Sydney Morning Herald, October 13, 1986: Difference between revisions

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Like Byrne, Elvis Costello is one of the few graduates of the Class of '77 to have continued making consistently interesting records, though, for this writer much of his 80s work has been too self-conscious in its trawl for critical approval. But not any more. In the Thatcher era much British music has either sounded dolorously uninspired or desperately shallow, but since the Westland Affair the mood of UK politics would appear to have shifted, creating a more optimistic environment.
Like Byrne, Elvis Costello is one of the few graduates of the Class of '77 to have continued making consistently interesting records, though, for this writer much of his 80s work has been too self-conscious in its trawl for critical approval. But not any more. In the Thatcher era much British music has either sounded dolorously uninspired or desperately shallow, but since the Westland Affair the mood of UK politics would appear to have shifted, creating a more optimistic environment.


The Nick Lowe-produced and Attractions-backed ''Blood And Chocolate'' seems to reflect this. It's a startlingly angry manifesto that returns to the rawness of Costello's early work, adding lashings of raucousness and paranoia that bring to mind the Velvet Underground and even Can. "Tokyo Storm Warning" is like ''Highway 61''-period Dylan updated for the 80s, and "I Want You" (not the Dylan song) an obsessive litany of despair. Bitter, scarred but fighting, English music hasn't sounded this vital for ages. I'd guess Elvis's new mood has also partly been inspired by Ulster's That Petrol Emotion, whose scorching debut LP (a couple of months old but so far ignored by local reviewers) is on the Costello-owned Demon label.
The Nick Lowe-produced and Attractions-backed ''Blood & Chocolate'' seems to reflect this. It's a startlingly angry manifesto that returns to the rawness of Costello's early work, adding lashings of raucousness and paranoia that bring to mind the Velvet Underground and even Can. "Tokyo Storm Warning" is like ''Highway 61''-period Dylan updated for the 80s, and "I Want You" (not the Dylan song) an obsessive litany of despair. Bitter, scarred but fighting, English music hasn't sounded this vital for ages.
 
I'd guess Elvis's new mood has also partly been inspired by Ulster's That Petrol Emotion, whose scorching debut LP (a couple of months old but so far ignored by local reviewers) is on the Costello-owned Demon label.


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{{Bibliography notes}}
{{Bibliography notes}}
{{Bibliography next
|prev = Sydney Morning Herald, April 14, 1986
|next = Sydney Morning Herald, November 27, 1987
}}
'''Sydney Morning Herald, The Guide, October 13, 1986
'''Sydney Morning Herald, The Guide, October 13, 1986
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[[Lynden Barber]] reviews ''True Stones'' by Talking Heads, ''[[Blood & Chocolate]]'' by Elvis Costello, and ''Manic Pop Thrill'' by That Petrol Emotion.
[[Lynden Barber]] reviews Talking Heads' ''True Stones'', ''[[Blood & Chocolate]]'', and That Petrol Emotion's ''Manic Pop Thrill''.


{{Bibliography images}}
{{Bibliography images}}
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*[http://www.smh.com.au SMH.com.au]
*[http://www.smh.com.au SMH.com.au]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sydney_Morning_Herald Wikipedia: The Sydney Morning Herald]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sydney_Morning_Herald Wikipedia: The Sydney Morning Herald]
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Latest revision as of 13:07, 3 November 2021

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Angry lyrics reflect British mood


Lynden Barber

Extract:

Like Byrne, Elvis Costello is one of the few graduates of the Class of '77 to have continued making consistently interesting records, though, for this writer much of his 80s work has been too self-conscious in its trawl for critical approval. But not any more. In the Thatcher era much British music has either sounded dolorously uninspired or desperately shallow, but since the Westland Affair the mood of UK politics would appear to have shifted, creating a more optimistic environment.

The Nick Lowe-produced and Attractions-backed Blood & Chocolate seems to reflect this. It's a startlingly angry manifesto that returns to the rawness of Costello's early work, adding lashings of raucousness and paranoia that bring to mind the Velvet Underground and even Can. "Tokyo Storm Warning" is like Highway 61-period Dylan updated for the 80s, and "I Want You" (not the Dylan song) an obsessive litany of despair. Bitter, scarred but fighting, English music hasn't sounded this vital for ages.

I'd guess Elvis's new mood has also partly been inspired by Ulster's That Petrol Emotion, whose scorching debut LP (a couple of months old but so far ignored by local reviewers) is on the Costello-owned Demon label.

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Sydney Morning Herald, The Guide, October 13, 1986


Lynden Barber reviews Talking Heads' True Stones, Blood & Chocolate, and That Petrol Emotion's Manic Pop Thrill.

Images

1986-10-13 Sydney Morning Herald The Guide page 05.jpg
Page scan.

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