ELVIS IS KING
Concert review: Elvis Costello with
Steve NieveRoyce Hall,
UCLAWednesday, 3rd March
2004Elvis was
irreducibly himself at UCLA’s Royce Hall Wednesday night, crooning his way
through one of the most remarkable catalouges in pop: his own. Though his
current tour is more-or-less a promotional outing for
North,
his collection of Only
the Lonely-style downbeat
ballads, he stayed true to his in-concert M.O., performing an expansive set that
drew from nearly every chapter of his songbook without once succumbing to
routine.
 
Portrait of the Artist, All Grown
UpConcert review:
Elvis Costello with Steve
NieveRoyce Hall,
UCLAWednesday, 3rd March
2004by Chris
Klimek"I feel
like Robert Donat in
Goodbye Mr.
Chips," said Elvis Costello
at UCLA's Royce Hall Wednesday night, joking about his 2002-3 tenure as the
University's Artist in Residence. Whomever he felt like, he was irreducibly
himself,
crooning his way through 29
selections from his catalogue, one of the largest and most varied in pop. Though
his current tour is more-or-less a promotional outing for
North,
his collection of Only
the Lonely-style downbeat
ballads, he stayed true to his in-concert M.O., performing an expansive set that
drew from nearly every chapter of his songbook
without once succumbing to routine.
Ironically, it was a
boor’s demand for one of his seminal sorta-hits that conjured the
“angry Elvis” persona he has spent the last 20 years of his
quarter-century career trying to escape. The anonymous jerk bayed out the title
“Radio
Radio” as the final chords of “Fallen,” one of the
delicate
North
cuts, were still echoing through the hall. “Amazing that we had to come
all the way to Los Angeles to find an arsehole like you,” Elvis told the
heckler. He quickly regained his composure, if not his calm, subjecting the man
to several more barbs in the show’s second hour, all of them far wittier
than the
first.Perhaps
relishing the taste of confrontation, Elvis segued into a lengthy reading of
God’s
Comic that included venomous
riffs on — in ascending order of aversion — Cher, modern country
music, and Dick
Cheney. (The veep was in the same hotel as Elvis on the last tour
stop, in Florida.) “This song proposes a view of the afterlife that is
not, strictly speaking, theologically
correct,”
Elvis told us. “I checked with Mel Gibson.” It was a remarkable
performance, proving yet again that Elvis does funny as well as he does bitter.
Later, when introducing a solo ukulele (!) version of “The Scarlet
Tide,” his Cold
Mountain song that lost its
Oscar last weekend to Annie
Lennox’s
Return of the
King
number, he scowled, “Fucking Hobbits.” After a
moment’s pause, he reproached himself: “Now that’s no way to
talk about Phil Collins.”
At the age of 50,
Elvis is more compelling than ever as a live performer, but his powerful pipes
and superb material are only part of the reason. More important than either of
those is his willingness to take risks in front of an audience. He makes up a
new set list every night.
Any
of the literally hundreds of songs he’s written may be heard, not to
mention the two or three left-field cover versions he typically includes.
(Encores for Wednesday night’s concert included “The Dark End of the
Street,” made popular by Gram Parsons — a
real
country singer — and “You’ll Never Walk Alone.” Yes, the
Rodgers and Hammerstein one.) He has so many songs in his head that he
couldn’t possibly rehearse them all, which means that individual
performances are not always perfect. This is a small price for an audience to
pay to avoid the tedium of being able to guess what three-quarters of the set
will be before the band has played at note. Rock and roll has never been and
should never be about perfection. It isn’t synchronized swimming. It
isn’t Miss
Saigon. It’s about
bringing genuine emotion to
this
performance, on
this
stage, for
this
audience, right
now.
Of course, there are
those — audience members and some artists, too — who believe that
buying a concert ticket should be just like dropping a quarter in the jukebox.
To which I reply that anyone who is only interested in hearing an artist’s
played-to-death singles should stay home. CD players and iPods
— not to mention Clear
Channel FM playlists — give the listener absolute power to
prevent accidental exposure to something new. The difference between watching an
entertainer and watching an
artist
is that the artist will require you to
surrender
that comfort. Part of their art is choosing which songs they will play for you,
and in what sequence. This is especially true of pop musicians like Costello,
who have dared to evolve past the songs they wrote 25 or 30 years ago. There
will always be singers
who have no ambition beyond financing their alimony payments through
helping after reheated helping of the same half-dozen hits they wrote in their
twenties. (And I
like
the Rolling Stones, for crying out
loud.)Of course,
dealing with a performer who is truly in the moment is a two-way street:
I’ve seen Elvis end shows after 90 minutes when the audience
didn’t respond demonstrably to what he was doing. At Royce Hall
last week, the enthusiastic crowd prompted him to stretch the show to
two-and-a-quarter hours. I’ll bet that even the “Radio Radio”
guy went home happy, if he had the balls to stick around. For his
third
encore set, Elvis traded in his acoustic for a Stratocaster. Despite a technical
snafu that required a walk-on appearance from his guitar technician, Elvis
partied like it was 1979, landing the one-two punch of “Pump It Up”
and, yes, “Radio Radio” — a number never more timely than in
the
Clear Channel era. After that he bid us goodnight with a tender
“Dark End of the Street,” coaxing the audience to sing the refrain
along with him. When one loud-voiced guy near the front rows sang the opening
line of “Allison” — not at all badly, it must be said —
Elvis just waved him off.The
Set:01
4502 Green
Shirt03 Brilliant
Mistake04 Shot with His Own
Gun05 This House Is Empty
Now06 You Left Me in the
Dark07 Someone Took the
Words Away08 Home
Truth09 Indoor
Fireworks10 No
Wonder11 You Turned to
Me12
Fallen13 God's
Comic14 Sleep of the
Just15
Shipbuilding16 (What's So
Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and
Understanding?ENCORE
ONE17 Either Side of the
Same Town18 When It
Sings19
Still20 Can You Be
True?21 God Give Me
StrengthENCORE
TWO22 Inch by
Inch/Fever23 Almost
Blue24 I'm in the Mood
AgainENCORE
THREE25 The Scarlet Tide
26 You'll Never Walk
Alone27 Pump It
Up28 Radio
Radio29 The Dark End of the
Street
Posted: Thu - March 4, 2004 at 12:27 PM
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Published On: Oct 05, 2004 12:33 PM
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