University Of Delaware Review, February 19, 1993: Difference between revisions
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<center><h3> The King may be dead, but Elvis lives </h3></center> | <center><h3> The King may be dead, but Elvis lives </h3></center> | ||
<center>''' Elvis Costello ''' / The Juliet Letters </center> | <center>''' Elvis Costello ''' / ''The Juliet Letters'' </center> | ||
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<center> Scott Capra, Jeff Pearlman </center> | <center> Scott Capra, Jeff Pearlman </center> | ||
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'''Grade: A+ | '''Grade: A+ | ||
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Attention, Attention!! Elvis has been found! Repeat, Elvis has been found! | |||
He’s not dead, he’s not pumping gas at a Shell station in the Ozarks and he’s not a door-to-door insurance salesman now cleanly shaven and re-named Bob Smith. | |||
Actually, he’s a singer with Brodsky Quartet. In his comeback album, ''The Juliet Letters'', Elvis trades in the guitar for violins and the bass for a cello to produce perhaps the most original and unique album in a career that has produced 16 releases. | |||
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{{tags}}[[The Juliet Letters]] {{-}} [[The Brodsky Quartet]] | |||
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Revision as of 21:06, 16 September 2022
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