eMusic Review 0
Costello's longstanding fascination with the music of the American South paid off on this raw, lively album, recorded in Mississippi with the Imposters. Originally intended as a linked sequence of narrative songs, it ended up ditching that plan — probably a wise idea — and incorporating some other material that was kicking around Costello's repertoire. ("The Judgment," in fact, had surfaced a couple of years earlier on a Solomon Burke album; "The Scarlet Tide" had first appeared sung by Alison Krauss on the Cold Mountain soundtrack.)
The result is the loosest, most playful record Costello had made in a dog's age. The songs respond to soul music in a distinctly different way from Get Happy!! — "Monkey to Man" is an answer song to Dave Bartholomew's "The Monkey" (which Costello recorded around the same time), and "Either Side of the Same Town," a "Dark End of the Street"-style heart-tugger originally written for Howard Tate, is blessed with one of Elvis's finest latter-day vocals. It's great to hear Costello's collaborators getting some latitude, too. The galvanizing beat of "Bedlam" is a welcome reminder of what drummer Pete Thomas can do when he feels like showing off. Lucinda Williams takes over… read more »