The Delivery Man Elvis Costello

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/21/2004
  • Sales Rank: 87,205
  • Label: LOST HIGHWAY
  • UPC: 602498624296
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

With all his recent forays into pop standards and classical music, it's been easy to forget that Elvis Costello can be one of the most urgent rock singer-songwriters of his generation. That's the point he confirms again and again on The Delivery Man, his most aggressive album in ages. That's evident in the blistering opener, "Button My Lip," which churns with the same sort of pugnacity that permeated Costello's earliest offerings, but it's just as important a component in songs that don't simply explode. "Monkey to Man," for instance, conjures up images of a Mississippi roadhouse with its call-and-response vocals and stinging, bluesy guitar riffs, while "There's a Story in Your Voice" continues the south-of-the-Mason-Dixon motif with plenty of honky-tonk attitude and a fiery guest vocal turn by Lucinda Williams. Costello's long-standing fascination with country music shapes several of the disc's tracks, most obviously the pedal steel–driven "Heart Shaped Bruise" -- a duet with Emmylou Harris -- and "Needle Time," which seems to be a particularly pointed (no pun intended) missive directed at Cait O'Riordan, Costello's ex. While it's definitely rough around the edges, The Delivery Man is also warm enough to offer some comfort between the body blows -- a fine combination, indeed. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Delivery Manby Anonymous

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September 26, 2004: For those who love Costello but have been dissapointed by the lack of a recent "great'' album, your wait is over. This one is a treasure. It's a roots album that is as urgent as a roadhouse gig but containing so much texture, it weaves deeper with each listening. And you can put this on the small list of current cds that don't need a "skip track'' click.

Delivery Manby Anonymous

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September 21, 2004: Elvis Costello remains a great voice in modern music striking out in new directions and crafting music that will be long lived. However, in the present recording, billed as a step back into rock and roll, and, incorporating some of my favorite artists like Lucinda Williams and Emmylou Harris, I keep asking myself 'why did he make this record'? There is so little here to get excited about and the quality of the singing, to my ear, is 2nd rate. This reminds me of a recording done for contractual purposes, not a work of art or love. For once, I'd like to see a realistic critique appear instead of the usual hype that magazines put out to keep the industry rolling along. Elvis, you can do a lot better than this. We deserve it!