Complicated Shadows (63 page)

Read Complicated Shadows Online

Authors: Graham Thomson

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

1
. The
Guardian
, 1 March 1996

2
. Programme notes for
Il Sogno

3
. Interview with Damon Coward, Bologna, printed in
Beyond Belief
, October 2000

4
.
Dallas Observer
, 5 April 2001

5
.
Phoenix New Times
, 12 April 2001

6
.
Expressen
, 1 December 2000

7
.
Daily Telegraph
, 15 March 2001

8
.
Independent On Sunday
, 11 February 2001

9
. Interview with Damon Coward, Bologna, printed in
Beyond Belief
, October 2000

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

1
.
Boston Globe
, 21 April 2002

2
.
Mix
, 1 May 2002

3
. ibid

4
. ibid

5
. Interview with author, August 2002

6
.
Mix,
1 May 2002

7
.
Word
, April 2003

8
.
Detroit News
, 22 March 2002

9
. ibid

10
.
Word
, April 2003

11
.
Daily Star
, 23 February 2003

12
.
Word,
April 2003

13
. ibid

14
.
Providence Journal Bulletin
, 11 July 2003

15
.
Guardian
, 19 September 2003

16
.
Guardian
, 30 August 2003

17
. stevenieve.com, 7 April 2004

18
.
Clarksdale Press
, 15 April 2004

19
. ASCAP Awards, 20 May 2003

Endnotes

 

 

1
. Ray Charles was later asked for his opinion on Elvis Costello’s comments, and showed the kind of maturity and restraint that few on either
side of the battle-lines had been able or willing to display. ‘Anyone could get drunk once in his life,’ said Charles. ‘Drunken talk isn’t meant to be printed in the
paper.’

2
. The family’s surname was originally spelt with the Mc- prefix, rather than Mac-, but by the time Declan’s father Ross married in 1952
it had morphed into the latter spelling, traditionally Scottish rather than Irish. This may have been an attempt to escape anti-Irish prejudice.

3
. Pat’s stint in the US is celebrated in the final verse of ‘American Without Tears’ on
King Of America
, where the
singer tenderly evokes his grandfather ‘walking the streets of New York’.

4
. The perennially popular Joe Loss Show ran on the BBC light service and later Radio One between 1933 and 1968.

5
. Beaulieu Close was firmly within the west London/Middlesex axis within which, two teenage years in Liverpool notwithstanding, Declan would spend
the remainder of his formative years and continue well into adulthood: Twickenham, Whitton, Hounslow, Roehampton, Richmond, Chiswick.

6
. The purchase is celebrated in the mathematical autobiography of ‘45’, from 2002’s
When I Was Cruel.

7
. Ross and Sara finally married in 1975, and went on to have four children: Ruari, Ronan, Liam and Kieran, who currently play in London group
Riverway.

8
. By the time Declan moved to Liverpool, his grandfather Pat had passed away.

9
. One poem ran, in part: ‘If you want to be the King/Lying on a bed of gold/Take the sceptre of the Old/Take the sword and wear the
crown/You’re in your robes and on the stairway/Looking down.’

10
. One of them ‘Maureen And Sam’, co-written with Mayes, would later turn up in rewritten form as ‘Ghost Train’ on the
New Amsterdam
EP, released in March 1980.

11
. So successful was the commercial that a Secret Lemonade Drinker fan club was set up, a R.Whites football team played their matches in pyjamas,
and there was even a Secret Lemonade Drinker handicap horse race held at Lingfield Park. In 2000, it was voted the seventh favourite advert ever in the UK.

