Sunday, November 17, 2024

Call him Cool Hand Elvis or Cowboy Costello...how Declan McManus' West was won...

Storytime with ol' OBG, who's going to tell you a litte about how Elvis Costello could have become a country star, years before genre exercise Almost Blue got him in a country kind of mood. The year is 1978 and My Aim Is True has come and gone. It did some business as an import disc in the US, but couldn't get a distribution deal there. Single release "Alison" also failed to chart. But wait - somebody somewhere had to adopt the song, right?! The student community of the University of Texas at Austin embraced "Alison", making it a local hit record. Which got tiny local country label Tumbleweeds Record thinking. So an inquiry of Tumbleweeds Records reaches the offices of Stiff Records. Would Elvis Costello have more country-ish songs in the vein of "Alison", to be released locally on Tumbleweeds Records, with the hopes of a grass roots movement pushing that country rock record further than the Austin area.  

Costello is in London busy working on what will be This Year's Model. But, in turn,  Elvis gets to do some thinking. The guys at Tumbleweed Records want another "Alison"? He's got that. They want more tried and true country stuff? Well, he got that, too.Kind of, sort of. And to give the Tumbleweeds records guys a whole album, he's diving into his back catalogue. Deeply back. 

Costello has two very recent, obvious contributions lying around: The fantastic, George Jones-esque (soon to be recorded as a duet with Jones!) tearjerker "Stranger In The House", that the powers to be at Stiff convinced him not to put on My Aim Is True. And he has "Radio Sweetheart", a number he cut as a demo for Dave Edmunds at the behest of Stiff Records. But two albums do not an album make. So Costello reaches back to his semi-recent past on the pub rock circuit. More explicitly, to his time with Flip City, the pub rock group that dabbled in country rock, or more precisely the kind of vaguely soul-inflected roots rock that a lot of pub rock bands were doing. And it so happens that Flip City recorded a song that sounds like an absolute dead ringer (or rather, a blueprint) of "Alison", "Imagination (Is A Powerful Deceiver)". Plus a bunch of other vaguely country-ish songs, including covers of The Amazing Rhythm Aces' "Third Rate Romance" and Dylan's "Knockin' On Heaven's Door". 

So, with the two country numbers he hasn't found room for elsewhere and the best of the Flip City stuff, Costello has the country rock record that Tumbleweeds Records wants. To sound more country, Flip City are being redubbed The Flip City Ramblers, while Mr. Costello gets of course top billing. Yet Radio Sweethearts, the resulting album, doesn't sell much outside of the faithful, and the two singles Tumbleweeds Record launches ("Imagination" and "Radio Sweetheart", are little more than turntable hits on student radio. So, Elvis' career as a country star have to wait, while he strongly rebounds with This Year's Model, paving the way for another country sojourn down the line...

Well, this is where we get back to reality, where no such record exists - until now! One Buck Records is proud to present how the first country record by Elvis Costello could have really sounded like...






10 comments:

  1. Cowboy Costello!

    https://workupload.com/file/JKm5CtUVwGJ

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  2. So, folks, what is your favorite Costello record and why?

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  3. Almost Blue but I prefer to see him live rather than listen to recorded stuff

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  4. 'This Year’s Model'
    It has solid songwriting (I like every song) and lots of energy, which I suspect was amphetamine fueled (in a good way). Probably my favorite late 70s "New Wave" record.

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  5. Brilliant!
    I don't know why but (Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes always makes me rock out.

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  6. Nice job of a little bit of revisionist history. We need more of that kind of history.

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  7. Armed Forces. EC's voice has bugged the shit out of me for years -- waaaaay too mannered -- but I've no problem with those early incendiary albums. Armed Forces is chock full of great songs -- like its two predecessors -- and the Ryko version had extra cuts, including his off-the-charts- great live-at-Hollywood-High 'Watching The Detectives'. Unbeatable!
    C in California

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  8. Did you know that The Outlaws did a version of "Miracle Man"?

    https://youtu.be/N7gaaUyIKwQ?si=V2CNPD3LSl5lL-5n

    This Year's Model is my #1

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    Replies
    1. As a matter of fact, I do/did. That's what set them apart from their Southern Rock brethren - who else would have the taste and guts to cover Elvis Costello.

      I definitely should get some Outlaws on here, they're probably my favorite in the genre, no doubt due to the high amount of country rock that Henry Paul brought to the band. When he was gone, so was that, and a good amount of the appeal of the Outlaws.

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  9. "This Year's Model" is my favorite as well but good god, "My Aim is True" has such great songs as well, just not the same "amphetamine fueled (in a good way)" energy of The Attractions.

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