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June 28, 2004

That's What Friends Are For

This SFGate writeup on the backround to De-Lovely has this surprising reference to a `pal` of Elvis -

Winkler then called Diana Krall, whom he'd cast in his 1999 film "At First Sight," to perform "Just One of Those Things." She told her husband-to- be, Elvis Costello, who sang "Let's Misbehave." Costello told his pal Robbie Williams, who crooned "It's De-Lovely." Sheryl Crowe vamped her way through "Begin the Beguine." Simply Red singer Mick Hucknall, unrecognizable as Nelson Eddy in a Canadian Mountie costume, crooned "I Love You," and young R&B singer Vivian Green gave a sultry "Love for Sale" reading.

Kralling From The Wreckage

Slate takes a long hard look at why Elvis no longer makes his older, funnier albums, and decides to blame Yoko.

And then it hit me: Krall and Costello may have brought each other happiness as people. But they're a terrible influence on each other's careers.

===================FULL TEXT
The Undynamic Duo
Are Elvis Costello and Diana Krall ruining each other?
By Douglas Wolk

Diving for pearls ... and coming up empty-handed

Elvis Costello used to be a victim of his own aspirations; now he's not the only one, I realized when I heard Diana Krall's new album, The Girl in the Other Room. It's the product of the Canadian singer/pianist's romance with Costello (the two were married late last year): Instead of the pre-rock ballad standards that she's sung almost exclusively until now, it includes covers of Costello's "Almost Blue" and songs by Joni Mitchell and Tom Waits, as well as five songs she co-wrote with Costello, featuring lyrics about "exchanging rings" and "a sparkling band." Krall's performances are mostly so genteel and slackly rendered that the album practically orders a glass of white wine the moment it starts playing. And her writing collaborations with her husband are disastrous concessions to his idioms and tics. They're not just Costello but bad Costello—syntax-torturing, proper-name-dropping rhymes ("We took the long way to get back/ Like driving over the Malahat") and cryptic wallowing ("I hope you never feel this much despair/ Or know the meaning of that empty chair"). A parody of late-period Costello probably couldn't have a much more dead-on title than "Abandoned Masquerade." What had gone wrong, I wondered?

Looking at a Costello news site for some kind of explanation, I realized that I'd forgotten about North, the eminently forgettable album of piano ballads he made last year, inspired by his romance with Krall. (Click here to read one Slate reviewer's more positive take on North.) The site also mentioned what Costello's been up to lately: He's been making a new album with the Imposters (the new lineup of his reliable rock band, the Attractions—good news) in Oxford, Miss., and Memphis, Tenn. (questionable news), potentially to be called South (red flag), which will be released simultaneously this fall with his new orchestral instrumental album, Il Sogno (bad news), which will in turn come with a bonus disk recorded at the North Sea Jazz Festival (extremely bad news).

And then it hit me: Krall and Costello may have brought each other happiness as people. But they're a terrible influence on each other's careers.

Costello's great weakness is wanting to be seen as a serious artiste who's equally at home in high and low culture, north and south—the kind of cachet and flexibility that, one might suppose, comes automatically to people like Krall, who sing "All or Nothing at All" and "I'm Through With Love," but not so easily to the guy behind "Pump It Up" and "Oliver's Army." For the last decade or so, he's been flaunting the distance between his social-climbing collaborations (with the Brodsky Quartet, Anne Sofie von Otter, and so on) and his rock 'n' roll side. North is more or less his stab at making a sober, dignified Diana Krall album, except that all the material is his own; its back-cover credit says "Composed, Arranged and Conducted by Elvis Costello." (Disposable tunes are "written," serious works are "composed," see?)

The irony that Costello apparently doesn't notice is that when he waves this sort of high-culture/low-culture distinction around, he sells himself short as an artist. His early albums, recorded when he wasn't so concerned about who he was trying to impress, are not exactly lacking in cultural capital. And the genre-of-the-week projects he's been pumping out for the last decade or so don't have the same kind of staying power. Costello's set lists with the Imposters include, almost exclusively, two kinds of songs: brand new stuff and songs he wrote before 1987. (Even 2002's watch-me-play-rock album When I Was Cruel has been almost entirely banished from his live performances.)

Krall, in the meantime, has caught Costello-itis. She's a solid musician when her repertoire is the great American songbook as it stood 50 years ago, but perhaps spending lots of time around a singer who writes his own material has convinced her that it would be a good idea for her to do the same. The post-Beatles commonplace that songs are always somehow more meaningful or worthwhile when singers write their own material is simply untrue in her case. The best Krall performance on The Girl in the Other Room is her version of Arthur Herzog and Irene Kitchings' "I'm Pulling Through," which Billie Holiday recorded in 1940; the worst is its Krall-Costello companion piece "I'm Coming Through," an icky meander through self-help clichés ("The things we shared/ Have hurt us both so much sometimes/ We each go places love can't touch"). Krall's music for "Departure Bay," which nods to former Costello collaborator Burt Bacharach, is vague but evocative. The rest is just vague.

Becoming a singer/songwriter (and, perhaps, marrying a famous one) also seems to have led Krall to others whose performances she can't quite shake off. Her version of Mose Allison's "Stop This World" cops Allison's clipped, reserved delivery; her arrangement of Tom Waits' "Temptation" is a polite, almost entirely degritted imitation of Waits' own version. They're the sorts of songs that Costello could make his own without a second thought, but Krall is far better at sublimating her own voice to a song. Costello, on the other hand, naturally overpowers almost everything he sings, which is why his attempts to tone himself down for North seem so self-defeating. It's frustrating hearing the two of them try to prove themselves on one another's turf. What's so funny about peace, love, and understanding when it makes you try to step beyond your own limitations?


Douglas Wolk's book James Brown Live at the Apollo will be published in August 2004.

