‘Look Now’ is an auditory treat
Like in Anna Karenina, the characters in Look Now, Elvis Costello’s sumptuous new album with The Imposters, are each unhappy in their own way.
A woman who laments her deteriorated marriage while doing some renovations around the house (Stripping Paper); a dilapidated music-hall singer whose return to showbiz may be brief (Under Lime); a daughter pondering her dad’s infidelity (Photographs Can Lie) and so on.
What makes it easy to be sympathetic with even the most pitiable of those in these very human songs are Costello’s elegant melodies and arrangements, which result in a kind of silkier, even more debonair version of Imperial Bedroom, his 1982 album.
Costello’s guitars are mostly in a supporting role. Horns, woodwinds and strings — as well as some of the liveliest backing vocals on an EC album since Afrodiziak lit up Punch the Clock — plus the deft hands of The Imposters and Argentine-born co-producer Sebastian Krys, turn Look Now into one of his most sonically gratifying records.
Burt Bacharach composed some of the music and Costello also dusted off Burnt Sugar Is So Bitter, another tale of domestic gloom, written years ago with Carole King.
Costello said he recorded the lead vocals as he was recovering from a cancer scare and it made him feel invigorated instead of depressed.
Those in Costello’s songs may be mostly miserable, but Look Now will make its listeners very happy indeed.