Elvis Costello

Rock Singer

Elvis Costello was born in London on August 25th, 1954 and is the Rock Singer. At the age of 69, Elvis Costello biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
August 25, 1954
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
London
Age
69 years old
Zodiac Sign
Virgo
Networth
$70 Million
Profession
Composer, Guitarist, Record Producer, Singer-songwriter
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Elvis Costello Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 69 years old, Elvis Costello physical status not available right now. We will update Elvis Costello's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Weight
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Hair Color
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Measurements
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Elvis Costello Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
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Education
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Elvis Costello Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Mary Burgoyne, ​ ​(m. 1974; div. 1984)​, Diana Krall ​(m. 2003)​
Children
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Dating / Affair
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Parents
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Elvis Costello Life

Declan Patrick MacManus, OBE (born 25 August 1954), better known as Elvis Costello, is an English pop/rock musician, composer, producer, film producer, and occasional actor. He began his career as a member of London's pub rock scene in the early 1970s and later became associated with the first wave of the British punk and new wave movements that emerged in the mid-to-late 1970s.

In 1977, his critically acclaimed debut album My Aim Is True was released.

He formed the Attractions as his backing band only shortly after they had been recording it.

His second album This Year's Model was released in 1978 and appeared on Rolling Stone's list of the best albums from 1967 to 1987.

Armed Forces' third album was released in 1979 and features his highest-charting track, "Oliver's Army" (number 2 in the United Kingdom).

On Rolling Stone's list of the Top Albums of All Time, his first three albums appeared. The Attractions and Costello toured and recorded together for the better part of a decade, but differences between them caused a split by 1986.

Costello's work since has been as a solo artist, however reunions with members of the Attractions have been attributed to the group throughout the years.

Costello's songs make use of a broad vocabulary and frequent wordplay.

His music has appeared on many different genres, with one critic describing him as a "pop encyclopedia" who is able to "reinvent the past in his own image."He has received numerous awards in his career, including a Grammy Award and twice nominated for the British Male Artist Award.

Costello and the Attractions were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.

Rolling Stone named Costello 80 on its list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time in 2004, including "God Give Me Strength" from Grace of My Heart (1996, with Burt Bacharach) and "The Scarlet Tide" from Cold Mountain (2003, with T-Bone Burnett).

Elvis was nominated (along with Burnett) for the Academy Award for Best Original Song and the Grammy Award for Best Written for Visual Media for Visual Media.

Early life

Declan Patrick MacManus was born on August 25, 1954 at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington, London, and he is of Irish descent on his father's side. Ross MacManus (1927–2011), a jazz trumpeter and vocalist who appeared with the Joe Loss Orchestra, and later as a solo cabaret performer, is Lilian Alda's son (née Ablett 1927–2021) and later as a solo cabaret performer. In 1970, MacManus senior Stephen Costello's cover version of the Beatles' "The Long and Winding Road" was a hit in Australia (as Day Costello).

MacManus was born in Twickenham, attended both St. Edmund's Catholic Primary School in Whitton and then Archbishop Myers Secondary Modern R.C. In Hounslow, the school, which is now St Mark's Catholic School, is located.

The 16-year-old MacManus and his mother travelled to Birkenhead, not far from her hometown city, Liverpool, where he formed his first band, "Rusty," with Allan Mayes. MacManus spent time in Liverpool learning to support himself, most notably at Elizabeth Arden, where he was employed as a data entry clerk. "I'm Not Angry" is a term that has been immortalized in the lyrics as the "vanity factory" in the lyrics. He served as a computer operator at the Midland Bank computer center in Bootle for a brief period of time.

In 1974, he returned to London, where he founded Flip City, a pub rock band that was active from 1974 to early 1976. Costello's first television interview was with his father in a television commercial for R. White's Lemonade ("I'm a Secret Lemonade Drinker"), which aired in 1974. The song's father performed the lyrics and Costello sang backing vocals; the commercial received a silver award at the 1974 International Advertising Festival. He continued to write songs and started to search for a solo recording deal. On the basis of a demo tape, he was signed to independent label Stiff Records in 1976. Jake Riviera, the singer's manager, suggested that he call himself D.P. Costello, who gave his father's stage name Day Costello, began using Elvis after Elvis Presley.