June 26, 2004

Diana Walks Tall

The same New York Post Page Six gossip column has this -

CANADA can thank the Teamsters and the other movie unions for all the celebrities in Toronto these days. There's even a Canadian Walk of Fame now. Inducted the other night were Jim Carrey, Shirley Douglas (fiery former wife of Donald Sutherland and mother of Kiefer), John Kay (of "Born to be Wild" fame), director Denys Arcand, singer Diana Krall and hockey great Mario Lemieux. Krall almost forgot to thank her hubby, Elvis Costello, in her acceptance speech. "It's the first time in my life I can thank my husband, because I now have one," she said.

Wild & Wooly EC

From Page 6 (not sure which paper)
"FINDING the right pop stars comfortable in period costumes to appear in "De-Lovely," the Cole Porter biopic, was a daunting challenge for director Irwin Winkler. But he was pleasantly surprised by the performances by such artists as Sheryl Crow, Diana Krall and Robbie Williams. It was Elvis Costello (above), however, who most impressed Winkler. "Elvis Costello had this image of a wild, woolly, different kind of guy," he told PAGE SIX's Lisa Marsh. "He came in wearing a white dinner jacket, and I just loved it. I never expected that."

June 24, 2004

Are you sitting comfortably...

Mastermind
BBC TV 2 , Mon 28 Jun, 9:00 pm - 9:30 pm 30mins

Hosted by John Humphreys, Britain's toughest quiz invites four of the country's cleverest brains to take the lonely walk to the black chair, where they will battle it out for the title of Mastermind 2004.

This programme's specialist subjects are the life and times of Emma Hamilton; the history of the European Cup Finals since 1970; the fiction novels of Michael Crichton; the music Of Elvis Costello.

And yet another list....

The 100 greatest British albums , according to The Observer

61 My Aim Is True, Elvis Costello
Stiff, 1977; chart position: 14
Proof that punk was more than gob

Now that the collective memory of the punk-rock years has been flattened out into a few iconic sounds and images, it's easy to forget how broad a church punk originally was. How else could the era have found room for a geeky-looking hornrimmed soul boy-cum-country fan backed by a band of ex-pat American country musicians? The transformation of Declan MacManus into Elvis Costello was one of the success stories of 1977: his spiky revenge-of-the-victim persona, short sharp songs and aggressive stage presence rendered him eminently punk-friendly, while his melodic musicality and dense, allusive lyrics made him attractive to more staid souls not quite ready for the Damned.

A quarter century and more after its first appearance, My Aim Is True sounds very un-punk indeed: a pop-rock songwriting masterclass with penetrating lyrics, memorable tunes and punchy but understated musicianship (performed by Clover, later to morph into - of all people - Huey Lewis & The News).
(CSM)

The Angry Young Man Hits The Lists

Pitchfork Media's Top 100 LPs of the 70s.


037: Elvis Costello - My Aim Is True - [Columbia; 1977]

If substance always won out over style, the world would endure fewer arguments about the significance of this album, held by many as the most impressive debut in pop music history. Though Costello had spent years honing his craft-- stealing early-70s off-hours from his day job and family life and later working as a roadie for Nick Lowe's band-- My Aim Is True is so far beyond clichés like "arrives fully formed" and "hits the ground running" that it's agonizing to hear them used. Costello enjoyed the prevailing punk prototypes-- he listening to The Clash constantly while recording My Aim Is True-- but stuck to his folk and blues roots, slashing through 13 heartbroken rock 'n' roll rants in just over half an hour.

Made a star by the AOR vibes ballad "Alison", the song's dolled-up presentation can't even dent the resilience of Costello's stunning narrative gift (made clearer in menacing solo performances). Even at this early stage, Costello rivals Bob Dylan in his poetics and damning insight, delivered in alternately seething and sorrowful tones ("revenge and regret" were his exact words regarding inspiration). From its hilarious alarm clock opening ("Welcome to the Working Week") to the dub-doting send-off "Watching the Detectives", there's just one song on My Aim Is True anyone could say a bad word about ("I'm Not Angry"). In every other regard, this album's title is deadly accurate. -Chris Ott


052: Elvis Costello - This Year's Model [Columbia; 1978]

While in his late-70s prime, Elvis Costello was one of pop's most winning characters: Ever dejected yet stubbornly undeterred, the unobtrusive troubadour turned his calamities of love into ingratiating melodies. One of his most deceptive rock records, This Year's Model avoids the oft-cloying bitterness of emotional politics by erecting an unflappable façade of proto-punk virtuosity. Unless you're listening carefully, it"s difficult to recognize the venom behind the limpid cadence of "Hand in Hand" or the deconstructed balladry of "Little Triggers". But at this album's core are lyrics sharper than an Iggy Pop needle. Costello always got the last word, and This Year's Model features some of his most searing (and underhanded) indictments. --Sam Ubl

(Submitted by Micheal Hernandez)

June 23, 2004

How to get Elvis on Larry Sanders out on DVD

1. Go here:

2. Pick your five favorite episodes.

3. Be sure to include episodes 307 (Peoples Choice, where EC&A do 13
Steps and Elvis trashes his room) and 503 (Everybody Loves Larry, where Elvis
does Little Atoms and Hank buys a lemon from Elvis and Larry thinks that
David Duchovny has a crush on him).

4. Wait.

(Submitted by Michael Hernandez)

June 22, 2004

Elvis Costello: Diving for Pearls

Yet another Elvis Costello biography is on the way -


Elvis Costello: Diving for Pearls
Paul Mathur

Hardcover 256 pages (September 2004)
Publisher: Piatkus Books
ISBN: 0749950145

Paul Mathur is also listed by Amazon as having done books on Oasis , Madonna and Pete Waterman .

June 16, 2004

Addition to Costello Il Sogno show , NY, July 17

IN THIS MOMENT: ELVIS COSTELLO

A once-in-a-lifetime Costello experience! Just added to the Lincoln Center Festival - Elvis Costello and Steve Nieve will perform an exclusive program of Costello repertoire with the Brooklyn Philharmonic, immediately following the North American premiere of Il Sogno, Costello's first full length orchestral work. One stage, one night, the full range of Elvis Costello's incredible musical scope.

Saturday July 17th at 8pm: Il Sogno; North American Premiere with Brooklyn Philharmonic and Elvis Costello performing with Steve Nieve.

