Monday, 29 April 2013

UNDERRATED ALBUMS # 9

                                                                
‘Its dark and dramatic narrative arc make it a powerfully thematic album of the sort that Burt Bacharach never really got around to with Hal David.’

Painted From Memory (1998)

by Elvis Costello & Burt Bacharach

During the 1990s revival of Easy Listening, the undisputed king of the genre, Burt Bacharach, once again reigned and although there were no new hits, the songs from his golden years of the late 1950s through to the early ‘70s regained their currency with a new generation. In his seventieth year, Bacharach began a new project with a collaborator more than a quarter of a century his junior*1. He and Elvis Costello had first worked together a couple of years previously on the song ‘God Give Me Strength’ which they had contributed to the film Grace Of My Heart (1996), a fictional story about a Brill Building singer-songwriter loosely based on Carole King. That song and eleven others would comprise the album, Painted From Memory.
Apart from occasional collaborations with the likes of Bob Hilliard, Mack David (Hal’s brother), Carole Bayer-Sager and Cathy Dennis, the vast majority of the extraordinary number of singles composed, arranged and produced by Bacharach – over seventy US Top 40 hits; over forty in the UK – were co-written with lyricist, Hal David. The Bacharach / David brand was a highly distinctive mark of quality and their songs feature an unusual unity of sound and style.
Costello, on the other hand, has proved himself to be one of popular music’s most eclectic characters. Coming to the fore in the late 1970s as part of The New Wave, he quickly began to experiment with different styles such as Soul and Country in albums like Get Happy! (1980) and Almost Blue (1981).  He has branched out into classical music with The Juliet Letters (1993), a collection of chamber pieces with the The Brodsky Quartet, and the ballet, Il Sogno (2004). He was also involved in jazz collaborations with singer Marian McPartland and songwriter Allen Toussaint. In addition, he worked as a producer with The Pogues, The Specials and Squeeze and has co-written songs with Paul McCartney. He has regularly contributed songs to films, such as the hit version of Charles Aznavour’s torch song, ‘She’ from Notting Hill (1999) and the Oscar-nominated ‘Scarlet Tide’ from Cold Mountain (2003). And somehow or other, he has found time to take numerous small acting parts in film and TV and has appeared as himself in high profile shows like The Simpsons, Frasier, Sesame Street and 30 Rock – not to mention hosting a US TV chat show.
 
The partnership between Rock’s Renaissance Man and The Lord Of Lounge may not, therefore have come as too much of a surprise, but Costello, on the face of it, must have been a very different prospect for Bacharach when compared to his old wordsmith, Hal David. Where David was economical and understated, Costello had frequently been verbose and flashy, his songs sometimes tending to get lost in his convoluted wordplay, but from Painted From Memory onwards, Costello develops a quieter, less busy approach. The songs are all co-credited (as is production) and Bacharach himself may have had a hand in some of the lyrics – he certainly wrote all the words on his next album, At This Time (2005) which featured not only Costello in a supporting role, but also Rufus Wainwright and – gulp – Dr. Dre. That record is nowhere near as successful as Painted From Memory, on which Bacharach wisely elected not to sing himself (thus saving listeners from the tuneless croak he occasionally indulges in on his solo outings).
 