Personal life

Costello has married three times, the first time in 1974 to Mary Burgoyne, with whom he had a son, Matthew. Costello, Bebe Buell, Todd Rundgren's then-girlfriend, became embroiled in an on-again/off-again affair. Buell has claimed she was the inspiration behind some of Costello's most traumatic love songs from the Armed Forces period, but Costello denied this by claiming that the majority of the songs had been written before Buell met Buell.

Costello first became acquainted with Cait O'Riordan, then the bassist of London's Pogues, while he was composing Pogues' album Rum Sodomy and the Lash in 1985. They married in 1986 and broke up by the time 2002.

Costello married pianist-vocalist Diana Krall in May 2003 and married her at the home of Elton John on December 6th. On December 6, 2006, Krall gave birth to twin sons in New York City.

Costello, a pescatarian who has lived in the United States since 1989, has been inspired by his film "The Animals Film (1982), which also inspired his song "Pills and Soap" from 1983's Punch the Clock. Costello joined Paul McCartney in January 2013 to create an ad campaign for vegetarian foods made by the Linda McCartney Foods brand.

Costello is a huge football fan, who is a fan of Liverpool FC, which is another Premier League football club. Since childhood, I've been playing as a pundit on Channel 4's Football Italia. Costello, who appeared with his band in a Norwich gig on May 25, 2005, was due to face AC Milan in the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final. Costello was on stage and starting warming up his voice for the evening when he decided: "I might as well see the first few minutes of the second half" after Liverpool losing 3–0 at halftime. Costello, who has been on stage for more than an hour, has been staging a spectacular comeback (since being dubbed the Miracle of Istanbul) by scoring three goals in six minutes and making it 3-1. With the game going back to penalties, Costello had no choice but to take the stage, but the phrase 'Oh shit, he's missed' may have mistakenly crept into the bar's text, 'Good Year for the Roses'. An ecstatic Costello broke out into a display of the club's anthem "You'll Never Walk Alone," with Liverpool winning while on stage.

Costello canceled the remaining six dates of his European tour on doctor's orders in July 2018, after recovering from surgery to cancer. Costello apologised to his followers and said he had initially believed he had recovered enough from the operation to finish the tour.

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Elvis Costello Career

Career

Stiff's first album, "Less Than Zero," was released on March 25, 1977. My Aim Is True (1977), his debut album, four months later, was released with modest commercial success (No. 1). Costello's trademark oversize eyeglasses appear on the front page in the United Kingdom and, later, Top 40 in the United States, with him on the front page, reminiscent of Buddy Holly. Costello's early singles, which included "Less Than Zero" and the ballad "Alison," failed to chart. Stiff's records were first released in the United Kingdom, limiting Costello's first album and singles to the United States as expensive imports. Costello, who was furious that no US record company had yet seen fit to announce his music, decided against it on a street corner in London and was jailed for busking. A few months later, Costello signed to Columbia Records (CBS in the United States) a few months later.

Costello's debut album was supported by American West Coast band Clover, a country band from England whose members would later go on to join Huey Lewis and the News and the Doobie Brothers. Costello's first major hit single, "Watching the Detectives," was released by Steve Nieve, Steve Goulding (drums) and Andrew Bodnar (bass), the latter two being members of Graham Parker's backing band the Rumour. The song, which was added to the American version of My Aim Is True, features scathing verses about the triumph of television abuse over a reggae beat. Costello formed the Attractions, a permanent backing band for Steve Nieve (piano), Bruce Thomas (bass guitar), and Pete Thomas (drums; no ties to Bruce Thomas).

Costello and the Attractions, as a replacement for the Sex Pistols, were supposed to perform "Less Than Zero" on Saturday Night Live on December 17, 1977; however, Costello and the Attractions, as a replacement act for the Sex Pistols, were due to perform "Less Than Zero"; on Saturday Night Live, they yelling "Stop! : Costello and the Attractions, a BBC show, on December 17 December 17 December 17, 1977, ' on Saturday Night On Saturday Night Pis's, were supposed to performer, Costello, On Saturday Night Live, on Saturday Night, a, but on Saturday Night Live, y, y, y, were e, On Saturday Night, On Saturday Night, were a, Hendrix Pis, e, a, a, y, y,'s, y, y, yls.