For more information on the Lincoln Center Festival click on the following link:

June 15, 2004

Details of next re-issues

The track lists for the upcoming reissues of Almost Blue, Goodbye Cruel World, and Kojak Variety are now on display at the unofficial Elvis Costello on Rhino site.

The US release date is July 20. The UK date is July 26, at least for Almost Blue and Goodbye Cruel World.

( Submitted by And No Coffee Table to the Costello Fan Forum)

Please note that I have not yet heard any of these bonus discs. It is possible that my commentary includes some incorrect assumptions.

All three of these CDs are scheduled for US release July 20.

UK release for Almost Blue and Goodbye Cruel World is scheduled for July 26. I have not yet learned the UK release date for Kojak Variety, but it should be at roughly the same time.

ALMOST BLUE BONUS DISC

1. STRANGER IN THE HOUSE with George Jones

Elvis' duet with George Jones appeared on Jones' 1980 album My Very Special Guests and was released as a single. This is its first appearance on an Elvis Costello album.
2. WE OUGHTA BE ASHAMED with Johnny Cash

This duet was recorded December 26, 1979 for Johnny Cash's album Rockabilly Blues but went unused. This is its first release anywhere.
3. RADIO SWEETHEART (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
4. STRANGER IN THE HOUSE (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
5. PSYCHO (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
6. IF I COULD PUT THEM ALL TOGETHER (I'D HAVE YOU) (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
7. MOTEL MATCHES (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
8. HE'LL HAVE TO GO (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)
9. GIRLS TALK (LIVE, FEB. 16, 1979)

On February 16, 1979, John McFee joined Elvis Costello and the Attractions for a "country" set at the Palomino Club in North Hollywood. "Psycho" has long been available (first on the B-side of "Sweet Dreams" and later on Ryko's Almost Blue), but the rest is previously unreleased. It is unclear how much of the unreleased material has been available on bootlegs, because Rhino may be combining material from both of that night's shows, only the second of which has been widely bootlegged. At the very least, "Radio Sweetheart" must be entirely new, since it is absent from the bootleg of the late show (and may have been performed only at the early show). This version of "Motel Matches" was included in an early track listing for Rhino's Get Happy!!.
10. TOO FAR GONE ("LOST SESSION" VERSION)
11. HE'S GOT YOU ("LOST SESSION" VERSION)
These tracks date from the "trial session" held at CBS Studio B in Nashville on January 20, 1981, for which the band was augmented by pedal steel guitarist Pete Drake rather than John McFee. Elvis had described this session as "lost," but obviously it has now been found. (Elvis apparently also misremembered exactly what was recorded at this session, listing "I'll Take Care Of You" instead of "Too Far Gone.") Although a studio version of "He's Got You" is available on the bootleg Nashville And More, it is unclear whether this is the same version. The alternate "Too Far Gone" is entirely unheard.
12. HONKY TONK GIRL
The first of 11 consecutive outtakes from the main sessions for Almost Blue, "Honky Tonk Girl" was first issued on the "I'm Your Toy" 12-inch single. Its only previous CD appearance was as part of the Singles, Vol. 2 box set.

13. THAT'S WHY I'M WALKING
This track has long been available on the bootleg Nashville And More, but this is its first official release.

14. WONDERING
"Wondering" was first issued on the "I'm Your Toy" 7-inch single and has never appeared in its correct form on CD, since Singles, Vol. 2 used an unfinished version with an alternate vocal. (Hopefully that won't happen again on this release!)

15. DARLING, YOU KNOW I WOULDN'T LIE
Previously available on the Ryko CD.

16. MY SHOES KEEP WALKING BACK TO YOU
First issued on the "I'm Your Toy" 12-inch single and later included on the Ryko CD.

17. BLUES KEEP CALLING
First issued on the "I'm Your Toy" 12-inch single, this track's only previous CD appearance was on Singles, Vol. 2.
18. TEARS BEFORE BEDTIME
Previously available on the Ryko CD.
19. PSYCHO
This studio version is previously unreleased officially, although it can be found on the bootleg Nashville And More.
20. CRY, CRY, CRY

Like "Wondering," this was first issued on the "I'm Your Toy" 7-inch single and only available on CD in an incorrect version on Singles, Vol. 2.
21. I'LL TAKE CARE OF YOU

Yet another track from the bootleg Nashville And More but released officially for the first time here.

22. YOUR ANGEL STEPS OUT OF HEAVEN

The final studio outtake was originally the B-side of "Good Year For The Roses" and also appeared on the Ryko CD.

23. BRAND NEW HEARTACHE (LIVE, JUL. 30, 1981)
24. THERE WON'T BE ANYMORE (LIVE, JUL. 30, 1981)
25. SITTIN' AND THINKIN' (LIVE, JUL. 30, 1981)
26. HONEY HUSH (LIVE, JUL. 30, 1981)
This live mini-set from Aberdeen begins with the Gram Parsons/Everly Brothers cover "Brand New Heartache," a song Elvis apparently never attempted before or since. The remaining three songs appeared on the Ryko CD. Completists should note that the two other live tracks included on the Ryko — "He's Got You" and "Cry, Cry, Cry" — have been omitted from the Rhino release, with studio versions appearing instead.
27. I'M YOUR TOY (LIVE, JAN. 7, 1982)
The bonus disc concludes with the 1982 single which also closed the Ryko CD.


GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD BONUS DISC

1. THE ONLY FLAME IN TOWN (ALTERNATE VERSION)
A previously unreleased outtake from the Goodbye Cruel World sessions.

2. YOUNG BOY BLUES (DEMO)
This Doc Pomus/Phil Spector song associated with Ben E. King comes from the same session which produced "Get Yourself Another Fool" and the first band version of "I Hope You're Happy Now." Previously unreleased.

