London Telegraph, June 3, 2006: Difference between revisions

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Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint
Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint
The River In Reverse
The River In Reverse
Verve Forecast, £12.99
Verve Forecast, £12.99


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Neil McCormick
Neil McCormick
==External links==
*[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Telegraph.co.uk]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Daily_Telegraph Wikipedia: The Daily Telegraph]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sunday_Telegraph Wikipedia: The Sunday Telegraph ]
[[Category:Bibliography|Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]
[[Category:Bibliography 1993|Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]
[[Category:Newspaper articles|Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]
[[Category:The Telegraph| Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]
[[Category:Album reviews|Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]
[[Category:The River In Reverse|Daily Telegraph 2006-06-03]]

Revision as of 02:38, 8 October 2013

The Daily Telegraph , June 3 '06

Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint

The River In Reverse

Verve Forecast, £12.99

In another story of the musical aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, 68-year-old New Orleans songwriting legend Allen Toussaint washed up in New York, where he fell in with the comparatively sprightly 51-year-old Elvis Costello.

The two performed at some benefit concerts, whereupon the irrepressibly enthusiastic and possibly workaholic Costello (this is his second album this year) thought it was about time someone recorded a Toussaint songbook, and it might as well be him. Backed by a classy band (Costello's Imposters, supplemented by a horn section under Toussaint's direction), they have created a rich, warm, live-sounding concoction that is more than mere tribute. If these are hardly the definitive versions - Costello's sometimes rough, overwrought vocals sitting uneasily with Toussaint's light, funky touch - the album takes flight on a clutch of soulful originals, on which two great songwriters tackle the aftermath of disaster, coming on like punk soul brothers.

Anger and disgust are among Costello's strongest emotional suits, and threatening horns drive him along as he sneers at political betrayal on Broken Promise Land, while Toussaint's delicate piano underpins the hopeless bafflement of Ascension Day.

Neil McCormick


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