Stop!"

Instead, he performed "Radio Radio," a song that criticizes the industrialization of the airwaves, which NBC and Lorne Michaels had forbidden them to participate in. Costello was later banned from the show (the ban was lifted in 1989), and he attracted a lot of attention as an irate young man. His insistence on performing "Radio Radio" on SNL proved a boon to his debut album, and its success in the United States increased after the show.

Following a tour with other Stiff artists that were on the Live Stiffs Live album, Costello's interpretation of the Burt Bacharach/Hal David standard "I Just Don't Know What to Do With Myself" was included in the band's "This Year's Model (1978). The British hit "I Don't Want to Go to) Chelsea" and "Pump It Up" are two of the more famous tracks, as shown above. Costello's U.S. record company placed such importance on his last name that the word Columbia was erased on the disc's label, despite the fact that the word Columbia was used instead. Audience members destroyed some of the seats on Attractions' first tour of Australia in December 1978, when the group's failure to perform an encore after a brief 35-minute set. Costello was already established as both performer and songwriter by the 1970s, with Linda Ronstadt and Dave Edmunds finding success with his songs.

Live at the El Mocambo, a long-lived Canadian promo-only version of the El Mocambo, was also released in the United States and Canada, which was eventually included in the Official Release of the 212 Years box set in 1993.

He released Armed Forces, his third album (originally titled Emotional Fascism, a term that appeared on the album's inner sleeve). In 1978, there was a 45rpm EP recorded live at the Hollywood High School Gymnasium in Hollywood. Both the album and the single "Oliver's Army" dropped to No. "Accidents Will Happen" in the United Kingdom, has gained brisk television coverage thanks to its groundbreaking animated music video, directed by Annabel Jankel and Rocky Morton. Costello made time in 1979 to produce the first album of the 2 Tone ska revival band the Specials, as a back vocalist on the album "This Is Your Life," a new wave band Twist's release.

Costello's presence in the United States was bruised for a time when, during a booze outpouring of alcohol with Stephen Stills and Bonnie Bramlett at a Holiday Inn bar in Columbus, Ohio, the singer called James Brown a "blind, ignorant nigger," then raised the stakes by proclaiming Ray Charles as a "blind, ignorant nigger." A few days later, Costello addressed the issue at a New York City press conference, alleging that he was inebriated and had been trying to be obnoxious to bring the conversation to an end, but not knowing that Bramlett would tweet his remarks to the public. "It became imperative for me to outrage these people with the most obnoxious and insulting remarks that I could muster," Costello says. In his liner notes for the expanded version of Get Happy!! Costello writes that, some time after the incident, he had declined an invitation to speak with Charles out of shame and shame, but Charles himself had forgiven Costello, saying, "Drunken talk isn't meant to be published in the paper." Both before and after the incident, Costello was instrumental in Britain's Rock Against Racism campaign. "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry," Questlove (drummer for the Roots), who Costello worked with in 2013), he said, "I can't tell how I even had to pretend you might be amusing about something like this."

You know?

It's about time that I said it out loud."

Costello is also a huge country music enthusiast and has cited George Jones as his favorite country performer. He appeared on Jones' duet album My Very Special Guests in 1977, presenting "Stranger in the House," a pair performed together on an HBO tribute to Jones.

The soul-infused Get Happy!!

It was the first of Costello's many experiments with genres that he is not usually associated with. It also marked a dramatic change in mood from his first three albums' tense, tense tone to a more upbeat, happy demeanor. "I Can't Stand Down for the Falling Down" was an old Sam and Dave hit (though Costello raised the temperature considerably). The songs are brimming with Costello's signature word play, to the point that he later felt he had become something of a self-parody and toned it down on later launches; he has jokingly described himself as the "rock and roll's Scrabble champion" in interviews. He appeared at the Heatwave festival in August near Toronto, his first appearance in North America at the 1980 Heatwave Festival.

