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- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 08:47:22 CST
- Sender: Discussions on all forms of Music <ALLMUSIC@AUVM.BITNET>
- From: Dave <USTS060@RUST1.DPO.UAB.EDU>
- Subject: LA Times review of TJL
- Lines: 73
-
- Here's another shameless attempt at promoting one of my favorite
- artists. This is being transferred from the Costello list without
- permission.
-
-
- ------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 14:29:03 -0800 (PST)
- From: VECTR01V@VAX.CSUN.EDU (Ron Heeb - rheeb@vax.csun.edu)
- Subject: LA Times review of TJL
- To: costello@gnu.ai.mit.edu
-
- Following is a review of the new E.C. CD from the Los Angeles
- Times. Reprinted without permission.
-
- -----
-
- Costello Gets Pumped Up (With Strings Attached)
-
- ELVIS COSTELLO
- AND THE BRODSKY QUARTET
- -----------------------
- "The Juliet Letters"
- *Warner Bros.*
-
-
- It's usually time to be wary when a pop-rock artist takes a
- radical turn from his demonstrated strengths. Remember Lou Reed's
- "Metal Machine Music," a 1975 collection of grating electronic
- noise by one of rock's genuine poets?
-
- So the concept of Costello's new album is warning enough to
- brace yourself: Rock 'n' roll's master of acrimony and wordplay
- has joined forces as writer-vocalist with the Brodsky Quartet, a
- veteran, highly regarded British group that is more accustomed to
- playing music by Shostakovich and Haydn than by anyone whose style
- comes from the well of Chuck Berry and Bob Dylan.
-
- Yet "The Juliet Letters" proves to be a wonder work -
- Costello's freshest and most compelling album in nearly a decade.
- It's almost as if Costello became such a master of songwriting
- technique in the '70s and '80s that he became a prisoner of it.
- Freed from the rules of the songwriting craft and the sometimes
- smothering expectations around him, Costello once again exhibits
- the sheer joy of creative discovery and risk-taking.
-
- In this sometimes disturbing, sometimes witty but ultimately
- warm panorama of human feelings, Costello sings/recites imaginary
- letters that he and members of the string quartet wrote for the
- album. Rather than form a narrative story, the letters simply
- offer glimpses of human character - from letters as stark as a
- suicide note to as offbeat as a cranky aunt's rejoinder to a
- nephew's sly effort to gain some of her fortune.
-
- There are glimpses in the letters of love - lost and found -
- and even the junk mail that often comes so attractively packaged.
- Sample line from the latter: *Your troubles will vanish / Your
- tears will dry / Your blessings will just multiply / Guaranteed at
- a price that is almost unbeatable / This offer is unrepeatable*.
-
- In the end, "The Juliet Letters" is a celebration of life that
- is as endearing - although never as relentlessly sentimental - as
- a classic holiday-season movie. Stretching the fiction to its
- limits, the album ends with a bittersweet but ultimately endearing
- letter from beyond the grave: *Banish all dismay / Extinguish every
- sorrow / If I'm lost or I'm forgiven / The birds will be singing.
-
- -ROBERT HILBURN
- ======================================================================
- Rev. Dave Hall | "It's not the voting that's
- usts060@rust1.dpo.uab.edu | democracy, it's the counting.
- | -- Tom Stoppard
- ======================================================================
-