3. TURNING THE TOWN RED
The B-side of "I Wanna Be Loved." Also available on the Ryko CD.
4. I HOPE YOU'RE HAPPY NOW
This version was first released on the Ryko CD.
5. TOMORROW'S (JUST ANOTHER DAY) with Madness
Elvis is the lead vocalist on this track which first appeared on the 12-inch single of the same name released by Madness in February 1983. Why it is used on Goodbye Cruel World rather than the more chronologically appropriate Punch The Clock is puzzling, but it is hard to quibble when it is making its first ever CD appearance.

6. GET YOURSELF ANOTHER FOOL

Originally released on the "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood" 12-inch single and included on the Ryko CD.

7. BABY IT'S YOU with Nick Lowe

Originally released on the 12-inch single for Nick Lowe's "L.A.F.S." and included on the Ryko CD.
8. I WANNA BE LOVED (DEMO)
9. THE GREAT UNKNOWN (DEMO)
10. SHE LOVES THE JERK (DEMO)
11. TURNING THE TOWN RED (DEMO)
12. PEACE IN OUR TIME (DEMO)

A series of unreleased demos recorded at Eden Studios in December 1983. "She Loves The Jerk" is a John Hiatt song which Elvis played in concert that month.

13. WITHERED AND DIED
Originally the B-side of "Peace In Our Time" and included as an unlisted bonus track on the Ryko CD.

14. THE COMEDIANS (DEMO)
15. INCH BY INCH (DEMO)
16. MYSTERY VOICE (DEMO)
17. JOE PORTERHOUSE (DEMO)
18. THE TOWN WHERE TIME STOOD STILL (DEMO)
19. BLUE MURDER ON UNION AVENUE (DEMO)
20. HOME TRUTH (DEMO)

A second set of unreleased demos. "Mystery Voice" and "Blue Murder On Union Avenue" are apparently entirely unknown songs, although "Blue Murder On Union Avenue" is presumably related in some way to "Worthless Thing" which includes a similar line among its lyrics. "The Town Where Time Stood Still" makes a surprise reappearance.

21. THE ONLY FLAME IN TOWN (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)
22. WORTHLESS THING (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)
23. SLEEPLESS NIGHTS (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)
24. WHAT I LIKE MOST ABOUT YOU IS YOUR GIRLFRIEND (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)
25. MOTEL MATCHES (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)
26. LOVE FIELD (LIVE, APR. 28, 1984)

The live mini-set from the Ryko CD (all solo performances from April 28, 1984 in San Francisco) is expanded with two unreleased performances: "What I Like Most About You Is Your Girlfriend" and "Love Field."


Note that "Deportee," which appeared on the Ryko Goodbye Cruel World, is absent from the Rhino version. It may not have been dropped entirely from the reissue program, however, as it could conceivably be used on King Of America instead.

KOJAK VARIETY BONUS DISC

1. SHIP OF FOOLS
This Grateful Dead song, first released in 1991 on the Deadicated tribute album, is the only known outtake from the Kojak Variety sessions.

2. MY RESISTANCE IS LOW
The first of 10 consecutive songs from the "George Jones demos," which Elvis (backed by Paul Riley and Pete Thomas) recorded in Pete's home studio in 1992 as potential material for George Jones. "My Resistance Is Low" is a Hoagy Carmichael song which previously appeared on the "London's Brilliant Parade" 12-inch single. This is its first CD release.

3. INNOCENT WHEN YOU DREAM
Tom Waits cover (from 1987's Franks Wild Years). Previously unreleased.

4. I'M COMING HOME
T-Bone Burnett cover (from 1980's Truth Decay). Previously unreleased.

5. THE DARK END OF THE STREET
Written by Chips Moman and Dan Penn and recorded perhaps most notably by James Carr (in 1967), although Elvis is undoubtedly also familiar with the versions by the Flying Burrito Brothers and Percy Sledge. "The Dark End Of The Street" was also performed by Costello in many of his 2003-2004 concerts. Previously unreleased.

6. CONGRATULATIONS
Paul Simon cover (from his self-titled 1972 album). First issued on the "London's Brilliant Parade" 12-inch single. This is its CD debut.

7. YOU'RE GONNA MAKE ME LONESOME WHEN YOU GO
Bob Dylan cover (from 1975's Blood On The Tracks). Previously unreleased.

8. POURING WATER ON A DROWNING MAN (ALTERNATE VERSION)
The only "George Jones demo" which has been otherwise recorded by Elvis, and the only song on the Kojak Variety bonus disc which also appears on the main album. Previously unreleased.

9. STILL FEELING BLUE
Gram Parsons cover (from 1973's GP). Previously unreleased.

10. BRILLIANT DISGUISE
Elvis' version of this Bruce Springsteen song (from 1987's Tunnel Of Love) was first issued on the "It's Time" CD single in 1996.

11. HOW LONG HAS THIS BEEN GOING ON
The George & Ira Gershwin standard is the last of the George Jones demos. Previously unreleased.

12. SLEEPLESS NIGHTS
Elvis' contribution to the 1999 album Return Of The Grievous Angel: A Tribute To Gram Parsons is a somewhat surprising choice for the bonus disc, as it dates from after his 1997 departure from Warner Bros. Aside from "She" on The Very Best Of Elvis Costello, this is the only post-Warner Bros. recording on any of the Rhino reissues.

13. STEP INSIDE LOVE
14. YOU'VE GOT TO HIDE YOUR LOVE AWAY
15. SALLY SUE BROWN
16. STICKS AND STONES
These four songs were recorded along with "Life Shrinks" at Westside Recording Studio in February 1994. "Sally Sue Brown" was recorded by Elvis alone and issued on Adios Amigo: A Tribute To Arthur Alexander. The other three feature the "Life Shrinks" band (Steve Nieve, Steve Donnelly, Trevor Barry, and Pete Thomas) and were recorded for the BBC television series The Family and included on the "You Tripped At Every Step" CD single.

17. THAT'S HOW YOU GOT KILLED BEFORE with The Dirty Dozen Brass Band

Elvis is the lead vocalist on this Dave Bartholomew song recorded in 1989 for The Dirty Dozen Brass Band's The New Orleans Album.