Costello opened Trust in 1981, despite increasing tensions within the Attractions, particularly between Bruce and Pete Thomas. The single "Watch Your Step" was released and appeared on Tom Snyder's Tomorrow show, and it was broadcast on FM rock radio in the United States, and it received airplay. The single "Clubland" dropped to the lower reaches of the charts in the United Kingdom, while Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze's "From a Whisper to a Scream" became the first Costello single to completely fall short of the charts. Costello co-produced Squeeze's hit 1981 album East Side Story (with Roger Bechirian) and performed backing vocals on the group's hit "Tempted."

Almost Blue, an album of country music cover songs penned by Hank Williams ("Why Don't You Love Me" Like You Used to Do? ("Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down") Merle Haggard ("How Much I Lied") and Gram Parsons ("How Much I Lied"). Costello's album, which received mixed feedback, was a salute to the country music he grew up listening to, especially George Jones. "WARNING: This album features country and western music, and may cause a reaction in narrow minded listeners." Almost Blue produced a surprise UK hit single in a version of George Jones' "Good Year for the Roses" (written by Jerry Chesnut), which debuted at No. 1 in a compilation of George Jones' "Good Year for the Roses). 6.

The Imperial Bedroom (1982) had a much darker sound due in large part to Geoff Emerick's lavish production of many Beatles albums. It remains one of the most influential albums in the United Kingdom, but it failed to produce any hit singles -- "You Little Fool" and the critically acclaimed "Man Out of Time" — which are both failed to make it to the top 40 in the United Kingdom. Costello has stated that he disliked the album's marketing pitch. "Almost Blue" by Imperial Bedroom is also inspired by jazz singer and trumpeter Chet Baker's music, and the song's later performance and recording of the song (on Chet Baker in Tokyo).

Along the Attractions, Punch the Clock released male backing vocal duo (Afrodiziak) and a four-piece horn section (the TKO Horns). Clive Langer (who co-produced with Alan Winstanley) provided Costello with a melody that later became "Shipbuilding," which featured a trumpet solo by Baker. A minor UK hit for former Soft Machine founder Robert Wyatt prior to the launch of Costello's own version.

Costello's pseudonym The Imposter revealed "Pills and Soap," an attempt on the changes in British society wrought by Thatcherism, which was timed to the 1983 UK general election. Punch the Clock also became a worldwide success in the single "Everyday I Write the Book," aided by a music video featuring lookalikes of Prince Charles and Princess Diana in a suburban home. Costello's first top 40 hit single in the United States was released on a B-side version of the Madness song "Tomorrow's Just Another Day."

Tensions within the band, especially between Costello and bassist Bruce Thomas, were starting to reveal, and Costello announced his departure and the group's break-up just before they were supposed to hear Goodbye Cruel World (1984). Costello will claim later that they had "got it as wrong as you can in terms of execution." On its first appearance, the liner notes to the 1995 Rykodisc re-release, penned by Costello, began with the phrase "Congratulations!" You've just bought our worst album. Elvis Costello's retirement, although brief-lived, was followed by two compilations, Elvis Costello: The Man in the United Kingdom, Europe, and Australia, as well as The Best of Elvis Costello & The Attractions in the United States.

As a solo artist, he appeared in the Live Aid charity concert in England in 1985, singing "All You Need Is Love" by the Beatles. (The performance was overspending, and Costello was asked to "ditch the band"). Costello performed the song as a "old northern English folk song" and the audience was encouraged to participate in the chorus. Costello joined T-Bone Burnett in the single "The People's Limousine" under the moniker of The Coward Brothers in the same year. Costello's 2013 release of Rum Sodomy & the Lash for the Irish punk/folk band The Pogues.

Costello appeared in Alan Bleasdale's No Surrender in 1985, where he appeared in a small role as a very bad stage magician hired to perform at a seedy Liverpool night club on a bleak New Year's Eve.

