Trouser Press, October 1982

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Not So Silly Love Songs


Elvis Costello and the Attractions
Inperial Bedroom
Columbia FC38157


By Scott Isler

You expect more from an Elvis Costello album, and on Imperial Bedroom you certainly get it. The 15 songs here are so densely written and tightly arranged that the slightest alteration would probably casue the record's contents to fly apart like an overwound mainspring.

Bouncing back from his ambitious but indifferently received country album, Almost Blue, Costello has returned to pop with a vengeance. The music on Imperial Bedroom sounds like something you might hear on rock radio. Costello puts it to the service of his diistinctive lyrics, though, transmuting accepted song structures in the process. The result is his most baroque album since Armed Forces, with a fascinating but intimidating sheen.

It may also be his most unified LP yet. As the title (with typically Costellian overtones of dominance and repression) suggests, Imperial Bedroom is monomaniacally concerned with love, or at least romance. The 5 musical case histories presented herein compendium of backfired emotional relationships: She-hates-him ("Beyond Belief"), they-hate-each-other ("Tears Before Bedtime"), they-hate-each-other-and-themselves ("Shabby Doll"), etc. Whether Costello is still "angry" or not is irrelevent. He is restless, which is almost always more attention-getting than doing a James taylor.

And Costello, who's nothing if not skillful, commands attention the instant the needle sets down on Imperial Bedroom's opening cut. "Beyond Belief" is a tour de force of internal rhyme, legato vocal phrasing, cumulative imagery, word play in extremis -- in short, his usual bag of tricks, but here rendered with a confidence and expressiveness only hinted at before. The effect is reinforced by Geoff Emerick's production, placing Costello way up front, and by the Attraction's swirling crescendo of harmonic changes. More self-assurance: This is the first EC album to sport a lyric sheet -- doubly important as, despite his high vocal relief, El enjoys slurring his words.

Words, words, words. They cover both sides of the inner sleeve, run together teletype-style with no punctuation, no break between songs and an occasional typo. The presentation exemplefies another Costelloism: the grudging bestowal. Printed lyrics facilitate comunication, but what is Costello communicating? As in the past much of his writing seems moer concerned with linguistic gymnastics than underlying meaning.

He needn't rely on such grandstanding. "The Long Honeymoon," a surprisingly clearcut narrative, depicts a wife waiting for her (probably errant) husband with deft touches: "When the phone rang only once she took a dreadful fright." "Almost Blue" ("There's a girl here and she's almost you") is a careful neo-torch song arranged similarly to Costello's reading of "My Funny Valentine" on the Taking Liberties LP. "Boy With A Problem," another introspectively paced number, disects its tangled interpersonal hang-ups with a sure songrwriter's scalpel, even showing rare compassion for the second-person female (or is that because its lyics are mostly by Squeeze's Chris Difford?).

"You Little Fool"'s mixture of pathos and contempt will be more reassuring to inflexible Costello fans. Other customary traits can be found in "Pidgin English" and "Tears Before Bedtime" (aggression), "Shabby Doll" and "The Loved Ones" (threats, denigration), "Human Hands" (assertive longing), and "Town Cryer" (self-pity). The last-named sums up the album thematically with the line, "Love and unhappiness go arm in arm."

To offset such harsh sentinents, the music on Imperial Bedroom is



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