Staff Pick
Clocking in at a whopping 688 pages and covering his entire life and career, Elvis Costello's memoir is not light on detail. Unfaithful Music and Disappearing Ink is the funny, moving, unique story of one of the best pop musicians working today (and, somewhat unfairly, he can tell stories and craft prose almost as well as he can write music). Recommended By Jill O., Powells.com
Synopses & Reviews
Born Declan Patrick MacManus, Elvis
Costello was raised in London and Liverpool, grandson of a trumpet
player on the White Star Line and son of a jazz musician who became a
successful radio dance-band vocalist. Costello went into the family
business and before he was twenty-four took the popular music world by
storm.
Costello continues to add to one of the most intriguing
and extensive songbooks of our day. His performances have taken him from
strumming a cardboard guitar in his parents’ front room to fronting a
rock and roll band on our television screens and performing in the
world’s greatest concert halls in a wild variety of company. Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink
describes how Costello’s career has endured for almost four decades
through a combination of dumb luck and animal cunning, even managing the
occasional absurd episode of pop stardom.
This memoir, written
entirely by Costello, offers his unique view of his unlikely and
sometimes comical rise to international success, with diversions through
the previously undocumented emotional foundations of some of his
best-known songs and the hits of tomorrow. It features many stories and
observations about his renowned cowriters and co-conspirators, though
Costello also pauses along the way for considerations of the less
appealing side of fame.
Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink
provides readers with a master’s catalogue of a lifetime of great
music. Costello reveals the process behind writing and recording
legendary albums like My Aim Is True, This Year’s Model, Armed Forces, Almost Blue, Imperial Bedroom, and King of America.
He tells the detailed stories, experiences, and emotions behind such
beloved songs as “Alison,” “Accidents Will Happen,” “Watching the
Detectives,” “Oliver’s Army,” “Welcome to the Working Week,” “Radio
Radio,” “Shipbuilding,” and “Veronica,” the last of which is one of a
number of songs revealed to connect to the lives of the previous
generations of his family.
Costello recounts his collaborations
with George Jones, Chet Baker, and T Bone Burnett, and writes about
Allen Toussaint’s inspiring return to work after the disasters following
Hurricane Katrina. He describes writing songs with Paul McCartney, the
Brodsky Quartet, Burt Bacharach, and The Roots during moments of intense
personal crisis and profound sorrow. He shares curious experiences in
the company of The Clash, Tony Bennett, The Specials, Van Morrison, and
Aretha Franklin; writing songs for Solomon Burke and Johnny Cash; and
touring with Bob Dylan; along with his appreciation of the records of
Frank Sinatra, David Bowie, David Ackles, and almost everything on the
Tamla Motown label.
Costello chronicles his musical
apprenticeship, a child’s view of his father Ross MacManus’ career on
radio and in the dancehall; his own initial almost comical steps in folk
clubs and cellar dive before his first sessions for Stiff Record, the
formation of the Attractions, and his frenetic and ultimately notorious
third U.S. tour. He takes readers behind the scenes of Top of the Pops and Saturday Night Live, and his own show, Spectacle,
on which he hosted artists such as Lou Reed, Elton John, Levon Helm,
Jesse Winchester, Bruce Springsteen, and President Bill Clinton.
The idiosyncratic memoir of a singular man, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink is destined to be a classic.
Review
“Plenty of tales to keep the pages turning. Readers will be fascinated
by Costello’s stories…his book feels like a discussion between friends
over a pint.” Publishers Weekly
Review
“Costello’s prose cuts with the same spiky wit and observational power
as his well-known lyrics…packed with great lines, vivid anecdotes…a
treat for his many fans.” Kirkus Reviews
Review
“This is a big book, literally, by one of the best rockers in the
business. Given the singular, and eclectic, nature of his career, it is
no surprise that Elvis Costello’s anecdotal autobiography is an
idiosyncratic journey through his music and the people and places that
have inspired him…A must for Costello fans everywhere.” Booklist (starred review)
Review
“With an encyclopedic knowledge and appreciation for, and deep love of,
music, and with an expressive power and heart, Costello’s memoir will
take its place in the highest echelons of the genre.” Library Journal (starred review)
Review
“Long one of music’s wittiest, smartest, and most perceptive lyricists,
Costello has done his legacy proud with his new book, which, thankfully,
goes far beyond his angry-young-man days, most movingly in its frequent
reminiscences about the relationship between the singer and his
musician father.” New York Magazine
Review
“Often brilliant and wholly idiosyncratic.” David Ulin, Los Angeles Times
Review
“In a world littered with uneven (and largely ghosted) celebrity
memoirs, “Disappearing Ink” is a beautifully written revelation. Dare I
blaspheme by declaring I liked it even more than the excellent memoirs
produced by Bob Dylan and Keith Richards? Costello embraces the basic
qualities of good storytelling: the use of detail, tension and
humor....The book is also a gold mine for Costello obsessives who have
spent decades dissecting and analyzing his every lyrical zinger. But
it’s not just for fans, more “Angela’s Ashes” than Motley Crue’s “The
Dirt.” “Unfaithful Music” is a lyrical tale that stretches across
generations, geography and a century of popular song. The book serves as
both a musical and personal anthropology.“ Geoff Edgers, The Washington Post
Review
“….Some of the best writing — funny, strange, spiteful, anguished — we’ve ever had from an important musician.” Dwight Garner, New York Times
About the Author
Elvis Costello is a Grammy award-winning musician whose career spans almost four decades. A prolific singer-songwriter, Costello has released several critically-acclaimed albums, and in 2003 was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.