Costello and Bruce Thomas' growing antipathy contributed to Attractions' first split in 1986, when Costello was set to make a comeback. King of America is an acoustic guitar-driven album with a country sound while working in the United States with Burnett, a band that features a number of Elvis Presley's sidemen (including James Burton and Jerry Scheff) and minor feedback from the Attractions. In the United Kingdom and Europe, "The Costello Show starring Attractions and Confederates" was on display, and "The Costello Show starring Elvis Costello" in North America was billed as performed by "The Costello Show starring the Attractions and Confederates" in the United Kingdom and Europe, as well as "The Costello Show starring Elvis Costello" in North America. Around this time, he legally changed his name back to Declan MacManus, adding Aloysius as an extra middle name. Costello redesigned his tour to accommodate multiple nights in each city, including one night with the Confederates, one night with the Attractions, and one night solo acoustic. He appeared at Self Aid, a charity concert in Dublin that was primarily focused on chronic unemployment, which was prevalent in Ireland at that time.

Costello returned to the studio with Attractions and recorded Blood & Chocolate, which was lauded for a post-punk fervour not seen since 1978's This Year's Model. It was also the return of producer Nick Lowe, who had produced Costello's first five albums, who had worked on Costello's first five albums. Although Blood & Chocolate was unable to pin a hit single of any importance, it did produce "I Want You," one of Costello's most popular concert songs. Costello used the alias Napoleon Dynamite on this album, a term he later attributed to the emcee's persona that he performed on the vainville-style tour to promote Blood & Chocolate. (The pseudonym had existed in 1982, when Napoleon Dynamite & the Royal Guard's "Imperial Bedroom" was credited to Napoleon Dynamite and the Royal Guard; whether Costello's name in the 2004 film Napoleon Dynamite was inspired by Costello is uncertain. Costello dropped from the Attractions after the tour of Blood & Chocolate, owing to principally differences between Costello and Bruce Thomas. Costello will continue to work with Attraction Pete Thomas as a session musician for future launches.

After the release of Blood & Chocolate, Costello's recording deal with Columbia Records came to an end. Out of Our Idiot, a compilation album on his UK label, Demon Records, consisting of B-sides, side projects, and unreleased songs from 1980 to 1987, with B-sides, side projects, and unreleased songs from recording sessions from 1980 to 1987. He signed a new deal with Warner Bros. in early 1989, Spike, which resulted in his first single in the United States, became Costello's "Veronica," one of many songs Costello co-wrote with Paul McCartney. "Veronica" received the MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles on September 6th, 1989.

Costello's 1991 release Mighty Like a Rose, which included the single "The Other Side of Summer." He also co-composed and co-produced the title and incidental music for the mini-series G.B.H. Alan Bleasdale, a narrator. This entirely instrumental, and largely orchestral, soundtrack earned a BAFTA Award for Best Music for a TV Series starring the two performers.

Costello conducted classical music in 1993, as part of the Brodsky Quartet's critically acclaimed collaboration on The Juliet Letters. He wrote a complete album of Wendy James' stuff, and these songs became the tracks on her 1993 solo album Now Ain't the Time for Your Tears. Costello's back to rock and roll the following year with a program that reunited him with the Attractions, Brutal Youth. He released Kojak Variety, an album of cover songs recorded five years ago, in 1995, and All This Useless Beauty followed him in 1996 with an album of songs originally written for other artists. This was his last album of original material released under his Warner Bros. contract, as well as his final album with the Attractions.

Costello performed a string of intimate club dates, backed only by Steve Nieve on the piano, in support of All This Useless Beauty in the spring of 1996. The band's life and fall tour came as a result. Costello and bassist Bruce Thomas' ties were at an all-time peak, and Costello revealed that the current tour would be the Attractions' last. The quartet appeared in Seattle, Washington, on September 1, 1996, before wrapping up their tour in Japan. Costello will still work regularly with Attractions Steve Nieve and Pete Thomas; eventually, they'll both be members of Costello's new back-up band, The Imposters.

Costello's 1997 album Extreme Honey was released to fulfill his contractual obligations to Warner Bros. It featured Costello's son, Matt, on bass, and it contained an original song titled "The Bridge I Burned." Costello had been artistic chair for the 1995 Meltdown Festival, giving him the opportunity to explore his increasingly eclectic musical interests. Bill Frisell's participation in the festival resulted in a one-off live EP that featured both cover and a few of his own songs.