12
. Pronounced ‘Mish’

13
. ‘Declan loved that set-up, as we all did,’ says Ken Smith. ‘I always thought The Band were the most convincing white band
doing music based on deep soul,’ Declan later agreed. ‘I thought they were the best. They kind of invented their own version of it, almost by accident. They were men, and yet they
weren’t dressing up as cowboys or anything. The sexuality was taken for granted. It wasn’t phoney.’
1

14
. The factory building was directly off the Western Avenue, and his trip on the 105 bus to and from work every day took him past an art deco
building which housed a factory that made vacuum cleaners, a journey which later found itself literally transposed into ‘Hoover Factory’.

15
. ‘Rick Danko was my absolute hero. He had a unique style,’ Declan later said. ‘It was kind of nasal and it had a little bit
of what I now realise to be country in it, but at the same time it was just so unusual to me.’
6
He could be describing himself.

16
. One night at Dingwalls, Mary had a fight with Pretender’s vocalist Chrissie Hynde. One source claims that ‘Mary could start a
fight in a telephone box’, while Bruce Thomas agrees that ‘they used to go at it a bit, sometimes in restaurants and whatever’.

17
. The song’s first line is ‘Stop thief, you’re gonna come to grief.’

18
. Declan had been a fan of singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester since his Liverpool days, and Ken Smith recalls accompanying him to see Winchester
play in London and meeting the singer afterwards.

19
. Early on, Declan stated that: ‘I don’t want to be successful so that I get a lot of money and retire. I’m just interested in
playing.’
10
Indeed, he has never been prone to the traditional rock star trappings of mansions in the country, or fleets of flash cars.
‘I don’t think money has ever been his motivating force,’ says ex-Attraction Bruce Thomas.

20
. The significance of the address would not have been lost on Declan. ‘Cypress Avenue’ is a key track on Van Morrison’s
classic 1968 album
Astral Weeks.

21
. In part, this was because he later raided many of the lyrics for future songs and wasn’t particularly keen for anyone to trace the link.
‘Cheap Reward’ would later yield the key chorus phrase for
This Year’s Model
’s ‘Lip Service’. ‘Jump Up’ was also plundered for lyrics later
in his career, when the phrase ‘last night’s obituaries’ turned up amidst the two-minute riot of ‘Luxembourg’ on 1981’s
Trust
. The lasting legacy of
‘Poison Moon’ was again a snatch of lyrics – ‘starts with fascination, it ends up like a trance’ – which finally surfaced on ‘Party Girl’, while
‘Call On Me’ was used as a launchpad for both ‘Moods For Moderns’ and ‘Lipstick Vogue’.

22
. Declan certainly would have been aware of the American singersongwriter; indeed, he nominated Hardin’s 1966 album
Hang On To A
Dream
in his ‘500 Essential Albums’ list for
Vanity Fair
magazine in November 2000.

23
. Ironically, that is exactly what happened. A little over a year later, CBS were alerted by the success of Elvis Costello in the UK and signed
him to an American deal.

24
. A companion piece to ‘Less Than Zero’, inspired by a late-night discussion with John Ciambotti at the Nashville Rooms. With its
‘Calling Mr Oswald’ refrain, Ciambotti was convinced that ‘Less Than Zero’ was about Lee Harvey Oswald and the assassination of JFK. Suitably inspired by this misreading,
Elvis wrote ‘Less Than Zero (Dallas Version)’. Ciambotti later heard the ‘Dallas Version’ in concert and allowed himself a small amount of credit. ‘Maybe I put a bug
in his ear.’

25
. He was fined £5 by the magistrate for the incorrect charge of ‘selling records in the street’. Not having enough money with
him, Elvis asked for time to pay, which he was granted.

26
. His clothes may not have helped. ‘Elvis was wearing this kind of biker outfit,’ says Wreckless Eric. ‘It got described in
one of the reviews as a “poofy biker outfit”, some sort of leather jacket and trousers combination. He only wore that once!’

27
. Elvis and The Attractions also played versions of Bacharach and David’s ‘I Just Don’t Know What To Do With Myself’to
work again!’” ; Richard Hell’s ‘Love Comes In Spurts’; and The Lovin’ Spoonful’s ‘Six O’Clock’ on the Stiff tour.

