
Elvis Costello
Detour-Live at Liverpool Philharmonic Hall
(Eagle Vision)
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Phase three of Elvis Costelloโs trilogy reviewing his life and career follows a biography (Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink) and the similarly titled double disc overview of his forty year catalog. ย This stripped down, partly solo gig caught in Liverpool โ one of his childhood homes โย is a two hour concert recorded on the titular tour.
Costelloโs in a talkative, generally jocular mood, telling occasionally awkward stories of his life and music, playing guitar along with some piano, and cherry picking hits and misses โ old, new with a few covers — from his bulging, impressively deep and diverse catalog. He initially performs in front of an oversized TV screen that floats lyrics, quotes and pictures occasionally reflecting the songs. Later he moves inside that TV, which functions as a stage, to close the show.
While there is no doubt of his dedication to the solo concept, some of this works better than the rest. Although he was the lone guitarist in his Attractions (later Imposters) band, Costelloโs playing has a rudimentary, boxy sound that doesnโt do many of the songs during the performanceโs first half justice. He also has a tendency to sing slightly behind the beat, a mannerism that is far more obvious, and annoying, when his is the only accompaniment. ย Itโs encouraging to hear him dig deep and extricate lesser known gems such as โWatch Your Stepโ (from the Trust album), but the song doesnโt connect without Steve Nieveโs playful keyboards and Pete Thomasโ crisp drums. Slower ballads such as โShipbuildingโ and โWhen I Was Cruel No. 2โ fare better. Yet a noisy version of โWatching the Detectivesโ where he creates live onstage overdubs is messy and overlong. Costello aficionados will appreciate the relatively rare โGhost Trainโ getting an airing.
Sisters Rebecca and Megan Lovell of Larkin Poe join for most of the second half which improves things considerably. They add much needed musical variety with lap steel guitar and mandolin that provides a fuller, livelier sound, especially on the already frisky โPads, Paws, and Claws.โ Costello also pulls out a few nuggets from his 2014 Bob Dylan/Lost on the River Basement Tapes project after running down โPeace, Love and Understandingโ on this 26-track gig.
Costello fans will eat it up, but there is little doubt many of these songs sound better and more exciting with a full band. That makes this an interesting but far from essential addition to his extensive resume, although itโs a must for those who have followed Costelloโs musical peaks and valleys since 1977. But itโs far from the first choice you would point Costello neophytes to, for them to enjoy or understand his fascinating, often inspiring and eclectic career arc.