18. THE NIGHT BEFORE LARRY WAS STRETCHED
Elvis contributed this traditional tune to 1996's Common Ground — Voices Of Modern Irish Music.

19. BUT NOT FOR ME with Larry Adler

The second Gershwin brothers song on the bonus disc was released on 1994's The Glory Of Gershwin, produced by George Martin.

20. FULL FORCE GALE
This a capella collaboration with The Voice Squad was released on 1994's No Prima Donna — The Songs Of Van Morrison.

June 14, 2004

Love That Mystic Hammering

The New York Times asks Lucinda to think about Dylan:

"Bobby Dylan, for all the years of being influenced by your humor, your wit, your brilliance and your sweet-ass attitude, thank you." - By Lucinda Williams

ELVIS COSTELLO COVERED BY STUART DAVIS

Singer/songwriter Stuart Davis, known on the indie circuit for his
Buddhist-Muslim-Hindu-Taoist-Jew-Christian-infused brand of biting pop/folk,
has released an online studio album of Elvis Costello covers.

STUART'S ALBUM NOTES FOR "DAVIS DOES ELVIS"

i first fell in love with elvis when i heard Other Side Of Summer on the
radio. he sang "Was it a millionaire who said 'imagine no possessions'?" i
was laughing and alarmed at the same time. did he just take a shot at the
sacrosanct John Lennon?, i wondered. shortly after that i owned almost
everything he'd ever released. although this bootleg tribute album doesn't
really reflect it, i'm as crazy for his later material as i am for the early
years. to me songs like This Is Hell (Brutal Youth), 20% Amnesia (Brutal
Youth), Poor Fractured Atlas (All This Useless Beauty), and pretty much
everything from the CD Mighty Like A Rose are perfect, but on this recording
i ended up just throwing together songs that translated at least somewhat to
acoustic guitar and voice. plus it's just a bootleg recording, meant to be
a fun little salute to one of my heros. as some may remember, for a while i
was opening up for myself on tour as Elvis Costello, i would dress up in a
suit, put the glasses on, use a sharpie marker to color in a gap in my front
teeth, and then hit the stage and do six or seven Elvis tunes (that's the
source of the photos on the album artwork), then get off, change clothes and
come back out as Stuart Davis. it was the inversion of my fantasy, opening
for Elvis. no such luck yet. this little bootleg is just my way of having a
good time and saying thanks to one of the greatest songwriters i've ever
heard. i've spent many hundreds of hours enrapt in the mystery of Elvis.
he's had many incarnations as an artist, sometimes they didn't work, but
he's still as cool as shit after it's said and done. what is it with England
anyway? the Beatles, XTC, and Elvis, all from that little island. if Bach
weren't German, one might suspect a conspiracy theory...

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - JUNE 15 2004


ELVIS COSTELLO COVERED BY STUART DAVIS

"Davis Does Elvis" released online at www.stuartdavis.com
Full download with cover art $8 or individual tracks for $1

Singer/songwriter Stuart Davis, known on the indie circuit for his
Buddhist-Muslim-Hindu-Taoist-Jew-Christian-infused brand of biting pop/folk,
has released an online studio album of Elvis Costello covers.


CRITICAL PRAISE FOR STUART DAVIS

"We were blown away by Stuart's pure genius."
- Bruce Warren, Producer of The World Cafe

"Without exaggeration, Stuart Davis is one of the most fascinating
and exceptional songwriters in modern music."
- San Jose Metro

"Not since Bob Dylan broke through 30 years ago has
Minnesota produced such a confident and creative songwriter."
- Minneapolis Star Tribune

"A rare genius. Whatever you do, don't miss his work or his performances."
- Ken Wilber

"The greatest lyricistI've ever heard."
- Ed Kowalczyk, lead singer of Live

"Davis laughs like a girl."
- bemused concertgoer


STUART'S ALBUM NOTES FOR "DAVIS DOES ELVIS"

i first fell in love with elvis when i heard Other Side Of Summer on the
radio. he sang "Was it a millionaire who said 'imagine no possessions'?" i
was laughing and alarmed at the same time. did he just take a shot at the
sacrosanct John Lennon?, i wondered. shortly after that i owned almost
everything he'd ever released. although this bootleg tribute album doesn't
really reflect it, i'm as crazy for his later material as i am for the early
years. to me songs like This Is Hell (Brutal Youth), 20% Amnesia (Brutal
Youth), Poor Fractured Atlas (All This Useless Beauty), and pretty much
everything from the CD Mighty Like A Rose are perfect, but on this recording
i ended up just throwing together songs that translated at least somewhat to
acoustic guitar and voice. plus it's just a bootleg recording, meant to be
a fun little salute to one of my heros. as some may remember, for a while i
was opening up for myself on tour as Elvis Costello, i would dress up in a
suit, put the glasses on, use a sharpie marker to color in a gap in my front
teeth, and then hit the stage and do six or seven Elvis tunes (that's the
source of the photos on the album artwork), then get off, change clothes and
come back out as Stuart Davis. it was the inversion of my fantasy, opening
for Elvis. no such luck yet. this little bootleg is just my way of having a
good time and saying thanks to one of the greatest songwriters i've ever
heard. i've spent many hundreds of hours enrapt in the mystery of Elvis.
he's had many incarnations as an artist, sometimes they didn't work, but
he's still as cool as shit after it's said and done. what is it with England
anyway? the Beatles, XTC, and Elvis, all from that little island. if Bach
weren't German, one might suspect a conspiracy theory...


TRACK LIST FOR "DAVIS DOES ELVIS"

1. Pump It Up
2. Oliver's Army
3. I Want You
4. The Other End
5. Brilliant Mistake
6. Beyond Belief
7. God's Comic
8. Watching The Detectives
9. Veronica
10.Veronica (Take 1)


SAMPLES AND INFO

http://www.stuartdavis.com/elvis

June 12, 2004

Elvis Misbehaves

Elvis' recording of Cole Porter's Let's Misbehave is now available on the soundtrack album of the film De-Lovely.

Buy it online from Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk and cduniverse.

