunders," Howard, sorry, Costello says in Red Cotton. Not yet, I would think.


Tags: Secret, Profane & SugarcaneHear MusicUniversalThe Coward BrothersHoward CowardHenry CowardT Bone BurnettKing Of AmericaHans Christian Andersen The Secret SongsJim LauderdaleEmmylou HarrisRed Cotton

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Sydney Morning Herald, May 30, 2009


Bernard Zuel reviews Secret, Profane & Sugarcane.


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