My Aim Is True

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Total Tracks: 48   Total Length: 132:50

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

12.27.10
A statement of purpose from a very smart, very articulate, festringly angry songwriter
2007 | Label: Elvis Costello Catalog

The legend goes that when the London independent label Stiff Records announced that it was open for business and accepting demo tapes, a struggling young songwriter named Declan MacManus (formerly of the not-very-successful pub-rock band Flip City) was the first to drop his off. Well, thought Stiff's owners, maybe all the tapes we get will be this good. It quickly became clear that they weren't, and MacManus — renamed "Elvis Costello" and outfitted with a huge pair of Buddy Holly glasses, in the hopes of getting some attention — was the first signing to Stiff. A handful of hasty studio sessions with a transplanted American band called Clover (minus their singer/harmonica player, Huey Lewis) yielded Costello's first album.

My Aim Is True is one of the all-time great debut albums: a statement of purpose from a very smart, very articulate, festeringly angry songwriter who's inhaled the history of rock 'n' roll and country music, and is spitting it all back out laced with hydrochloric acid. The chief source of his problems is girls — "I said 'I'm so happy I could die'/ She said 'drop dead' and left with another guy," goes one zinger — but by the end of the… read more »

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WOW!!

schmo

The album that started it all. It still upsets me that when this was released, the band "Peaches & Herb" won Best new artist for 1977. Critics...

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Icon: Elvis Costello

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

Smart, angry and mercurial, Elvis Costello is one of the greatest living songwriters; for better or worse, he knows it. The man with the big spectacles (born Declan MacManus) is an exile everywhere he goes: an Englishman whose strongest work owes its greatest debts to American country and R&B; a new wave star who hated the term and the scene and has spent a lot of the latter half of his career working with classical… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Given that Universal’s 2007 deluxe edition is the third expanded reissue of My Aim Is True, it is a reasonable question to ask whether hardcore fans need to bother with buying the album for a fourth time (or a fifth or sixth, depending how many LPs wore out before CDs) — to ask whether this double-disc reissue offers anything that the previous double-disc reissue on Rhino, released just six years before, does not, since that Rhino edition had only four cuts on it that weren’t on the first expanded edition from Demon/Rykodisc in 1993, suggesting that there might not be much in the vaults that Elvis Costello wanted to release. As it turns out, Universal’s 48-track deluxe edition of Elvis’ 1977 debut has a whopping 29 unreleased tracks, most of them coming in the form of a concert at the Nashville Rooms on August 7, 1977, the entirety of which is on the second disc, along with five songs from the soundcheck, four of which they didn’t play in the main gig. The other unreleased cuts are demos recorded at Pathway Studios before the debut album was cut. There are eight of these, all but one previously unreleased (“Welcome to the Working Week” surfaced on the Rock and Roll Music comp released earlier in 2007), among them are four previously unheard tunes: “Blue Minute,” “Call on Me,” “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” and “I Hear a Melody.” None of these are forgotten classics, but none of them are bad — they’re solid, tuneful, clever pub rock that share the same sound and sensibility of the 13 songs that made the finished album, but they’re just not as good. They are certainly worthwhile additions to this expanded edition, as is the excellent live second disc, an energetic, thoroughly entertaining show that contains most of My Aim Is True and a good chunk of tunes that would show up on This Year’s Model the following year. Appropriately, the concert serves as a bridge between the two albums: it’s rougher and rowdier than the debut, but it’s not nearly as frenzied, frazzled, and furious as Model — the sensibility is much closer to the pumped-up pub rock of My Aim Is True, only without the polish it received in the studio. So there’s plenty of new music here, all of it good-to-excellent — so what is there to complain about? Mainly, that there are nine songs orphaned on the Rhino expanded edition, including all the “Honky Tonk” demos Elvis recorded in his bedroom that were later aired on Charlie Gillett’s BBC show Honky Tonk. Among these are four songs not available elsewhere — “Cheap Reward,” “Jump Up,” “Wave a White Flag,” “Poison Moon” — and their absence is regrettable, but they’re not as lamented as the lack of the B-side “I Just Don’t Know What to Do with Myself,” the alternate “Dallas Version” of “Less Than Zero,” and the Flip City demo “Imagination (Is a Powerful Deceiver),” which is among the best of his early material not cut for My Aim Is True. Although these two discs are packed — and they do include the early alternate versions of “No Action” and “Living in Paradise,” plus “Radio Sweetheart” and “Stranger in the House,” two flat-out classics that weren’t on the debut because they were too country — it’s hard not to be a bit irked that this deluxe edition falls just short of being definitive because of their absence (and the absence of any new or recycled liner notes, for that matter; maybe Costello is tired of writing liners, or saving all future reminiscences for a memoir), because that means any hardcore fan will need to keep two double-disc versions of My Aim Is True in their collection. And let’s face it, hardcore fans are the audience that would buy a double-disc reissue of an album, whether it’s once or twice. And this 2007 deluxe edition has enough great unheard music to make it worth the investment for hardcore fans, since there is no question at all that they will enjoy this second disc immensely, but whether they enjoy it enough to purchase the album all over again? That’s all a matter of personal taste, really, or perhaps personal finances. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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