Elvis goes to market

Gawker.com reports -

Saw Elvis Costello and Diana Krall in Jefferson Market this Thursday ( June 10) afternoon, using the ATM. Costello looked goofy as if in costume but i suspect he always rocks the weirdo/oddly bright accessories and rumpled-tie thing. Krall looked exactly like a young Brett Butler (guttural-voiced real-life battered wife/alcoholic turned sitcom actress/90's survival signifier).

June 7, 2004

EC JAPAN TOUR 04

This is the schedule for a tour with the Imposters.

DATE:
DECEMBER 2004
Tue-07 ARRIVE JAPAN
Wed-08 TOKYO KOUSEINENKIN (cap. 1950)
Thu-09 TOKYO KOUSEINENKIN (cap. 1950)
Fri-10 OSAKA GRAN CUBE (cap. 2000)
Sat-11 OFF
Sun-12 FUKUOKA ZEPP (cap. 1800 )
Mon-13 OFF
Tue-14 TOKYO KOUSEINENKIN (cap. 1950)
Wed-15 NAGOYA KINROKAIKAN (cap. 1400)
Thu-16 LEAVE JAPAN

(Submitted by Mike Bodayle)

June 5, 2004

Elvis in Mojo Honours List

Elvis has been nominated in the Mojo Honours List, a series of awards being given by the U.K. music magazine. He appears in the Songwriter section along with Paul McCartney, Ray Davies, Nick Drake and Paul Weller.

The awards ceremony takes place in the Banqueting House on Whitehall, London on June 22.

June 4, 2004

Il Sogno , 13 Sept.'04 , UK release date

HMV ( UK) have this info. for Elvis' ballet score album -

Availability: available for pre-order only
Release date: 13-9-2004
Number of Discs: 1
Catalogue Number: PRERELCLASSCD
Label: DECCA

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elvis , as we know , recorded this with the
London Symphony Orchestra in April 2002. Today's
Independent ( London) has a profile of this musical
operation.

Elvis has , of course , regularly spoken about his respect for professional musicians. He will not , therefore , be offended if his musical colleagues of
two years back hardly remember him ; as this extract shows some of them cannot remember who they worked with mere days ago.

Trumpeter Maurice Murphy comments -

"And I've been here ever since. The Saturday morning I
started was the first session for Star Wars. It seemed
nice music, but none of us really knew what it was."
What it was, of course, was the start of the LSO's
most dependable money-spinner: as the film composer
John Williams's orchestra of choice, they're booked to
record for the sixth Star Wars film next February. Now
they do sessions galore: what was the one they
recorded yesterday? "I've no idea. Just some light
music. A nice chap came with his arrangements and
played them on the piano, to make a CD of some sort.
I've forgotten his name. That's the pleasure of this
job." Are there stresses too? "Well, you are exposed."
Has he ever had an alarming moment? A beaming smile:
"Can't remember one."

We can also expect a sound with a little less racousness than the Imposters as this comment from Orchestra leader Colin Davis tells -


Colin Davis pinpoints the key change in this band over
the four decades he has known it: the influx of women.
"They're very good players, and they make a different
sound. The all-male orchestra was very efficient, but
its sound was hard. It isn't any less efficient now,
but the sound is softer and sweeter. The women don't
play as aggressively, and they're more flexible -
maybe because they don't put so much tension into it.
They don't have such big hands, and they're not
muscular unless they decide to be. They therefore
remain very nimble. And with them, the men behave
better. Nobody would dare to be drunk on the platform
now."


Instruments of power

The London Symphony are the Manchester United of orchestras: rich, influential and a magnet for the greatest classical stars.

Michael Church is duly dazzled

04 June 2004


"Right, let's go," shouts the conductor Valery Gergiev, and with screeching violins and a clash of cymbals, the orchestra surge into Prokofiev's tumultuous Third Symphony. They expertly negotiate the music's controlled hysteria, adjusting instantly to the maestro's cryptic commands: it's hard to believe this is a piece they haven't played for years. Complimented afterwards on sorting it so fast, the co-leader politely demurs: "Whatever Gergiev demands in rehearsal, we know he'll demand something totally different on the night."

Rehearsing Verdi's Falstaff with Sir Colin Davis a few days later, Britain's finest orchestra might be on another planet. This work starts with a high dive into a thicket of musical argument: it's new to most of the players, but again, you wouldn't know. Their resident maestro steers them invisibly towards his goal: like thoroughbred racehorses, an occasional nudge is all they need.

The London Symphony Orchestra really is some band, as the names celebrating its centenary next Wednesday attest: Rostropovich, Midori, Sarah Chang, Alfred Brendel, John Williams and Dave Brubeck are just some of the stars who will share its Barbican stage. In addition to being one of the world's current top five, this orchestra has always led the way - with recordings, television tie-ins, film work and self-government by its players. They run their own record label, LSO Live (launched in 2000), and last year converted a Grade I-listed church, St Luke's, into a music-education centre. The orchastra's occasional woes have been no less dramatic, and it has had the narrowest squeak in musical history - as the first European orchestra to cross the Atlantic, it was prevented by a booking mix-up from travelling on the maiden voyage of the Titanic.

Ever since the London Philharmonic naively bared its communal soul to a journalist in the mid-Nineties- the revelations about sex, drugs and despair were so mortifying that many players couldn't face their colleagues on publication day - British orchestras have worried about their image, the periodically strife-torn LSO more than most. So it's with no expectation of lurid gossip that I hover backstage at the Barbican as they gather for their first public onslaught on Verdi's last opera. These ace professionals are famed for getting on with the job: they come, play and go home to partners and kids, usually without even a detour to the pub. But we can at least take the temperature, and see what makes them tick.

And also where they come from. Some players - such as the clarinettist Andrew Marriner - hail from musical dynasties, but the violinist Warwick Hill's beginnings in Barnsley could not have been humbler: "I noticed there was a school orchestra that met every Wednesday and said I'd like to be in it. An uncle bought me a violin, and my first teacher was a miner."

