Biography
Costello was given only twenty-four hours of studio time to record his first album, and was backed by an American country-western bar band named Clover (their lead singer at the time, who didn't participate in the sessions, was Huey Lewis). Two singles, "Less Than Zero" and "Alison," were released with little fanfare. In a desperate attempt to secure a distribution deal, Costello strapped a Pignose amplifier on his back and played in front of the Hilton in London, where a CBS Records international convention was taking place. He was soon arrested, but he signed with the label.
His first album, titled My Aim Is True, was released in 1977 on Columbia, and was immediately hailed as one of the finest debuts in rock history. It was embraced by the new wave and punk underground scene for its energy and scathing, cynical observations on relationships and sexual misadventures (Costello said at the time his motivation came from "revenge and guilt"); critics loved it for its literacy and eclectic musical ideas, and went so far as to vote it "Album of the Year" in Rolling Stone's annual poll. Costello assembled a backing band called the Attractions and began touring America, where he managed to anger the staff of Saturday Night Live by replacing "Less Than Zero" with "Radio, Radio" (the band played the opening strains of the former and without stopping, launched into the latter, a scathing indictment of radio, the music industry, and for that moment, U.S. network television).
My Aim Is True was followed by the harder-edged and higher-charting This Year's Model (the Attractions' studio debut), which included the radio staple "Pump It Up." His next album, Armed Forces, was originally titled Emotional Fascism, which neatly summed up the album's content The band returned to England not knowing if they could ever tour America again, and as a reaction to the whole debacle, they ironically titled their new album Get Happy!! In quick succession, Costello released Almost Blue, a "country record" of Nashville standards, and Trust, in which he returned, somewhat unsuccessfully, to pop. His next album, Imperial Bedroom, was hailed by the critics as a pop masterpiece in the same vein as the Beatles' and Beach Boys' best work, but follow-ups Punch the Clock, with its single "Everyday I Write The Book," and Goodbye Cruel World, with the Daryl Hall duet "The Only Flame in Town," were less ambitious, and Costello seemed in disarray. By 1986, both his marriage and his band had begun to disintegrate. He recorded King of America with the Confederates, a group of accomplished session musicians, a few of whom had at one time backed the other Elvis. Costello turned his confusion into an advantage for the tour that followed, performing with the Confederates, the Attractions, and as a solo performer. He and the Attractions were able to hang together through Blood and Chocolate, but after that, he abruptly left the band to pursue a solo career. He also left his wife and married Caitlin O'Riordan, former bassist of the Pogues. In 1991, he released Mighty Like a Rose, which completed his break with the past; he sported a new look and performed songs that Rolling Stone called (ambitious and adventurous. Costello was even more adventurous on his next album, The Juliet Letters (1993): he worked with the Brodsky Quartet in a collaboration that mixed pop with chamber music

























Plus