Costello signed a multi-label agreement with Polygram Records in 1998, the same year the company was sold by its parent company to become part of the Universal Music Group. Costello's latest project was focused on what he considered to be the appropriate imprimatur within the labels' family tree. Burt Bacharach's first new job as part of this program involved a partnership. Their first appearance on Grace of My Heart began in 1996 with the song "God Give Me Strength." The pair went on to write and record Painted From Memory, which came out under his new deal with Mercury Records in 1998, and featured songs that were largely inspired by the dissolution of his marriage to Cait O'Riordan. Costello and Bacharach performed numerous concerts with full orchestral support, as well as an updated version of Bacharach's "I'll Never Fall in Love Again" for Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, with both actors appearing in the film to perform the song. He also wrote "I Throw My Toys Around" for The Rugrats Film and performed it with No Doubt. On the soundtrack of the PBS/Disney The Irish in America: Long Journey Home miniseries, he collaborated with Paddy Moloney of The Chieftains on "The Long Journey Home." In 1999, the soundtrack received a Grammy Award.

Costello made a version of "She" (1994), which was released by Charles Aznavour and Herbert Kretzmer for the soundtrack of the film Notting Hill, with Trevor Jones as the producer. Costello attended the 25th anniversary of Saturday Night Live, where he recalled his unexpected song-switch, "Sabotage," this time; however, the Beastie Boys' "Sabotage" was on display, and his backing group for "Radio Radio" was included.

Costello re-issued his back catalogue in the United States, from My Aim Is True (1977) to All This Useless Beauty (1996) on Rhino Records' double-disc collections. These two discs of bonus content fell out of print in 2007, after Universal Music acquired the rights to Costello's catalog. My Aim Is True and This Year's Model's Model's Model received new deluxe versions of full-length concerts from the time of each album's debut. These deluxe editions also went out of print, and Universal has reverted to re-releasing Costello's pre-1987 albums in their original context without bonus content.

Costello appeared in Steve Nieve's opera Welcome to the Voice, alongside Ron Sexsmith and John Flansburgh of They Might Be Giants, in 2000. Costello performed in a new ballet in 2001 and composed the score for a new ballet. Anne Sofie von Otter, a classical singer, recorded and performed on an album of pop songs. When I Was Cruel on Island Records in 2002, he formed the Imposters, a new band that toured with the Imposters (essentially the Attractions, but with Davey Faragher, formerly of Cracker), when he was in charge of Cracker. In the "How I Spent My Strummer Vacation" episode of The Simpsons, he appeared as himself.

At the 45th Grammy Awards ceremony, Costello, Bruce Springsteen, Steve Van Zandt, and Dave Grohl performed a version of "Clash's "London Calling" in honor of Clash frontman Joe Strummer, who had died in December. Elvis Costello & the Attractions were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in March. He revealed his participation in May to Canadian jazz singer and pianist Diana Krall, who had appeared in concert and then met backstage at the Sydney Opera House in Australia. He released North, an album of piano-based ballads relating to his ex marriage's dissolution and his possible in love with Krall in September. Costello appeared in the Café Nervosa's television series Frasier as a folk singer, triggering Frasier and Niles' quest for a new coffee bar this year.

On the evening, Costello replaced David Letterman on the Late Show with David Letterman, although Letterman was recovering from an eye infection.

Costello and T-Bone Burnett co-wrote the song "Scarlet Tide," which was used in the film Cold Mountain, was nominated for an Academy Award in 2004; he performed it with Alison Krauss, who performed the song on the official soundtrack at the awards ceremony. Costello co-wrote several songs on Krall's 2004 album The Girl in the Other Room, the first of her own compositions to feature several original compositions. Il Sogno, Costello's first full-scale orchestral work, premiered in New York in July 2004. The work, a ballet based on Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, was commissioned by Italian dance troupe Aterballeto, and the classical music critics applauded it. The recording was released on CD by Deutsche Grammophon in September and was conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas. Costello's album The Delivery Man, which was released in Oxford, Mississippi, on Lost Highway Records, was hailed as one of his finest albums in September 2004.

