Negative Reaction, August 1977: Difference between revisions

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<center> Jon Romney </center>
<center> Jon Romney </center>
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Negative Reaction, No. 3, August-September 1977 -- Jon Romney profiles Elvis Costello and Nick Lowe and reviews My Aim Is True.
Last Wednesday, Elvis Costello played to a capacity audience, compressed, sweating and ready to go, squeezed in like hot sardines in the cellar of the Hope and Anchor. The audience swayed to the best, sang along and shouted out for their favourite songs. It was his second ever London performance. Elvis Costello had made, to date, one album and three singles, all of which appear on the album. Also, no-one knows a thing about him.
 
So don’t be too surprised if this time next week, he’s the hottest new property in the country.  What really surprised me, though, was the man’s attitude to his own success.  But let’s start at the beginning.
 
To begin with, here’s our Elvis Costello interview in its entirety, and the story behind it. We turned up early at the Hope, angling for interviews, and snuck downstairs to find Elvis hunched over the show’s running order with bass man Bruce Thomas. If you’ve seen his photos, you’ll know he looks offbeat, but it isn’t much resemblance. Elvis is a lot younger than he looks, but at the same time, looks a lot older than he is (you got me?), resembling a learned turtle in large-scale hornrims. He manages at once to be gangling and stocky, and to cap the effect, his top half sports an immaculate dark jacket and waistcoat with dark shirt while underneath is a scrubby pair of drains with hefty boots. But if you think he looks funny, wait’ll you see what he had to say for himself after flicking through a copy of NR No2 to see if we’d given him a good review.  
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Negative Reaction

Fanzines

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Sweatin' it out with Nick and Elvis


Jon Romney

Last Wednesday, Elvis Costello played to a capacity audience, compressed, sweating and ready to go, squeezed in like hot sardines in the cellar of the Hope and Anchor. The audience swayed to the best, sang along and shouted out for their favourite songs. It was his second ever London performance. Elvis Costello had made, to date, one album and three singles, all of which appear on the album. Also, no-one knows a thing about him.

So don’t be too surprised if this time next week, he’s the hottest new property in the country. What really surprised me, though, was the man’s attitude to his own success. But let’s start at the beginning.

To begin with, here’s our Elvis Costello interview in its entirety, and the story behind it. We turned up early at the Hope, angling for interviews, and snuck downstairs to find Elvis hunched over the show’s running order with bass man Bruce Thomas. If you’ve seen his photos, you’ll know he looks offbeat, but it isn’t much resemblance. Elvis is a lot younger than he looks, but at the same time, looks a lot older than he is (you got me?), resembling a learned turtle in large-scale hornrims. He manages at once to be gangling and stocky, and to cap the effect, his top half sports an immaculate dark jacket and waistcoat with dark shirt while underneath is a scrubby pair of drains with hefty boots. But if you think he looks funny, wait’ll you see what he had to say for himself after flicking through a copy of NR No2 to see if we’d given him a good review.

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Negative Reaction, No. 3, August-September 1977


Jon Romney profiles Elvis Costello and Nick Lowe and reviews My Aim Is True.

Images

Pages 4-5.
Pages 4-5.

Cover.
1977-08-00 Negative Reaction cover.jpg

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