UDiscoverMusic, April 15, 2018

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UDiscoverMusic

UK online publications

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Elvis Costello models the sound of 1978


Paul Sexton

With his debut LP My Aim Is True still on the American album chart, Elvis Costello's This Year's Model joined it there on 15 April 1978.

Elvis Costello titled his second album This Year's Model with his trademark sense of irony about the fleeting nature of hipness in the music business. But the phrase was also an accurate description of his status as a breakthrough artist at the time. On 15 April 1978, with his debut LP My Aim Is True still on the American album chart, the sophomore release joined it there.

There was plenty of other British representation across the Atlantic that week, with Wings going straight to No. 20 with their new release London Town, and the latest albums by the Average White Band (Warmer Communications) and Robert Palmer (Double Fun) both climbing into the top 50. Two weeks later, Costello's new collection of songs, again produced by Nick Lowe, would be there too, soon reaching a No. 30 peak.

Although Elvis' career in the US was on the rise, and the album peaked two places higher than My Aim, the second long player had a much shorter chart stay, at 17 weeks compared to 36. While, in the UK, he was now augmenting album sales with hit singles, it would be another five years before he ever made the Billboard Hot 100, a measure of just how wary mainstream US radio and TV were of the so-called new wave.

In the week that This Year's Model took its US bow, Elvis and the Attractions were reaching the No. 16 peak in the UK of the album's lead single "(I Don't Want To Go To) Chelsea." The LP had debuted and peaked at home at No. 4, in a total run of 14 weeks.

Things were moving fast for Elvis. As the second album appeared, it was less than a year since his first gig under his new stage name, and only nine months since he had quit his day job at Elizabeth Arden. Across the ocean, both of the first two albums were fuelled by a three-month US tour in the first three months of 1978, on which Costello and the Attractions played with Mink DeVille and Rockpile.

By April, Elvis and the band were back in the UK for a 14-date tour, culminating on the 16th at London's Roundhouse. The album's second British single "Pump It Up" prepared to hit the charts, and their relentless schedule continued apace.

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UDiscoverMusic, April 15, 2018


Paul Sexton profiles Elvis Costello and This Year's Model.

Images

TYM album cover large.jpg

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