Creem, May 1981: Difference between revisions

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<center><h3> Clown Time Is Over </h3></center>
<center><h3> Clown Time Is Over </h3></center>
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<center>...</center>
<center> Jeff Nesin </center>
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{{Bibliography text}}
{{Bibliography text}}


[[image:article.jpg]]
After a breath-taking 54-song year — 20 on ''[[Get Happy!!]]'', 20 on ''[[Taking Liberties]]'', and a modest 14 on ''[[Trust]]'' — was barely six weeks old and Elvis Costello was gone again. The Silver Train bus that carried E.C. and the Attractions and their old Chinas (whatever the hell that meant) [[Squeeze]] as they crawled across the U.S.A. is now schlepping Steve and Eydie or the Rossington Collins Band. Mr. Costello leaves in his speedy wake thousands of satisfied customers, a new album getting "very hot add-on action" (a highly technical trade term which means it's getting played a lot on radio radio), and several reasonable questions. The questions, alas, will have to resolve themselves over time because E.C. doesn't talk to the press.
 
He doesn't talk so loudly that Jann Wenner (famous publisher of ''Rolling Stone'') called Walter Yetnikoff (famous president of Columbia Records) asking for some divine corporate intervention on behalf of his mag's planned cover story. My informant didn't mention where Yetnikoff was at the time combatting taping from the radio with [[Bruce Springsteen]] perhaps, or shredding newspapers onstage with Billy Joel but, whatever his feelings on the matter, the outcome was the same: no interview. Not wanting to shake the same foolish tree knowing the same result was inevitable, I opted for rummaging through the CBS files looking for clues. In a few short days I saw every E.C. videotape, read reams of prose, listened to countless tapes and generally glutted myself on scripture. In the course of this research one of the most interesting things I found was that he has been sighted on the Underground (subway to youse) on his way to London gigs. I was amused by this bit of intelligence and it certainly puts the lad in exclusive company. One night 25 years ago Benny Nadell saw the Cleftones in their stage tuxes taking the D train to a dance in Coney Island. Many years later my brother reported that the Dictators took the IRT from their lair in the Bronx down to the Palladium where they were headlining. (AC/DC, the opener, came in limos.) And now Elvis Costello had been positively sighted beneath the pavement, eschewing the protective hauteur of a stretch. Who says rock 'n' roll isn't full of surprises?
 
The biggest surprise this time around was the notorious Costello demeanor or, more accurately, its total absence. On the Trust tour E.C. was a real mensch: warm and gracious from the stage and, in his ten minute chat with [[Tom Snyder]] on ''[[TV 1981-02-03 Tom Snyder|Tomorrow]]'' (Sample dialog TS: Do you love your Dad? EC: Oh, yeah.) the very model of good humored decorum. In fact the two of them fell all over themselves to be nice — Torn didn't ask any blind, ignorant questions and Elvis didn't bite the hand that fed


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{{Bibliography notes header}}
{{Bibliography notes header}}
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'''Creem, May 1981
'''Creem, May 1981
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... profiles Elvis Costello.
[[Jeff Nesin]] profiles Elvis Costello.


... reviews ''[[Trust]]''.
[[Richard Riegel]] reviews ''[[Trust]]''.


{{Bibliography images}}
{{Bibliography images}}
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem cover.jpg|160px]]
 
<br><small>Cover.</small><br>
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem page 20.jpg|900x220px]]
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem page 21.jpg|900x220px]]
<br><small>Page scans.</small><br>
 
{{Bibliography box}}
<center><h3> Elvis Costello <br> Trust  </h3></center>
<center> (Columbia)</center>
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<center> Richard Riegel </center>
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{{Bibliography text}}
 
{{cx}}
 
<br><br><br><br><br>
''Trust review text.
<br><br><br><br><br><br>
 
{{cx}}
<br>
 
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem photo 01 er.jpg|320px]]
<br><small>Photo by [[Ebet Roberts]].</small><br>
 
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem photo 02 pn.jpg|320px]]
<br><small>Photo by [[Paul Natkin]].</small><br>
 
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem cover.jpg|900x120px]]
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem page 50.jpg|900x120px]]
 
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem page 51.jpg|900x120px]]
[[image:1981-05-00 Creem page 60.jpg|900x120px]]
<br><small>Cover and page scans.</small><br>


{{Bibliography notes footer}}
{{Bibliography notes footer}}

Revision as of 23:52, 23 March 2013

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Template:Creem index Template:Magazine index

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Clown Time Is Over


Jeff Nesin

After a breath-taking 54-song year — 20 on Get Happy!!, 20 on Taking Liberties, and a modest 14 on Trust — was barely six weeks old and Elvis Costello was gone again. The Silver Train bus that carried E.C. and the Attractions and their old Chinas (whatever the hell that meant) Squeeze as they crawled across the U.S.A. is now schlepping Steve and Eydie or the Rossington Collins Band. Mr. Costello leaves in his speedy wake thousands of satisfied customers, a new album getting "very hot add-on action" (a highly technical trade term which means it's getting played a lot on radio radio), and several reasonable questions. The questions, alas, will have to resolve themselves over time because E.C. doesn't talk to the press.

He doesn't talk so loudly that Jann Wenner (famous publisher of Rolling Stone) called Walter Yetnikoff (famous president of Columbia Records) asking for some divine corporate intervention on behalf of his mag's planned cover story. My informant didn't mention where Yetnikoff was at the time combatting taping from the radio with Bruce Springsteen perhaps, or shredding newspapers onstage with Billy Joel but, whatever his feelings on the matter, the outcome was the same: no interview. Not wanting to shake the same foolish tree knowing the same result was inevitable, I opted for rummaging through the CBS files looking for clues. In a few short days I saw every E.C. videotape, read reams of prose, listened to countless tapes and generally glutted myself on scripture. In the course of this research one of the most interesting things I found was that he has been sighted on the Underground (subway to youse) on his way to London gigs. I was amused by this bit of intelligence and it certainly puts the lad in exclusive company. One night 25 years ago Benny Nadell saw the Cleftones in their stage tuxes taking the D train to a dance in Coney Island. Many years later my brother reported that the Dictators took the IRT from their lair in the Bronx down to the Palladium where they were headlining. (AC/DC, the opener, came in limos.) And now Elvis Costello had been positively sighted beneath the pavement, eschewing the protective hauteur of a stretch. Who says rock 'n' roll isn't full of surprises?

The biggest surprise this time around was the notorious Costello demeanor or, more accurately, its total absence. On the Trust tour E.C. was a real mensch: warm and gracious from the stage and, in his ten minute chat with Tom Snyder on Tomorrow (Sample dialog TS: Do you love your Dad? EC: Oh, yeah.) the very model of good humored decorum. In fact the two of them fell all over themselves to be nice — Torn didn't ask any blind, ignorant questions and Elvis didn't bite the hand that fed






Text part 2










Text part 3










Text part 4





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Creem, May 1981


Jeff Nesin profiles Elvis Costello.

Richard Riegel reviews Trust.

Images

1981-05-00 Creem page 20.jpg 1981-05-00 Creem page 21.jpg
Page scans.

Elvis Costello
Trust

(Columbia)

Richard Riegel






Trust review text.






1981-05-00 Creem photo 01 er.jpg
Photo by Ebet Roberts.

1981-05-00 Creem photo 02 pn.jpg
Photo by Paul Natkin.

1981-05-00 Creem cover.jpg 1981-05-00 Creem page 50.jpg

1981-05-00 Creem page 51.jpg 1981-05-00 Creem page 60.jpg
Cover and page scans.

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