28
. The tour provided Steve Nason with his enduring stage name, after he wondered aloud what a groupie was. ‘The first few tours we did, I
was just out of school and looking for a wild time,’ he said. ‘I can’t really recall much about them.’
13
He didn’t
stay naive for long, but he would be ‘Nieve’ from then on.

29
. The US version included ‘Watching The Detectives’.

30
. The real-life protgaonists of ‘Party Girl’ never had sex, apparently because the girl’s skin lotion smelt of coconuts and
Elvis’s ardour was dimmed.

31
. Two of the songs would end up on the
New Amsterdam
EP in June 1980, while ‘Hoover Factory’ would appear on the B-side of
the ‘Clubland’ maxi-single in December 1980.

32
. These can be found on the
Sisters
album, released in 1982. The Bluebells later had a No. 1 single with ‘Young At
Heart’.

33
. Only his work on the Various Artists soundtrack for
The Courier
has ever been credited to his real name, although a one-off single
was credited to The MacManus Gang in 1987.

34
. The line, ‘If you’ll wear it proudly through the snakepits and the cat-calls’ seems to draw on Elvis and Cait’s
on-tour experiences with the band.

35
. The US tour between 15 April and 2 May again involved the Spectacular Spinning Songbook. In Washington, Elvis rigged the wheel: ‘If you
can’t cheat in Washington, D.C. where can you cheat?’, he joked.

36
. They came up with at least a dozen new songs in all: ‘My Brave Face’, ‘You Want Her Too’, ‘Don’t Be
Careless Love’, ‘That Day Is Done’, ‘Mistress And Maid’ and ‘Lovers That Never Were’ appear on McCartney’s
Flowers In The Dirt
and
Off
The Ground.
‘Playboy To A Man’, ‘So Like Candy’ and ‘Shallow Grave’ made it onto Elvis’s
Mighty Like A Rose
and
All This Useless
Beauty.
In addition, ‘I Don’t Want To Confess’, ‘25 Fingers’, ‘Tommy’s Coming Home’ and, in all probability, several more exist, but have never
been officially released.

37
. Steve Nieve and Pete Thomas became part of the house band on Jonathan Ross’s weekly TV show
The Last Resort
, while all three
Attractions were involved in session work with the reformed Madness and Andy White, among others.

38
. Spike Jones was a ‘musical comedian’ who worked in the ’30s and ’40s, assembling a group of fine musicians whom he
trained to play toilet seats or tune gunshots to C-sharp. Mixing learned instrumental virtuosity with sonic hi-jinks, they blended comedy and music in a way that was unique, funny and sometimes
slightly disquieting. Elvis seemingly recognised a similar quality in his own recent music.

39
. In the mid-’80s, Elvis stated categorically that he ‘wasn’t Irish’, but later changed his view to one of ambiguity.
‘I talk about “we Irish”,’ he later said. ‘I love to tease by virtue of my mixed nationality. I say that the problem with you English is that we’re younger,
smarter, better educated and eventually will be richer than you, because we’re not insular like you are.’
16
On 13 May, 2001 he played
U2’s ‘Please’ and his own ‘Heart-Shaped Bruise’ at the Irish Festival at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC, introducing himself as an
‘accidental Englishman’.

40
. A form of ballad.

41
. Elvis also cut a version of the Grateful Dead’s ‘Ship Of Fools’, which would be left off the final album, appearing instead
on
Deadicated
, a tribute record released in 1991.

42
. The film finally appeared in 2001 with both songs on the soundtrack. Elvis’s small role as a ‘despairing teacher in a leaky
school’ seemed to have been cut at the editing stage.

