North Elvis Costello

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/23/2003
  • Sales Rank: 109,934
  • Label: DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON
  • UPC: 602498091630
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Super Audio CD - SACD Hybrid$15.19
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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North

1LISTENYou Left Me in the Dark 3:26
2LISTENSomeone Took the Words Away 4:35
3LISTENWhen Did I Stop Dreaming? 5:22
4LISTENYou Turned to Me 2:32
5LISTENFallen 3:12
6LISTENWhen It Sings 3:58
7LISTENStill 2:27
8LISTENLet Me Tell You About Her 4:23
9LISTENCan You Be True? 3:45
10LISTENWhen Green Eyes Turn Blue 4:17
11LISTENI'm in the Mood Again 2:34

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Elvis Costello has always marched to the beat of his own drummer -- and on this outing, that percussionist is hitting the skins with a jazzy touch and a feathery brush. It'd be easy to pin that stylistic shift on Costello's recent romantic linking with jazz singer Diana Krall, but from 1981's Almost Blue to his 1996 collaboration with Burt Bacharach, Painted from Memory, Costello's catalogue is peppered with conceptual experiments. North, which teams the singer with longtime partner Steve Nieve (the only accompanist on the lovely "You Turned to Me") and a wide array of jazz reedmen, is orchestrated in the mode of a classic Nat King Cole disc, unfailingly sweet but not sticky enough to be cloying. At its onset, the disc threatens to swamp the listener in blue notes (and blue moods), thanks to a passel of tunes that seem to refer, however indirectly, to the breakup of Costello's marriage to onetime Pogue Cait O'Riordan. Those dusky tunes -- particularly "Someone Took the Words Away," which features a smoky alto sax solo from Lee Konitz -- give way to glimmers of emotional sunlight at the disc's midway point. The light bounce of "When It Sings" finds Costello treading as close as he's ever come to the utterly guileless, a state that suits the perpetual cynic surprisingly well. Likewise, "Let Me Tell You About Her," with its flugelhorn-daubed melody, burbles with the excitement of new love -- albeit with a healthy dose of that patented Declan wordplay. Think of it as the calm after the storm kicked up by When I Was Cruel. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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