The billing on the album is intriguing: ‘Elvis Costello With Burt Bacharach’. One might have expected Bacharach’s name to have appeared first – after all, he is somewhat higher up the pop music totem pole than Costello and has age-seniority as well as the edge in terms of alphabetical order. Film stars, of course, agonize over star-billing and Paul McCartney has in recent years been subject to fits of paranoid brooding about the ‘Lennon / McCartney’ credit that appears on all Beatles records apart from their debut album (and which, apparently, Lennon persuaded him sounded better and made more sense alphabetically). Does Costello’s top billing on Painted From Memory imply that he was responsible for the lion’s share of the music and lyrics with Bacharach perhaps supervising the arrangements?*2  
In any case, proceedings open with ‘In The Darkest Place’ which should convince listeners that they are in for a high quality experience – depending, that is, on how they cope with Costello’s singing, which is something of an acquired taste. Not noted for hanging back, he grabs the song by the scruff of the neck, unafraid of pushing his powerful baritone to its limits. The song drifts in quietly though, with a flute hovering over minor chords on a piano and fades out with Costello and the girl singers sadly repeating the title phrase. In between, he wrenchingly speculates about the woman who has dropped him, reflecting that she’s probably handling their separation much better than he is.
The gentle lilt of ‘Toledo’ starts with Bacharach’s trademark flugelhorns and, compared to the album’s general air of lovelorn desperation and melancholia, features a lighter touch. Lyrically reminiscent of ’24 Hours From Tulsa’, but without its narrative clarity, the song nevertheless works well musically (it was released unsuccessfully as a single). Considering that there were upwards of eighty musicians including fifty string-players involved in the making of this album, the sonic texture is often understated, as is again the case in ‘I Still Have That Other Girl’. It is Costello’s voice that drives the rise and fall here, taking the strain in this scenario of a guilty conscience that won’t allow him to fully commit to a new relationship.
‘This House Is Empty Now’ is one of the stand-out tracks, a beautiful song with chiselled, poetic words that Costello sings both melodically and soulfully (not an easy trick to pull off). With a title like that, it is, of course, reminiscent of ‘A House Is Not A Home’, but the later song stands up well on its own merit. In another setting, the tinkling vibes, doleful fretless bass and wistful musette (a kind of cross between bagpipes and an accordion) would sound downright sappy, but here the tune and words are too strong to be undermined. The reference to ‘all our friends must choose / who they will favour, who they will lose’ has the bitter ring of experience about it as does the following verse:-
                       ‘The walls were lined with photographs
                        Remember the glass we charged with celebration’, 
                        But now I fill my life up
                        With all that I can to deaden this sensation.’
Then, on the bridges, Costello’s voice, racked with emotion, picks up the figure played by the yearning solo violin in the song’s intro:-
                         ‘Do you recognise the face
                         Reflected in that fine silver frame
                         Were you really so unhappy there?
                         You never said.’
After such heartbreak, a touch of light relief is called for and an urbane alto-sax is on hand to lead us into ‘Tears At the Birthday Party’ with its deceptively jaunty, quickstepping chorus. Lyrically, it recalls Costello’s own ‘Alison’ and ‘Indoor Fireworks’, also songs about family gatherings gone haywire. The sun then comes out in ‘Such Unlikely Lovers’ as unexpectedly as the arrival of a new love, which as well as making Costello exclaim, ‘I’m not saying there will be violins / But don’t be surprised if they appear’, also inspires him into a dash or two falsetto. It’s a lovely, breezy song and one of the more quintessentially Bacharachian in the set. 
In the rich, swelling chorus of ‘My Thief’, the narrator feels ‘almost possessed’ by a ‘glorious distress’ when his ex-partner steals back into his new life via his dreams. Lisa Taylor, one of the backing singers, provides a solo coda here to sweetly reassure him not to feel threatened because she has ‘the perfect alibi’. It’s a clever piece of work as is the following track, ‘The Long Division’, a meditation on the mathematics of The Eternal Triangle:-
                               ‘Can it be so hard to calculate -
                                That when three goes into two,
                                There’s nothing left over?’
The sultry electronic keyboards that dominate this song melt into the title track’s reflective piano and sighing wash of strings. The narrator has painted a portrait of his lost love which gazes back at him with eyes that ‘smile for someone else’. It is the sort of song – and performance - that might have found a place in one of Sinatra’s collections of blue ballads, recorded during his trials and tribulations with second wife Ava Gardner - In The Wee Small Hours (1955) say, or Frank Sinatra Sings For Only The Lonely(1958).