Index

 

 

 

A

Abba
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Abbey Road
(Beatles)
ref1

Aberdeen, Metro Hotel
ref1
,
ref2

Absolute Beginners
(Julian Temple film)
ref1

‘Accidents Will Happen’
ref1
,
ref2

Accidents Will Happen
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13
,
ref14
,
ref15
,
ref16

Ackles, David
ref1

Adelaide
ref1

Advancedale Management
ref1
,
ref2

Aelita, Queen of Mars
(Soviet film)
ref1

Afro Blok
ref1

Afrodiziak
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

‘After The Fall’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Aftermath
(Stones)
ref1

Against The Streams
(Tabor album)
ref1

Agnes Burnelle
ref1

Agutter, Jenny
ref1

‘Alibi’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

‘Alison’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13
,
ref14
,
ref15
,
ref16
,
ref17
,
ref18

‘All Day And All Of The Night’ (Kinks)
ref1

‘All Grown Up’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

‘All My Loving’ (Lennon/McCartney)
ref1

All-Star Irish Band
ref1

‘All The Rage’
ref1
,
ref2

‘All This Useless Beauty’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

All This Useless Beauty
,
ref1n
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

‘All You Need Is Love’ (Beatles)
ref1

‘All You Thought Of Was Betrayal’
ref1

Allen, Woody,
ref1

Allison, Mose,
ref1
,
ref2

Almeria, Spain,
ref1

‘Almost Blue’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11

Almost Blue
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

‘Almost Ideal Eyes’
ref1
,
ref2

Alpha Band, The
ref1

Altman, Robert
ref1

Amazing Rhythm Aces, The
ref1

American Beauty
(Grateful Dead)
ref1

‘American Girl’
ref1

‘American Without Tears’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7

Americanthon
(Al Jean Harmetz film)
ref1

Amsterdam
ref1
,
ref2

‘. . . And In Every Home’
ref1
,
ref2

Andersen, Hans Christian
ref1

Anderson, Clive
ref1

Andersson, Benny
ref1

Andriessen, Louis
ref1

Angel Tiger
(Tabor album)
ref1

Animal House
(National Lampoon film)
ref1

Animals, The
ref1

Anne Sofie Van Otter Meets Elvis Costello: For The Stars

(Deutsche Grammophon),
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

‘Another Saturday Night’ (Cooke)
ref1

Anti-Nazi League
ref1

Anuna
ref1

‘Any King’s Shilling’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

‘Anyone Who Had A Heart’

(Bacharach/David)
ref1

‘April In Orbit’
ref1

Aquilante, Dan
ref1

Arc Angels, The
(TV sitcom)
ref1

Archipelago studios, Pimlico
ref1
,
ref2

Arden, Don
ref1

‘Are You Afraid of Your Children?’
ref1

Armed Forces
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13
,
ref14
,
ref15
,
ref16
,
ref17
,
ref18
,
ref19

Armstrong, Louis
ref1

Asbury Park, NJ (Stone Pony at)
ref1
,
ref2

‘At Last’ (James)
ref1

Aterballetto
ref1
,
ref2

Atlanta, Georgia
ref1
,
ref2

Atlantic Records
ref1

Atlantis Studios, Stockholm
ref1

Attractions, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6n
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13
,
ref14
,
ref15
,
ref16
,
ref17

see also
Costello, Elvis

‘Armed Funk’ tour, violence of
ref1

‘Bedrooms of Britain’ tour
ref1

billing concerns
ref1

‘Clocking Across America’ tour
ref1

collective schizophrenia
ref1

death throes
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

debauchery of
ref1

drinking
ref1

drug use
ref1

‘English Mugs’ tour
ref1

hedonism at a price
ref1

inter-band chemistry
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

last time round the block
ref1

Marathon in New York (April Fool’s Day)
ref1
,
ref2

parting from Elvis
ref1

rawest and roughest
ref1

temptations of women
ref1

US, touring in
ref1

video promos
ref1

‘Wake Up Canada’ tour
ref1

well-oiled unit
ref1

‘Aubergine’
ref1

Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
(Jay Roach film)
ref1

Australia
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

‘Autumn Leaves’ (Kosma/Mercer)
ref1

‘Awesomeness’
ref1

Azavedo, Robert
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Aznavour, Charles
ref1

