Category Archives: England

Thought of the Day 8.25.12 Elvis Costello

I used to be disgusted; now I try to be amused.

–Elvis Costello

Declan Patrick MacManus was born on this day in Paddington, London, England in 1954. He is 58 years old.

Declan grew up around music. His father, Ross MacManus, was a singer for The Joe Loss Orchestra, a dance band with it’s own popular BBC Radio Show. Ross, who had to learn a new song every week for the show, brought home demo tapes to practice, and young Declan absorbed the tunes. His first recording was with his dad, the two sang for a commercial for R. White’s Lemonade.

When he was 17 he moved to Birkenhead (opposite Liverpool on the Mersey River) and started a folk duo with Allan Mayes. He formed the country rock band Flip City when he moved back to London in 1974. It was then that he took the stage name D.P. Costello. He supported himself as a computer operator and an office clerk while continuing to hone his skills as a singer, song writer and musician.

He signed with Stiff Records, and independent label out of London and changed his pseudonym to Elvis Costello.

When Elvis Costello‘s first record was released in 1977, his bristling cynicism and anger linked him with the punk and new wave explosion. …he tore through rock’s back pages taking whatever he wanted, as well as borrowing from country, Tin Pan Alley pop, reggae, and many other musical genres. Over his career, that musical eclecticism distinguished Costello‘s records as much as his fiercely literate lyrics. [Allmusic by Rovi]

The first lp, My Aim Is True had two singles, “Less Than Zero” and “Alison.” While neither initially charted “Alison” has become a classic and the album reached number 14 on the British charts.

His backing band, The Attractions, was firmly in place for his next lp, This Year’s Model. Bruce Thomas played bass, Steve Nieve played Keyboards, and Pete Thomas was the drummer, while Costello sang lead and played guitar for the group. The lp reached #4 in Brittain and #30 in the US. Armed Forces did even better with its catchy single “Oliver’s Army.”  That was followed by Get Happy!!  (1980) and Trust (1981).

He put on some country western boots and recorded with Billy Sherrill, a Nashville producer for his next lb, Almost Blue with the single “A Good Year for the Roses.” 1982 brought Imperial Bedroom, 1983 , Punch the Clock and “Every Day I Write the Book.” In 1984 he went on a solo tour with Goodbye Cruel World, and in 1985 he did King of America (sans the Attractions.) He briefly reunited with the Attractions with Nick Lowe as producer for Blood and Chocolate.

He teamed up with Paul McCartney in 1987  for Spike with the single “Veronica.” Mighty Like a Rose followed in 1989.

Costello switched gears again in 1993, this time  going classical. He wrote a song cycle called the Juliet Letters which he performed with the Brodsky Quartet.

Back with The Attractions and to rock and rol  he put out Brutal Youth in 1994. All This Useless Beauty is a cover album of sorts, he penned all the songs, but they were originally done by other artists.

He wrote theme songs for Austin Powers and Notting Hill (his achingly beautiful “She” is almost as lovely as Julia Roberts.)

In 2001 he worked with Steve Nieve and Pete Thomas  on When I Was Cruel, with the amazing single “Dust.”

Next up was his interpretation of the Great American Song Book with North “falling halfway between Gershwin and Sondheim.” [Allmusic by rovi], and the live jazz album Flame Burns Blue — with Costello in front of The Metropole Orkest, a 52-piece orchestra.

After Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans Costello joined forces with Allen Toussaint (they had worked together on Spike) for The River in Reverse

Momofuku (2008), Secret, Profane & Sugarcane (2009) and National Ransom (2010) round out his impressive discography.

Whew! Another LONG bio. They always look so easy when I start. But I just bet I forgot your favorite album or single, didn’t I? Come on… let me have it… what’s your Elvis Costello favorite [leave me a comment.]


Thought of the Day 8.24.12 Stephen Fry

“It is a cliche that most cliches are true, but then like most cliches, that cliche is untrue”

Stephen Fry

Stephen John Fry was born on this day in Hampstead, London, England in 1957. He is 55 years old.

He grew up in Norfolk. He was expelled from several schools and got into trouble with the law as a teen. He served three months in Pucklechurch Prison after stealing a credit card from a family friend. But the stint in prison seemed enough to straighten him out. He went back to school, this time at City College of Norwith and promised to apply himself to his studies. He scored well enough in his Cambridge entrance exams to get a scholarship at Queens’ College in 1979. At Queens he joined the Cambridge Footlights Dramatic Club and met Emma Thompson and Hugh Laurie. He won a Fringe First Award for  Latin! or Tobacco and Boys  a play he wrote for Footlights.

He teamed up with Laurie  to for the comedy act A Bit of Fry & Laurie. The Duo turned the act into a television sketch comedy series that premiered on December 26, 1987 with a 36 minute pilot. It ran for four seasons (1-3 on BBC2; season 4 on the more mainstream BBC1). The show’s combination of satire, wordplay and innuendo made it very popular. The complete series is available on DVD and selected sketches have been collected in book form.

In 1984  Fry adapted Noel Gay’s Me and My Gal. It had an eight year, 3,303 performance run at the Adelphi Theatre in London’s West End (with Robert Lindsay and Emma Thompson in the cast.)  It hopped the pond and opened at Broadway’s Marquis Theatre  in 1986 where it ran for 1,420 shows and was nominated for 13 Tony Awards. It also made him rich.

Fry considers himself a writer first and a  comedian/ actor second. He has published four novels: Liar (1991), The Hippopotamus (1994), Making History:  A Novel (1997) and The Stars’ Tennis Balls (200). His biography, Moab is My Washpot came out in 1997.

Other television work include Lord Melchett  in Black-Adder II and Reginald Jeeves in  Jeeves and Wooster. On the Radio he worked on Loose Ends, Delve Special, This is David Lander, Saturday Night Fry, Absolute Power and was the voice of Winnie the Pooh. He also presented The Incomplete and Utter History of Classical Music, a 20 part review of music over the past millennium.

His film work goes back to 1985. He had was in the ensemble cast of Peter’s Friends (with Laurie and Thompson). He played Oscar Wilde in Wilde (1997). In Gosford Park he is the clueless Inspector Thompson. He’s the Cheshire Cat in Tim Burton’s 2010 Alice in Wonderland. You can catch him as the Master of Laketown in the upcoming The Hobbit: There and Back Again and as Sir Simon De Canterville in The Canterville Ghost. [The list of Fry’s television and film roles is quite long.  See his IMBD site for a more comprehensive look at this side of his career.)

Fry also has lent his talents to audio books. He read the film tie-in version of  Douglas Adam’s The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy (he also dubbed the voice of the Book and was the narrator for the movie ) in 2005. He’s recorded his own novels and works by A.A. Milne, Anthony Buckeridge and Roald Dahl. Most famously he is the voice for the English audio books for the Harry Potter novels by J.K.Rowling.

He embraces technology with both hands, and has said he’s never met a smart phone he didn’t buy. He is “deeply dippy for all things digital” and says he bought the third Macintosh computer sold in the UK (Douglas Adams beat him to the first two.) His Twitter account has passed the four million mark .

He is actively involved in a number of social issue (often promoting them with his Twitter account and on his website.)

[All images courtesy Last.fm where you can find lots more great photos of Stephen Fry.]