Album Reviews
Despite this, the record boasts the sweetly deceptive appeal of a rummage sale. Indeed, its very lack of system (no chronological or other order, no dating of songs) promises discoveries, bargains and an occasional gem amid the dross. The gem here is Costello's classic "(I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea," from the English version of This Year's Model (and released in the U.S. on the Americathon soundtrack). With its stuttering, shorthand guitar lick, its abrupt, shuddering bass and its trenchant, trend-mocking words, "(I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea" is so good that it throws the entire LP off-balance. Next to it, most of the other Nick Lowe-produced Elvis Costello and the Attractions numbers (i.e., the bulk of Taking Liberties) seem shoddy and second-rate. The dreary melodic sameness of such cuts as "Night Rally," "Tiny Steps," "Sunday's Best" and "Wednesday Week"they all sound like you've heard them before, done better under different titles simply emphasizes their glib, smug lyrics. There's nothing threatening about either the National Front of "Night Rally" or the Tory hypocrites of "Sunday's Best," because the dynamite has been defused by buffoonish waltz arrangements and leaden ironies ("Blame it all upon the darkies").
More successful are "Clean Money" (an early, raveup draft of Get Happy!!'s "Love for Tender"), the starkly emotional "Big Tears" and "Girls Talk." Though Dave Edmunds' cocky, rowdy, Repeat When Necessary cover version of "Girls Talk" is often considered definitive, Costello restores the tune's paranoiac underpinnings with the nervous quaver of his voice and soft keyboard parts that echo like footfalls. Edmunds' frustration might have seemed half-funny, but when Costello moans, "Can't you talk any louder," you know he's hiding behind the bathroom door.
If Elvis Costello manages to reclaim "Girls Talk" (along with "Talking in the Dark," which winds upjust as on Linda Ronstadt's Mad Love an agreeable throwaway), he nearly loses his hold on "Black and White World" and "Clowntime Is Over," both of which are handled so much better on Get Happy!! that their current inclusion appears truly perverse. "Black and White World" is presented as a twangy demo tape, while "Clowntime Is Over," slowed down and robbed of its heart-stopping organ line, becomes a standard lament: a stroll through twilight instead of Get Happy!!'s contradictory plunge into darkness.
These alternate renditions and the range of material on the album as a wholemake Taking Liberties seem less like a songwriter's showcase (though it certainly proves that Costello is prolific) than a panorama of production experiments and disparate styles. Two early cuts, "Radio Sweetheart" and "Stranger in the House," are more interesting as examples of the artist's attempts to master country music than they are as compositions. At the other end of the spectrum, "Getting Mighty Crowded," a joyous romp through the Van McCoy number, sports a gritty Stax feel à la Get Happy!!
As at all rummage sales, however, there are cheapo treasures. Taking Liberties' most oddly satisfying tracks are those that can't possibly be passed off as anything but let's-fuck-around-in-the-studio memorabilia, recorded with only an engineer behind the board and Costello playing most of the instruments himself. In the bittersweet piano ballad, "Just a Memory," the singer's sad, resonant vocal turns the words ("Losing you is just a memory/Memories don't mean that much to me") into wishful thinking. In "My Funny Valentine," Elvis Costello manages a straightforward and affecting version of the Rodgers and Hart evergreen. These are the real collector's itemsCostello at his least pretentious. As he self-mockingly sings in "Hoover Factory" (a wonderfully weaving performance that sounds like an accordion crawling home to die): "It's not a matter of life or death/What is? What is?/ It doesn't matter if I take another breath/Who cares? Who cares?"
Costello closes Taking Liberties with yet another one-man-band curiosity. "Ghost Train," full of echoed effects and poignant details, is the tale of an arty couple who remain out of work despite the fact that they have "songs for every occasion." So has Elvis Costello. And isn't it lucky we let him get away with so much?
(Posted: Dec 11, 1980)
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Clean Money (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Clean Money
- Girls Talk
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Black And White World (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Talking In The Dark
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Getting Mighty Crowded (track not available in Rhapsody)
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My Funny Valentine (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Radio Sweetheart
- Balck And White World
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Sunday's Best (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Big Tears
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Talking In The Dark (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Just A Memory
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Girls Talk (track not available in Rhapsody)
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Tiny Steps (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Night Rally
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Dr. Luther's Assistant (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Stranger In The House
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Crawling To The U. S. A. (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Clowntime Is Over
- Getting Mighty Crowded
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Big Tears (track not available in Rhapsody)
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Stranger In The House (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Hoover Factory
- Tiny Steps
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Hoover Factory (track not available in Rhapsody)
- (I Don't Want To Go To) Chelsea
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Ghost Train (track not available in Rhapsody)
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Radio Sweetheart (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Dr. Luther's Assistant
- Sunday's Best
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Night Rally (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Crawling To The U.S.A.
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Wednesday Week (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Wednesday Week
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Just A Memory (track not available in Rhapsody)
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Chelsea (track not available in Rhapsody)
- My Funny Valentine
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Clowntime Is Over (track not available in Rhapsody)
- Ghost Train
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.