Arab Times

Once ‘vowing’ not to record, Costello back

Ballad-heavy album

- By David Bauder

Besides the fact that he’s still here, Elvis Costello’s fans can be grateful that he’s open to changing his mind.

While something short of a vow, Costello said in 2010 that he didn’t plan to record anymore. Yet on Friday, he releases “Look Now”, his second disc since that declaratio­n. The lush showcase for his backing band, the Imposters, is musically inspired by Dusty Springfiel­d’s “Dusty in Memphis” and has a renewed collaborat­ion with Burt Bacharach at its heart.

That Costello, 64, is around to talk about it is because he was treated for what was described as a small, but aggressive form of cancer earlier this year. The world learned about it, somewhat to his regret, when he had to cancel some concerts.

The changing music business had taught Costello, like other older artists, that there was a diminishin­g return to recording.

Connected

“I didn’t feel like I could justify the vanity of making records, compared to making my living with what I do most of the time, which is do shows,” he told The Associated Press. “Up until that point, it had always been that (recording and touring) were connected, and it was just finding a way to disconnect them again.”

Thus began his “impresario years.” He’s had a handful of themed concert tours, including one focusing on the period around his “Imperial Bedroom” album and another accompanie­d by a game show-like “spinning songbook” that determined the evening’s set list.

He didn’t stop writing, however, much of it aimed toward theater. He and the 90-year-old Bacharach, with whom he made the 1998 record, “Painted From Memory”, are working on a stage show.

While waiting for that to progress, longtime drummer Pete Thomas encouraged Costello to record some of the new material that had backed up. Costello recognized that his three-piece band had never really shown its range on a single CD, and concentrat­ed on the garage band side of his diverse catalogue while in concert.

The work on “Look Now” is ballad-heavy and lightly soulful, with plenty of space for the rhythm section of Thomas and Davey Faragher, the keyboards of Steve Nieve, orchestrat­ion and backing vocals. This was his original idea for a follow-up to “Painted From Memory” years ago, although Costello didn’t get to it. He said it benefits from the extra time and experience.

“Do we sound like we’re old?” he said. “No, we sound like we know what we’re doing and are alert to the possibilit­ies. We could play it a lot of ways but we decided to play it like this.”

He said he’s “tremendous­ly happy that I went in and did it with these guys.”

The songs, which include a 20-year-old collaborat­ion with Carole King, tell typically complex stories: a woman stripping wallpaper and reflecting on a failed relationsh­ip, a rich woman who disdains the former lover hired to paint her portrait, a woman whose childhood memories are haunted by her father’s infideliti­es. In three of the songs, he sings from the perspectiv­e of a female narrator.

Focus

Another highlight is “Unwanted Number”, a song he wrote for the female band For Real in the 1990s, about a woman deciding to raise a child born from a youthful relationsh­ip. He subtly rewrites the song to de-emphasize the childhood abuse she suffered at the hands of her father and put more focus on her choice to raise the baby.

Material written with Bacharach – most notably “Photograph­s Can Lie” and “He’s Given Me Things” – set the record’s tone.

Costello said he and Bacharach haven’t given up on Broadway. It’s just a question of securing the financial backing.

“I can understand the caution of producers,” he said. “They’re trying to make a stage production out of 12 songs that are slow and melancholy, and adding another 10 that are slow and melancholy. You could understand if a hard-headed producer says, ‘Well, where’s the tap dancing?’”

“Look Now” had been delayed for release after an agreement with one record company fell through. Costello notes ruefully in an essay that he couldn’t shake the thought that “such minds had determined my value long ago and might wait out the windfall should I become a posthumous artist, although that was a career opportunit­y I was unprepared to pursue just now.”

Fans were shaken by the thought that might come sooner rather than later when they heard of his cancer scare. He had tried to push through with concert dates, despite a doctor’s advice, and found he wasn’t physically ready. Cancelling the shows required an explanatio­n, but Costello winces at how it escaped his control. Unfounded speculatio­n that he was at death’s door upset his family.

“I had some very nice messages from people I’ve never met or saw on the street saying very nice things about me,” he said. “And, of course, there are one or two who say, ‘I never liked him anyway, I hope he dies.’”

Also:

LOS ANGELES: The “A Star Is Born” soundtrack is a star in its own right. Sources watching retail reports come in from the album’s first five days of sales say it’s expected to debut with more than 200,000 copies sold in its first week, not accounting for streaming or other forms of consumptio­n.

Official figures won’t be announced till Sunday. But if those numbers hold up, it would be the biggest week in pure album sales for the soundtrack to a movie musical since “Frozen” in 2014. A figure over 200,000 would also give “A Star Is Born” easily the best opening tally for any soundtrack in 2018, surpassing another Interscope release that currently holds that title, “Black Panther: The Album”.

The album’s success is vindicatin­g the strategy to withhold all of the music – with the exception of a single, “Shallow” – until the day of the movie’s release last Friday. That plan may have come about primarily from a desire to keep the songs as surprises for moviegoers as the tunes pop up in key emotional moments in the film, but it also had the effect of sending Lady Gaga fans and enraptured attendees to retail all at once. With swooning word of mouth likely to generate a strong holdover in the theaters, Interscope Records is hoping for sustained album sales, too, of the sort that had the slower-growing “Greatest Showman” at or near the top of the charts for multiple weeks early this year.

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