The tuba player Patrick Harrild's start was entirely accidental: "I played tuba in the brass band at school, and when I was 15 I did a Brahms lullaby - very badly - at a concert. The next day I got a call from a professor of the Royal Academy saying he wanted me to study with him. As I didn't know about the existence of the Royal Academy of Music, I thought it was the art one, so I said, 'I can't even draw, let alone paint.' My first lesson with him was a disaster, and I really only became a musician to vindicate myself."

While Harrild warms up his tuba, the trumpeter Maurice Murphy looks back over an astonishingly smooth career. This began when he was six, playing cornet next to his father, who was principal cornet of the Salvation Army in Stanley, Co Durham. He played contests, moved to a series of colliery bands and then to a works band, then the Fairey Aviation band, and then to Black Dyke when he was 20. "I had my last lesson when I was 12." After freelancing with orchestras all over the North, including spa orchestras - "Very good experience, as you had to double for lots of other instruments, and learn to transpose" - Murphy got a job with one of the BBC orchestras, was invited to join the LSO in Mexico for a fortnight, and on the plane home was offered the post of principal trumpet.

"And I've been here ever since. The Saturday morning I started was the first session for Star Wars. It seemed nice music, but none of us really knew what it was." What it was, of course, was the start of the LSO's most dependable money-spinner: as the film composer John Williams's orchestra of choice, they're booked to record for the sixth Star Wars film next February. Now they do sessions galore: what was the one they recorded yesterday? "I've no idea. Just some light music. A nice chap came with his arrangements and played them on the piano, to make a CD of some sort. I've forgotten his name. That's the pleasure of this job." Are there stresses too? "Well, you are exposed." Has he ever had an alarming moment? A beaming smile: "Can't remember one."

But we all rewrite history: a couple of days later, dipping into a company portrait that was published to mark the LSO's 80th anniversary, I discover that Maurice Murphy did once suffer an alarming loss of nerve that briefly but publicly ruined his playing. He'd been working too hard, and the pressure had affected his embouchure, which he'd signalled by cracking a note in that cruelly exposed lone trumpet call that opens Mahler's Fifth. Being the pro he is, he recovered his form within a couple of weeks.

Stress? In contrast to those poor saps in the LPO, nobody in the LSO seems to take beta-blockers, but the topic still crops up in this miasma of pre-concert tuning and practising that swirls round our heads. The violinist Nigel Broadbent's testimony is illuminating: "It's a funny thing, nerves. You can be feeling fine, then all it takes is one split second, where you expect to come in on a quiet entry, and you suddenly realise that nobody is coming in, and there's that extra gap, and you have to put your bow on very lightly... that's where it happens. An adrenalin shot - and you don't have the chance to burn the chemicals which are now flooding into the bloodstream. That's why it's good to go for a run afterwards. I've just joined a gym."

Brass players are not the only people at risk, Broadbent says: everybody has their exposed moments. "It's all a matter of muscular balance and relaxation. Even world-class weightlifters have this problem: they can't pull their best when they're nervous, because they have to relax the muscles that work in the opposite direction from the one they are pulling in. I've often heard top violinists getting ready for a concerto, going shift-shift-shift up and down the fingerboard in their dressing room, so that when they go on stage and nerves kick in, it still feels the same."

It was stress that impelled Warwick Hill to move down to the No 2 seat after 19 years as principal second violin. "I'd just had enough of leading. You have to wield the stick, but as this is a democratic orchestra, you can't do that heavily. You have to sort out bowings, and smooth the way between conductors and the other players. I wanted a less stressful life."

Regina Beukes left a principal's job in another orchestra to join the LSO as a rank-and-file viola. "It's lovely to leave the decisions to somebody else, to just sit back and watch things unfold, to let somebody else decide if it's an up or a down stroke." Why is that decision so important? "It reflects your interpretation of a phrase. It comes from the leader, down to the rest of the section." How easy is it to get out of kilter? "Experienced people acquire a sort of radar system: they react to each other very quickly. If I'm going to walk into a trap, my neighbour will help me not to. When you play with younger, less experienced people, you immediately feel the lack of this radar. They can walk into a wall quite easily."

Where you sit determines what you earn: the top four numbered desks in the first violins are on a sliding scale above the other 16 unnumbered players, who all earn the same, however long they've been here. But, as Harrild points out, some actually prefer to stay "rank and file". He says: "One musician, who's regarded as the absolute doyen of orchestral violinists, wouldn't dream of moving up. He loves being in the middle of the section. People tell me that when they sit next to him, they feel like better players."

That's another thing about this orchestra: they all move around, so nobody gets stuck in a bad position - next to the piercing piccolos or ear-bashing timpani, for instance. This constant movement also allows every player to assess those who join them on trial. Hundreds of hopefuls apply when a post falls vacant, and a musician can spend years on trial.

A statuesque young Pole, Iwona Muszynska, has just entered this process, and is learning to appreciate the collegiate ethos. "Poles are all trained as soloists, not as orchestral musicians. That means that everybody there is trying to be the best, the loudest, the most wonderful player. And it doesn't work, because an orchestra must be one organism."

After the performance and the tumultuous applause, Colin Davis pinpoints the key change in this band over the four decades he has known it: the influx of women. "They're very good players, and they make a different sound. The all-male orchestra was very efficient, but its sound was hard. It isn't any less efficient now, but the sound is softer and sweeter. The women don't play as aggressively, and they're more flexible - maybe because they don't put so much tension into it. They don't have such big hands, and they're not muscular unless they decide to be. They therefore remain very nimble. And with them, the men behave better. Nobody would dare to be drunk on the platform now."

How times have changed. When the LSO was conceived, a West End pub nicknamed the "Glue Pot' was the hub and recruiting office for London's musical life. Alcohol was the lubricant for everything. And the reason the LSO was conceived was paradoxical. With theatres, music halls and hotels all competing for the best players, it became customary to call in a friend to deputise if you suddenly got a more lucrative opportunity. Sir Henry Wood recalled that at one Prom he found himself facing "an orchestra with 70 or 80 unknown faces in it. Even my leader was missing."