In 2005, there was a CD recording of a concert collaboration with Marian McPartland on her show Piano Jazz. Costello performed six jazz standards and two of his own songs, as well as McPartland on piano. Costello's new album with Allen Toussaint and producer Joe Henry was released in November. The River in Reverse was launched on the Verve brand in the United Kingdom the following year in May.

Costello's tour in 2005 featured a gig at Glastonbury that he was so sad that he said, "I don't care if I ever play England again." I would not come back to an end because of the show's ferociousness. I can't get along with it. We've lost touch. It's been 25 years since I lived there. I don't dig it, but British music fans don't have the same attitude to age as they do in America, where young people flock to check out. They have a strong connection with him and have a place for that music in their lives."

Allen Toussaint, Katrina, Costello, and Toussaint appeared in New York at a series of Hurricane Relief benefit concerts in September 2006. Costello had written "The River in Reverse," performed it with Toussaint, and discussed album plans with Verve Records executives by the week's end. The result, Costello's The River in Reverse, a project with New Orleanian, Allen Toussaint, and The Crescent City Horns, was a recording of the Crescent City Horns. Costello began to sing of the national malaise of the time.

Costello interpreted the role of Chief of Police in a studio recording of Nieve's opera Welcome to the Voice (2006, Deutsche Grammophon), and the album debuted at No. 105, with Barbara Bonney, Robert Wyatt, Sting, and Amanda Roocroft. Billboard's classical charts have 2 people on them. Costello revived the piece on the stage of the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris in 2008, with Sting, Joe Sumner (Sting's uncle) and Sylvia Schwartz. My Flame Burns Blue, a live recording of a concert with the Metropole Orkest at the North Sea Jazz Festival, was also released in 2006. M.D.'s House soundtrack is reminiscent of the Beatles'. Christina Aguilera's interpretation of "Beautiful" by Costello was included in the second episode of Season 2.

Costello was asked by the Danish Royal Opera in Copenhagen to write a chamber opera on Hans Christian Andersen's obsession with Swedish soprano Jenny Lind. It was called The Secret Songs, but it was unfinished. Complete songs were interspersed with pieces from Costello's 1993 collaborative classical album The Juliet Letters, starring Danish soprano Sine Bundgaard as Lind in a performance directed by Kasper Bech Holten at the Opera's Studio Theatre (Takelloftet). Profane & Sugarcane, the 2009 album Secret Songs, contains excerpts from Secret Songs.

Momofuku's debut on Lost Highway Records, the same imprint that launched The Delivery Man, his previous studio album, was released on April 22, 2008. At least the album was first released on vinyl (with a code to download a digital copy). Costello toured with the Police on the last leg of their 2007-2008 Reunion Tour, that summer, in support of the album. Costello appeared at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall on June 25, 2006, and it was his first appearance in Poland that month, with The Imposters playing The Imposters at the closing gig of the Malta theatre festival in Pozna.

Costello (as Declan McManus) appeared in his hometown Liverpool, where he was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Music from the University of Liverpool. Costello's series Spectacle, which Costello talked and performed with actors in various fields, was styled similarly to Inside the Actors Studio between 2008 and 2010. Costello produced 20 episodes in between its two seasons, including one in which actress Mary-Louise Parker interviewed Costello. Costello appeared on Fall Out Boy's 2008 album Folie à Deux, providing vocals on the track "What a Catch, Donnie" and assisting other artists who are associates of the band.

Costello appeared in Stephen Colbert's television series A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All. He was initially eaten by a bear but later saved by Santa Claus; he also performed a duet with Colbert. On November 23, 2008, the special premiere was broadcast for the first time. On June 9, 2009, Costello introduced The Secret, Profane & Sugarcane, a T-Bone Burnett project, on September 9, 2009. It was his first time on the Starbucks Hear Music label, as well as a return to country music in the spirit of Good Year for the Roses.

Costello appeared as himself in the third season of 30 Rock's third season and performed in the episode's celebrity telethon, "Kidney Now!" When Jack Donaghy accuses Costello of concealing his true identity, he says "Declan McManus, international art thief."

Costello made a surprise cameo appearance on stage at the Beacon Theater in New York as part of Spinal Tap's Unwigged and Unplugged show in May 2009, performing their fictional 1965 hit "Gimme Some Money" with the band backing him up.