The fluent metre of ‘The Sweetest Punch’ carries a cleverly extended boxing metaphor in which the narrator ‘in the blue corner’ with his ‘glass jaw’ is ‘knocked out’ by that punch from the girl who ‘saw red’. He ‘dropped his guard’ and ‘didn’t see it coming’ but he does hear bells ringing out the riff which is picked up by the strings in a buoyant disco coda.
In ‘What’s Her Name Today?’, our hero, having picked himself up from the emotional canvas, embarks on a string of affairs, beating himself up along the way for taking out his heartbreak on the new conquests. The self-loathing, even at the remove of second-person narrator, is still palpable:-
           ‘Isn’t her smile reminiscent of someone else?
            Well, is it or isn't it?
            Oh, why did you decide that
            You’d punish any other girl you’d meet
            To try and make that feeling go away?’*3
The closing images are disturbingly and paradoxically dark with his latest girl ‘twisted in chiffon’ and ‘[strung] with pearls…hung up like a chandelier.’ Costello has always been fascinated by the psychopathology of romantic love and the whooshing cymbals which follow Bacharach’s rolling piano at the end of this song - another stand-out track - have a distinctly film noir feel about them.
If, by now, the impression of this being an Easy Listening album has not quite dispelled, then ‘God Give Me Strength’ should finish the job conclusively. Despite the title, we don’t really see the narrator turning to religion. Rather, having finally realised that he will never get over the great lost love of his life, he tries to summon up the commitment to put her behind him and rise above his despair and jealousy. 
But as the song draws to a close, the bile rises again and hardens into the conviction that ‘she becomes my enemy’. The tortured image of his replacement – from whose shirt the narrator ‘was washed out like a lip-print’ appears and, unequivocably, he ‘want[s] him to hurt’. The air of gloomy reconcilement to the way of things apparent earlier in the song is overturned by the bitter resentment and burning jealousy that Costello conjured up in ‘I Want You’, his harrowing masterpiece from a decade earlier on Blood & Chocolate (1986). After this last eruption, we leave him forlornly murmuring over and again, ‘wipe her from my memory’ as the steady, sorrowful horns fade away.
Painted From Memory is a romantic song-cycle about the end of a relationship. Its dark and dramatic narrative arc make it a powerfully thematic album of the sort that Burt Bacharach never really got round to with Hal David. Their partnership will be remembered for all those great, inimitable singles, rather than any particular album.
This record is a more than worthy addition to that legacy. Had he been around in the 1960s, Elvis Costello may well have handled some of those Bacharach / David classics with aplomb, although whether he would have rivalled Dionne Warwick, Dusty Springfield and Scott Walker is a moot point. No matter – this fine album could not have been made by any other artist*4 in collaboration with Bacharach – and it may yet prove to be one of the best of both their careers.

N. B.

*1 - The title track’s strings were arranged by the even more venerable Johnny Mandel (b. 1925), whose long CV includes Frank Sinatra and Duke Ellington.
*2 - When Costello reassembled his most successful backing band, The Attractions, for his album, Brutal Youth (1994) in a quest to recapture the distinctive sound of his early recordings, he neglected to credit them as ‘The Attractions’ anywhere on the packaging.
Ex-Attraction and long-time Costello associate, Steve Nieve, is one of several keyboardists on Painted From Memory. Costello is heard on the album purely as a vocalist; only one song, the title track, features a guitar solo (and a pretty ordinary one by Dean Parks at that). Costello’s own highly effective guitar-playing seems to have been deemed surplus to requirements, but then, Bacharach has never demonstrated much interest in the guitar as a instrument…
*3 - ‘reminiscent / Well, is it or isn’t it?’ How about that for a rhyme!
*4 - There is a Jazz version of this album – Bill Frisell’s The Sweetest Punch (1999) – which features Costello and another singer, Cassandra Wilson on a couple of tracks.

STOP PRESS - According to the Sept. 2013 issue of Mojo magazine, Costello and Bacharach are 'currently writing new songs...for a stage version of...Painted From Memory.'

                                                       c. 2013 IGR

 

 

 

 

 

 

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