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Sept. 28, 1999 |
Bill Wyman's piece on Elvis Costello is typical of the treatment Costello
has received from rock critics over the past 10 years; once the electric
guitar and the snide putdown ceased to be the focus of his work, their
adoration turned to ridicule. Costello's ambition and sophistication should
be welcomed as relief from the witless, one-dimensional rubbish that passes
for popular music in 1999, but instead the media has cast him as a poseur
and has-been. The prevailing critical wisdom that rock 'n' roll must be
loud, simple and angry has consistently discouraged the kind of stylistic
experimentation that would keep rock alive as an art form. Wasn't rock 'n'
roll about freedom once? It has now become the most conservative music there
is, and that's why Elvis Costello has outgrown it. -- Neil Oliver Bill Wyman's brief emotional sketch of Elvis Costello's career was quite on
target. Most music of the '70s forgot that music is more than an outlet for
hedonistic impulses (I can still hear those Giorgio Moroder synthesizers
imploring me to dance, dance, dance). Rock was supposed to be about
rebellion, whether real or not. Costello and the punksters gave new life to the rapidly dying medium called rock
music. To this day I can feel Elvis Costello's rage as he sang, "I want to
bite the hand that feeds me" in "Radio, Radio." That rage can never be
captured again. Costello was more than brilliance, more than a shining moment
in rock history -- he was a savior just when we needed one. -- Robert Salti Bill Wyman loses interest in Elvis Costello midway through Costello's
career and somehow that's a betrayal on Costello's part? Bill, he's not
dating you, he's just writing and playing music in close enough
proximity to you that you can hear it. Try not to take it so
personally. Elvis isn't the 23-year-old punk prodigy he used to be. We all have to grow old; the worst thing is to pretend
we don't. We should be thankful that Costello is, unlike some in the rock pantheon Wyman mentions, growing,
not just getting, old. Each Costello album, even the ones Costello himself dislikes, contains
at least a few pieces of brilliant songwriting that put him head and
shoulders above so many of his contemporaries and others putting out
music today. The songs on "Trust" are meaningless, you say?
Compared to what? As long as we are overanalyzing Elvis Costello's music instead of just
enjoying it, it's worth pointing out that Costello has been one of the
most consistent male voices addressing gender issues with any sort of
complexity. It was clear to anyone who really listened that all those
scabs picked over in the first few albums were from self-inflicted
wounds. His nerd pose was a reaction against the overstuffed,
overripe testosterock of the '70s. And his song "Why Can't a Man
Stand Alone" (from "All This Useless Beauty") is one of the most
poignant commentaries on the subject ever set to music. As for Costello turning up at the Fleadh and Woodstock, he is, you know,
a performer. Sometimes performers like audiences. So sue them. -- Jeff Hagan Although I'm his contemporary, I'm not "in the punk generation," as Bill
Wyman is, and so can appreciate Elvis Costello from a far different, and
perhaps more rewarding, perspective. I cherish Costello's work as
music, often exceptional music, and I've found a rare pleasure in
hearing his work age just as I have, expressing views that are in tune
with my own sympathies which change and mature through the erosion of
time and experience. "This Year's Model" was the perfect record for my
high school years, just as "All This Useless Beauty" and "Painted From
Memory" fit with the life and concerns I find myself with 20 years later. Wyman seems trapped in a place that I find so many other music critics
in -- the past. Whether it's a 60's-era
oldies tour, or a Sex Pistols reunion, stasis is stasis. While
looking at pop from an avowed punk perspective can be interesting, it
limits the quality of the criticism. Wyman actually lodges a
complaint that is essentially hypocritical -- that Costello dared to
change, to realize that the punk era, like the '60s, is dead and gone.
His attitudes, ideas and music changed, and, contrary to Wyman's
assertions, that was always reflected honestly in his work -- which is why
he took chances with things like "The Juiet Letters." I say
that's to Costello's great credit. -- George Grella NBC strikes slur from "Will and Grace" While I fervently believe in respect for everyone -- regardless of sex,
color, race or creed -- I also believe in equal opportunity insults. Get a
grip: "Will and Grace" is a sitcom, not a social commentary. While I don't think that
calling a Latina a "tamale" is funny, I also don't think the network should
cave under minority pressure. Shame on NBC: They should address their feelings of guilt
for lack of ethnic diversity by adding it, not by editing out a word. -- Sandra Smith Let me get this straight. Hispanics are offended because a female is
called a "tamale" -- but they're OK with the fact that the female is
stereotypically cast as a Salvadoran maid? And they don't find the
substitute word, "honey," to be any more demeaning? And the
overwhelmingly Catholic (and homophobic) Hispanic interest group is
otherwise OK with the general concept of "Will & Grace"?
These folks have way too much time on their hands. -- Rich Karakis | ||
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