Syracuse Herald-Journal, May 27, 1994: Difference between revisions

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Costello says that he and his band have been trying to strike a balance between doing the new songs, “which are out current passion,” and the late ‘70s/early 80’s modern classics.  He says they’ve also been playing a few songs from the old records that they had never performed live before.   
Costello says that he and his band have been trying to strike a balance between doing the new songs, “which are out current passion,” and the late ‘70s/early 80’s modern classics.  He says they’ve also been playing a few songs from the old records that they had never performed live before.   


{{rttc}}
We didn’t feel the necessity to come up with radically new arrangements for the old songs,” Costello says, “because during the eight years that we were together (1978-86), we’d been constantly updating and adorning the material with little things, little rhythms, that would keep them interesting to us.


“For this tour, we decided to go back to the old records and play them like we did in the years that they were written.”
The music of Elvis Costello and the Attractions is not an easy listen, but usually the albums that endure – like “''Darkness on the Edge of Town''” by [[Bruce Springsteen]] or “''Astral Weeks''” by [[Van Morrison]] – are the ones that you didn’t get at first.
I hated Elvis, with his whiny voice and obnoxious sneer, until I heard a cover band do “[[Oliver's Army|Oliver’s Army]].” I went back to the original version and was hooked in about 10 minutes.
Thinking back to those blissed-out nights, when it seemed that the music of E.C. and the Attractions could cure all social pains, I asked Elvis if he thought that music is given too much importance in our society.
“Music is everything and nothing,” he says.  “I’ve always had this contrary-sounding premise that it’s best to care passionately about music without giving a damn.
“With magazines like [[Rolling Stone]] and functions like the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, there’s this attempt to try to turn rock’n’roll into somebody’s idea of rock’n’roll. 
“It misses the point entirely.  It’s the fleeting moments in which the music touches your heart or has an effect on your life that really matter, not some thumbnail sketch or these artificial groupings. 
“It’s like making a fantasy football team of your favorite stars.  It doesn’t mean that they would be a great team, because there are too many intangibles.” 
{{cx}}
{{cx}}


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[[Category:Syracuse Herald-Journal| Syracuse Herald-Journal 1994-05-27]]
[[Category:Syracuse Herald-Journal| Syracuse Herald-Journal 1994-05-27]]
[[Category:Newspaper articles]]
[[Category:Newspaper articles]]
[[Category:Transcription needed]]

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Quirky lyrics by Elvis Costello hook listeners for life


Michael Corcoran / Dallas Morning News

When the warm organ, bass and drums of “Watch Your Step” started to fade, I heard a sharp rapping at my door, which sprang me up from the couch like a firehouse Dalmatian who’d just heard the alarm.

Back in 1982, when I was listening to Elvis Costello and the Attractions, any intrusion was an invasion of privacy. The knocking pressed hard into my musical womb – nobody knew that I was living in the crummy Ambassador Hotel in Wai-kiki, and, believe me, there were no maids or room service.

I peeked through the window to see a harmless-looking man and woman about my age, which was then 26. “We couldn’t help but notice that you were playing Elvis Costello,” the guy said. “E.C’s our absolute favorite!” the woman said.

His name was Mike, and hers was Patty Ann, and they lived three doors down. During the summer of ’82, we hung out just about every night and listened to Costello records.

Patty Ann and Mike were more into the lyrics than I was. Though I loved to pull on certain lines like “She’s filing her nails while they’re dragging the lake” from “Watching the Detectives” or “Good manners and bad breath will get you nowhere” from “New Lace Sleeves.” I thought of the lyrics as very man-made, while the music of Elvis and the Attractions was spiritual.

Costello and his three backup musicians were playing the fiercest, most inventive rock’n’roll of the time.

Rykodisc has recently been reissuing the earliest Costello albums, complete with sometimes astonishing bonus tracks and, even after all these years, the magic remains.

Steve Nieve, Bruce Thomas, Costello and Pete Thomas could play music the way Willie Mays used to catch baseballs. Listen to the last two minutes of “Lipstick Vogue” if there’s any doubt.

So I was more than just a little nervous the other day while I waited for Elvis himself to call for an interview.

As I sat there, arranging five pages of questions to the left of the phone and all his CDs to the right. I thought of Mike and Patty Ann and that summer of ’82, and suddenly anxiety overtook me as it seizes that wide-eyed and moronic character Chris Farley plays on “Saturday Night Live.”

I had to tell myself that our scheduled chat was, at least in Elvis’ eyes, nothing more than an elegant plug for his reunion tour with the Attractions to promote the new album “Brutal Youth.

I also reminded myself that Elvis hasn’t made a great record since 1986, when he made two (“King of America” and “Blood and Chocolate”).

As I chided myself for getting all clammy just to interview the guy who made “Mighty Like a Rose,” the phone rang, and my lungs turned into big raisins.

“This is Elvis Costello for Michael Corcoran,” a very proper British voice said, and the only lead-off question I could think of was “R-r-r-remember when you were with the Attractions? That was awesome.” No, not that bad but close.

Elvis is the swift-talking sort, who needs only the slightest prompting. He started off talking about the current show, which has him playing live with the Attractions for the first time in eight years.

“Maybe it’s our time,” Costello says, after recounting the incredible audience response to the first four concerts on the tour. Crowds have been standing and screaming in ecstasy, especially when the band launches into an old favorite.

“It could be that the Attractions are finally getting recognition as one of the greatest bands that the English music scene’s ever thrown up.” Costello alternately refers to the Attractions as “we” and “them” throughout the interview.

“They eat Led Zeppelin’s breakfast, which isn’t to say they can do what Led Zeppelin did better,” he says. “We wouldn’t want to play that rubbishy music anyway.”

Costello says that he and his band have been trying to strike a balance between doing the new songs, “which are out current passion,” and the late ‘70s/early 80’s modern classics. He says they’ve also been playing a few songs from the old records that they had never performed live before.

We didn’t feel the necessity to come up with radically new arrangements for the old songs,” Costello says, “because during the eight years that we were together (1978-86), we’d been constantly updating and adorning the material with little things, little rhythms, that would keep them interesting to us.

“For this tour, we decided to go back to the old records and play them like we did in the years that they were written.”

The music of Elvis Costello and the Attractions is not an easy listen, but usually the albums that endure – like “Darkness on the Edge of Town” by Bruce Springsteen or “Astral Weeks” by Van Morrison – are the ones that you didn’t get at first.

I hated Elvis, with his whiny voice and obnoxious sneer, until I heard a cover band do “Oliver’s Army.” I went back to the original version and was hooked in about 10 minutes.

Thinking back to those blissed-out nights, when it seemed that the music of E.C. and the Attractions could cure all social pains, I asked Elvis if he thought that music is given too much importance in our society.

“Music is everything and nothing,” he says. “I’ve always had this contrary-sounding premise that it’s best to care passionately about music without giving a damn.

“With magazines like Rolling Stone and functions like the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, there’s this attempt to try to turn rock’n’roll into somebody’s idea of rock’n’roll.

“It misses the point entirely. It’s the fleeting moments in which the music touches your heart or has an effect on your life that really matter, not some thumbnail sketch or these artificial groupings.

“It’s like making a fantasy football team of your favorite stars. It doesn’t mean that they would be a great team, because there are too many intangibles.”

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Syracuse Herald-Journal, May 27, 1994


Michael Corcoran profiles Elvis Costello.

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1994-05-27 Syracuse Herald-Journal page C8.jpg
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