Zub Records, November 21, 2020

From The Elvis Costello Wiki
Revision as of 17:22, 20 October 2021 by Zmuda (talk | contribs) (formatting / standardize quote marks, apostrophes)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
... Bibliography ...
727677787980818283
848586878889909192
939495969798990001
020304050607080910
111213141516171819
202122232425 26 27 28


Zub Records

Blogs

-

Hey Clockface

Elvis Costello

Steve McGowan

As the COVID crisis began, Elvis Costello headed from touring the UK to Helsinki, of all places, to record, by himself, a couple of solo songs. Then to Paris to meet up with a horn heavy combo including Steve Nieve and AJUQ (tinyurl.com/zubimmobile), to record the bulk of the Hey Clockface Tracks. He finished more new tracks off in New York with a combo featuring Bill Frisell. The tracks were fast and loose. Although I believe Elvis has, in The Imposters, probably the best rock band in the world, It is refreshing to hear him collaborate in new alignments. Some of his best work has been done with Allen Toussaint, Burt Bacharach, and especially The Roots on Wise Up Ghost.

The fourteen songs on Hey Clockface are quite remarkable, opening with the majestic "Revolution #49", which starts with a very Middle Eastern horn, reminiscent of a call to prayer, transported to some kind of Lawrence Of Arabia scene. It's a spoken word tale about hanging on to love. Strange, glorious, and regal sounding. "No Flag" is one of the solo Helsinki tracks, A noisy, electronic track with distorted guitars and an insistent bass that sounds like it could be on When I Was Cruel. Elvis intones about the dissolution of self and beliefs:

I could write you verses and recite more than one
But they're not worth the paper that they're written on

It's quite a jolt after the intro song.

"They're Not Laughing At Me Now" is a tender, sad acoustic tune with jazzy horns and an odd organ sound. Piano and drums crash in the middle to great effect. This is a classic post King Of America Costello tune, reminding me somehow of "Indoor Fireworks." Opening with a distorted baritone guitar, "Newspaper Pane" is a word packed gem, another twisted tale of love:

They were all cut down in a cavalry charge
Weeping, Miss Imogen said to her priest
"I gave him my virtue
It was the least I could leave him
On the eve of departure
Though I will long for him now and hereafter
And the child I'll be raising may have his blue eyes
What if he grows up and dies
On some distant unnamable hillside or field
Because a king and a concubine put a mark on his shield

With the beatbox drums and the 60's organ sound, the tune could almost be a throwback to the This Year's Model era, but the horns and Costello's amazing vocal delivery give it more of a Look Now treatment.

"I Do (Zula's Song)" is a dreamy, classical-tinged tune, with piano, horns, upright bass and a straight rip from "Toreador Song" from Carmen by Bizet. We see what you did there, Elvis. He's in full crooner mode, and sounding fantastic. This one is a stunner.

The lyric for "We Are All Cowards Now":

They're coming for our Peacemakers
Our Winchesters and Colts
The rattle of our Gatling Guns
Our best cowboy revolts and threats and insults
We are all cowards now

Obviously a fierce anti-gun screed. This one has Elvis back in his R&B mode with a very strange chorused vocal part. Lyrically amazing but the tune is only average for this year's master.

"Hey Clockface / How Can You Face Me?," Is a song we heard on the last tour and found it very interesting. This take is straight 30's jazz, rollicking piano, clarinet, spoons...very old timey. It sounds like a classic jazz side from that era, not easy to do. To drive the point home, they break into a snippet of Fats Waller's "How Can You Face Me Now" from 1934. The whole thing is quite joyous, and no one can pull off this musical shape shifting better than Elvis. "The Whirlwind" is a beautiful tune and melody, again written from the point of view of a disappointed young woman. Elvis provides a tour de force on the vocals, and the piano is stately and amazing. There's a whiff of Painted From Memory on this one. Again, Elvis hits it out of the park.

With "Hetty O'Hara Confidential" we get another beatbox electronic tune, with the cheesy organ, lyrics jam-packed about an old-fashioned gossip columnist:

Who's got your girlfriend?
And who had her first?
Reading her column was essential
Hetty O'Hara Confidential
She could kill a man with a single stroke
She is not the one you want to provoke
If you can't take the heat
Or you can't take a joke

This one is a rollicking good ride. Elvis is almost rapping at points, and he does it well. "The Last Confession Of Vivian Whip" is another piano driven ballad about a lonely woman. Elvis croons admirably and the backing is almost Brodsky-like, It's a pretty and sad song, but I'm afraid it doesn't quite match up to "The Whirlwind."

"What Is It That I Need That I Don't Already Have?" starts with somber, acoustic strumming that gives away to horns and strings. In waltz time, a man looks back on the material things that hold him back.

What is it that I lost that I don't really need
Some glasses for my eyes
And an hour or two of speed
My hands don't blister, my hands don't bleed
But I'll never be contented, repent or ever be lamented
 'Til I'm planted down like rotten crops
 And covered up with weeds

This is a sad song and a very mature topic. Elvis is obviously looking back and, whether writing in character or not, his years are slipping through. "Radio Is Everything" is basically a spoken word piece without the regal backing of "Revolution #49." He rails against hate on the radio:

You don't need to see my face
Radio is everything
You don't need to know my name
Radio is everything
The lie that I tell
It just doesn't matter
If I should deceive you
Or if I should flatter
If your bankroll gets thin while some kitty gets fatter
Radio is everything
From the straight to the narrow to the broadcast from within
Radio is everything
Radio is everything

It's quite remarkable and stands up to repeated listening.

"I Can't Say Her Name" is another acoustic tune that sounds like it could be home on National Ransom, it has that 30's jazz vibe. Trumpets and barrelhouse piano join in. Like "Hey Clockface," it's a joyous song not even ruined by Elvis' take on scat singing. It makes me smile. "Byline" is a story of broken lovers, this is a piano-driven ballad with a strange chorus part. It's short, sad, pretty, and to the point. Another winner and Hey Clockface goes out on top.

This is Costello's thirty-first record. This amazing artist, after all this time, continues to innovate and impress. The themes show Elvis to still be angry at times, just presenting his arguments with a much more, ahem, "mature" delivery. He's considered a new style, writing from the female perspective, as on Look Now. He continued to pursue old time jazz tropes, that began with National Ransom, and continues to improve on that theme. He's also not afraid to cross into noisy electronica, a la When I Was Cruel. His singing and lyrics are always nonpareil, and the new collaborators are truly astonishing. He continues to experiment, invent, adopt, and adapt. Here's to more to come!


Tags: Hey ClockfaceHelsinkiSteve NieveAJUQNew YorkBill FrisellThe ImpostersAllen ToussaintBurt BacharachThe RootsWise Up GhostRevolution #49No FlagWhen I Was CruelThey're Not Laughing At Me NowKing Of AmericaIndoor FireworksNewspaper PaneThis Year's ModelLook NowI Do (Zula's Song)We Are All Cowards NowHey Clockface / How Can You Face Me?Fats WallerThe WhirlwindPainted From MemoryHetty O'Hara ConfidentialThe Last Confession Of Vivian WhipThe Brodsky QuartetWhat Is It That I Need That I Don't Already Have?Radio Is EverythingI Can't Say Her NameNational RansomByline

-

Zub Records, November 21, 2020


Steve McGowan reviews Hey Clockface.

Images

Hey Clockface album cover.jpg

-



Back to top

External links