Elvis Costello

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Information about the artist.

Works

The Delivery Man

Elvis Costello, The Imposters

Take one part This Year’s Model, mix with a bit of Almost Blue, and top off with a healthy sprinkling of King of America. Voilà, The Delivery Man! Elvis Costello’s first album for Lost Highway finds the musician deftly exploring American roots music, from rock ‘n’ roll to country to soul, with assistance from the Imposters (stalwart Attractions Steve Nieve and Pete Thomas plus ace bassist Davey Faragher) and thrushes Emmylou Harris and Lucinda Williams. It also finds him back digging around in the ashes of a failed relationship. One of…

 

Cruel Smile

Elvis Costello, The Imposters

Cruel Smile is a stop-gap compilation of peripheral recordings dating from the When I Was Cruel sessions (including sundry remixes of tracks from that album), radio slots, and performance tracks, many of which were originally released as B-sides and bonus cuts on singles from the far flung corners of the globe. Costello aficionados may already own the likes of the blood-and-guts live rendition of “Uncomplicated” and the two admirable recordings of the Charlie Chaplin-penned/Nat “King” Cole-covered “Smile”—one dripping with strings, sax, and…

 

When I Was Cruel

Elvis Costello

Following a string of tasteful but sometimes bloodless collaborations with Sophie Van Otter, Bill Frisell, and the London Symphony Orchestra, Costello delivers his most visceral and satisfying CD in years with When I Was Cruel. Reunited with half the Attractions, Pete Thomas and Steve Nieve, Costello sticks relatively close to the sharp new-wave melodies that sealed his reputation in the late ‘70s and ‘80s, but infuses them with powerful sonic touches: a hypnotic loop of Italian pop singer Mina that carries the title track, the melodica that casts an eerie…

 
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