 

B

‘B-Flat Sonata’ (Franz Schubert)
ref1

‘Baby, It’s You’ (Bacharach/Costello)
ref1

‘Baby It’s Cold Outside’ (Loesser)
ref1

‘Baby Plays Around’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Babyface,
ref1

‘Baby’s Got A Brand New Hairdo’
ref1
,
ref2

‘Baby’s In Black’ (Beatles)
ref1

Bach, Johann Sebastian
ref1
,
ref2

Bacharach, Burt
ref1
,
ref2n
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9

‘Back On My Feet’ (McCartney)
ref1

‘Backstabbers’ (O’Jays)
ref1

Baker, Chet
ref1
,
ref2

Baker, Stephen
ref1

Balanescu, Alex
ref1

Balkana
ref1

Ball, Zoe
ref1

‘Bama Lama Bama Loo’
ref1

Band, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

‘Band Played Waltzing Matilda, The’
ref1

Bangles, The
ref1

Barbados, Blue Wave Studios
ref1

Barcelona
ref1

Barnacle, Gary
ref1

Bartoli, Cecilia
ref1
,
ref2

‘Baseball Heroes’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

‘Battered Old Bird’
ref1

Baz
ref1

BBC Maida Vale
ref1

BBC Radio London
ref1

BBC Radio One
ref1

Beach Boys, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Beat, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6

‘Beaten To The Punch’
ref1

Beatles, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8

Beatty, Warren
ref1

Bechirian, Roger
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11
,
ref12
,
ref13

‘Bedlam’
ref1

Beethoven, Ludwig Van
ref1
,
ref2

Behan, Brendan
ref1
,
ref2

‘Behind Closed Doors’ (Odell)
ref1

Belfast
ref1

Belgium
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Bell, Derek
ref1

Bell, Max
ref1

Belmont, Martin
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Belton, Ian
ref1

Benjamin, George
ref1

Bennett, Tony
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Bentham, Jeremy
ref1

Bentley, Bill
ref1

Berkeley Community Theater
ref1

Bermuda
ref1

Berry, Chuck
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Best Of Elvis Costello
(Universal)
ref1

‘Beyond Belief’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

‘Big Boys’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

‘Big Fool Of The Year, The’ (Jones)
ref1

‘Big Light, The’
ref1
,
ref2

‘Big Sister’s Clothes’
ref1
,
ref2

‘Big Tears’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Big Wheel, The
(Thomas, B.)
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Bigonzetti, Mauro
ref1

Billboard Charts
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Billboard Jazz Charts
ref1

‘Birds Will Still Be Singing, The’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Birkenhead, Merseyside
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
ref1

Bjork
ref1
,
ref2

‘Black and White World’
ref1

‘Black Sails In The Sunset’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Blackburn, Tony
ref1

Blades, Ruben
ref1

Blair, Michael
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Blake, William
ref1

‘Blame It On Cain’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5

Bleasdale, Alan
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

Blockheads, The
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3

Blonde On Blonde
(Dylan)
ref1

Blondie
ref1
,
ref2

Blood & Chocolate
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4
,
ref5
,
ref6
,
ref7
,
ref8
,
ref9
,
ref10
,
ref11

‘Blood Count’ (Strayhorn/ Ellington)
ref1

‘Blue Chair’
ref1
,
ref2
,
ref3
,
ref4

‘Blue Minute’
ref1

Blue
(Mitchell)
ref1

Bluebells, The
ref1

Blythe, Jeff
ref1

‘B-Movie’
ref1
,
ref2

Bochum Jahrhunderthalle
ref1

Bodnar, Andrew
ref1

Bologna Teatro Comunale
ref1

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