Costello announced on May 15 that he would pull out of a concert in Israel in protest against Israel's treatment of Palestinians. "It's been important to dial out the pseudoneous claims of propaganda, the double game, and hysterical language of politics," Costello wrote on his website, the vanity and self-rightness of cranks' public announcements would eventually filter through my own conflicted thoughts."

Elvis Costello appeared in David Simon's television series Treme in 2010. In the fall of 2010, Costello released the album National Ransom. Costello appeared on Sesame Street in 2011 as himself, titled "Monster Went and Ate My Red Shoes" as a play on "(The Angels Wante Wear My) Red Shoes."

Costello paid tribute to music legends Chuck Berry and Leonard Cohen, the recipients of the first annual PEN Awards for songwriting excellence, at the JFK Presidential Library in Boston, Massachusetts, on February 26, 2012. Wise Up Ghost, a Roots-related project, was released in September 2013. Costello received an Honorary Doctorate of Music from the New England Conservatory on October 25, 2013. In October 2015, Unfaithful Music & Disappearance Ink was published.

Costello's first studio album in five years, Look Now, released with The Imposters on October 12, 2018. Burt Bacharach co-written three songs on the album, and Carole King co-written one. Costello wrote and produced a vast number of the songs himself, with support from producer Sebastian Krys. Look Now received the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album at the 62nd Grammy Awards on January 26, 2020.

In the 2019 Birthday Honours for services to music, Costello was named Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE).

Costello unveiled the Spanish Model, a remake of 1978's This Year's Model with Spanish lyrics, in 2021. Singers from Spain's Spanish-speaking songwriters converted all 16 songs of the album into Spanish, with the new vocals matching the original recording and instrumentation by the Attractions. Juanes, Jorge Drexler, Luis Fonsi, Francisca Valenzuela, Fuego, Draco Rosa, and Fito Páez were among the singers on stage.

Costello performed two songs with the Imposters in 2021. Alan Carr introduced him as a man who has done everything other than appearing at the Royal Variety Show. Costello announced that he was the second McManus to appear in a number of songs. Ross' father has appeared on "If I Had a Hammer" in the 1960s.

He appeared on The Graham Norton Show in January 2022. The Boy Named If, the Imposters' compilation, was released in the same month.

Source

Scammers are targeting uninvited visitors of Byron Bay's Festival Bluesfest

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 7, 2024
Since fake pages trying to scam them appeared online, supporters of the famous Byron Bay festival Bluesfest have been left angry. A Facebook page, which was created in November 2023, has been imitating the festival's official website, and a glance at it reveals it to be very convincing. It has full video replays and live streams for sale, but no such content is available right now, with some fans stunned after being shown that their credit card information was revealed.

EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: Westminster Abbey decides to return a sacred tablet to the Ethiopian church it was looted from in 1868

www.dailymail.co.uk, February 20, 2024
EPHRAIM HARDCASTLE: Westminster Abbey giants have decided to return a sacred tabot (a symbolic tablet) to the Ethiopian church, which was looted by British troops in 1868. The HRH's vast Royal Collection of art, jewelry, furniture, decorative arts, and costume is the world's biggest private collection of treasures, and it includes several dubiously acquired treasures. Queen Victoria even arranged a special exhibition to commemorate items confiscated from monarchs that had been overthrown by her troops.

In Sainsbury's and Tesco's, Pro-Palestine activists stick out spoof 'apartheid' price labels by pots of Israeli hummus, claiming that consumers buying dip are'supporting genocide.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, December 24, 2023
Pro-Palestine protesters have been spouting spoof 'apartheid' price tags in British supermarkets by trays of Israeli hummus, according to the dip's owners, who are'supporting genocide.' Sabra hummus is shown on social media with a false label indicating: 'Apartheid Hummus.' Buying this product aids in the preservation of genocide. 'For more detail, search BDS for more details.' Darren Cullen, who promotes the anti-Israel BDS campaign, has condemned the stunt and claims he intends to make them for a variety of other items.
Elvis Costello Tweets and Instagram Photos
5 Dec 2022

Alongside some great company 🎶🎸

Posted by @elviscostello on