Wood decided to demand loyalty from his players, but could guarantee them only £100 a year. Determined to keep their right to sell their services to the highest bidder, his top musicians resigned and, in 1904, set up "something akin to a musical republic", which they named the London Symphony Orchestra. Yet their prospectus implied that there would be no skiving off to better-paid gigs: it boldly asserted that they would be "second to none" among Europe's top orchestras.

And that's what they quickly became. Mahler himself was turned down when he offered to conduct them in 1907; Edward Elgar, briefly their principal conductor, was unceremoniously dropped when they decided he wasn't a big enough box-office draw (they gratefully received him back later on). They had to stay solvent, and did so by playing for choral societies and festivals, on tours abroad, and through working for a new-fangled medium called the gramophone.

The First World War's effect on concert life hit them hard, as did the slump in the early Thirties. The emergence of rival orchestras - including those of the BBC - further tested their ability to survive. Setting up the London Philharmonic, Thomas Beecham almost succeeded in wiping out the LSO for good, and work at newly established Glyndebourne opera was one of the LSO's saving perks.

In the Second World War, when 60 of their players were on active service, the old deputy system was needed again, and they toured tirelessly during the Blitz. The creation of the Arts Council promised a lifeline, but was also a threat to their cherished independence: they eventually bent the knee and got their grant, but its size meant they had to play endless games with other sponsors to stay afloat.

Zubin Mehta and Leonard Bernstein were among the glittering stars who conducted them in the Sixties, and when André Previn took over as principal conductor in 1968 - and BBC television started broadcasting André Previn's Music Night - the LSO became the height of cool. Claudio Abbado, who succeeded Previn, took the orchestra back to the intellectual high ground. But when they moved into the brand-new Barbican as its resident orchestra, financial calamity nearly zapped them again. The man who saved them - and who's still the managing director 20 years on - was a cellist drawn from their ranks, Clive Gillinson. "It was lucky I knew so little about the challenges of the job," he says. "Otherwise I'd never have taken it on." Yet, as Richard Morrison observes in his new history of the LSO, it's now become "the Manchester United of British music: a brand so big and powerful that it has no real competitors in its own country". Some of its principals - whose half-time contracts allow them to pursue parallel careers - are top-flight soloists in their own right.

LSO Live is an increasingly prominent part of this brand, with critical and commercial hits such as Colin Davis's inspirational recording of Berlioz's Les Troyens, and its budget-price CDs causing problems for the ailing big labels. But the LSO's bold conversion of an 18th-century church into the St Luke's music education centre - a key element in its strategy to cultivate future audiences - has put the orchestra once more into deficit, necessitating, among other things, a whip-round of £300 per head from the players themselves (that's the downside of owning your own company).

On the other hand, the LSO's City of London backing makes the other London bands green with envy. Gillinson replies that this orchestra does more London concerts than they do, and that City support only puts it on a par with leading regional bands like the Hallé in Manchester and the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. Money is a problem that will never go away.

Meanwhile, Sir Colin Davis - now 76 and at the peak of his powers - leads his 110-piece band serenely on, secure in his conviction that orchestral music is one of the supreme inventions of the human mind. "I just wish our philistine government would take a pride in this orchestra's achievement," he growls. He points out a political moral: "This is a very small kingdom, and I can know everyone in it, and how they function. A prime minister is barred from that: he and his government sit in their offices, dealing with paper. An orchestra can vote you out tomorrow, if they decide you're intolerable. Very different from our elected tyrannies." Yes, indeed.

BATTLE OF THE BANDS: THE LSO'S RIVALS

BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra

Under Martyn Brabbins, the Finnish conductor Osmo Vanska and now the young Israeli conductor Ilan Volkov, the BBC Scottish have made their name with adventurous programming and a willingness to go into uncharted territory in the recording studio, chiefly for the Hyperion label, with, for example, archaeological digs into long-lost Victorian British masterpieces.

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra

The RLPO's music director, Gerard Schwarz, has come under fire in recent months for programming new and unfamiliar works such as Max Bruch's The Song of the Bell. At a meeting of musicians last month, more than half of them objected to Schwarz's five-year contract being extended. But nobody questions his musicianship, and his vision continues to gain critical approval.

BBC Symphony Orchestra

The orchestra rose to prominence under the baton of the arch-modernist Pierre Boulez, but has not had such a happy time of it since Sir Andrew Davis headed off to the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 2000. But it is still a formidable musical force, and its Composer Portrait series has brought much unusual work into the public eye, throwing new light on composers as varied as Kurt Weill, Harrison Birtwistle and John Cage.

City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra

Sir Simon Rattle may have gone on to Berlin, but fears that his former orchestra would face a steep decline have proved unfounded. Its partnership with the starry Finnish musician Sakari Oramo, who became principal conductor in 1998 and music director in 1999, continues to generate heat with inspired performances of the Scandinavian repertoire.

Hallé

Not to be outdone by the LSO, the Hallé launched its own record label in 2003 with three recordings. Conducted by the music director Mark Elder, these focused on works by Nielsen and Elgar, whose First Symphony was premiered by the Hallé in December 1908. This is an orchestra that has declined since its glory days, but it could be springing back.

LSO Gala, Barbican, London EC2 (020-7638 8891), 7.30pm, Wednesday. Richard Morrison's 'Orchestra: The LSO - a century of triumph and turbulence' is published by Faber and Faber (£20)

June 3, 2004

Elvis in concert with Diana Krall , Montreal , June 29



MONTREAL, June 3 /CNW Telbec/ - There's only about three weeks left until the start of the 25th edition of the Festival International de Jazz de Montréal, the biggest celebration of music anywhere on Earth.

And we've even thrown in a pre-opening show on June 29, the 25th Anniversary Gala Concert at the Bell Centre, featuring Diana Krall and a few invited
guests, not least of whom is Diana's husband, Elvis Costello.
------------------------------------------------------


Concert-Gala du 25e anniversaire
DIANA KRALL ET INVITÉS SPÉCIAUX
Centre Bell 6/29/2004
at 8:00:00 PM
From $49.50 to $ 110.00