Published on Feb 23, 1997
Blessed are the geeks, for we shall inherit the earth. Who knew
in 1977 that a skinny young Brit would give the industry a swift
kick in the ass?
Elvis Costello looked on the cover of his debut album
My Aim Is True to be the kid that got the shit beat out of
him in gym class – thin, scrawny, kind of geeky-looking.
But the album showed hints of genius, and
My Aim Is True still contains some of Costello’s best music
ever. (Rykodisc re-released the album, along with a good portion of
his early catalog, some years back. This review is frrom the
original Columbia release.)
Costello seems to have learned a valuable lesson before he
entered the studio – say what you have to, then get out. Several
tracks, including the opener “Welcome To The Working Week,” are
under two minutes in length. When he performs longer, the message
he’s trying to get across is a little more complex.
The rawness of the performance is what makes this album still
sound fresh two decades after its release. Cuts like “Alison” and
“Blame It On Cain” have not aged a bit, and Costello’s vocals are
as raw and fluent as they would be later in his career. He was
setting a tough standard to follow, but Costello seemed like he
wanted to make his first effort count. Chalk one up for raw emotion
– it works.
The reggae feel of “Watching The Detectives” works well, as does
the dance beat of “(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes.” Costello
tends to jump from musical style to musical style on
My Aim Is True, but unlike many other artists who have done
this, Costello pulls it off with great success. He also seems to
try to shake off the “angry young man” label that he would wear for
some time on the cut “I’m Not Angry.” You may be the judge whether
he is or not.
My Aim Is True is a great primer for those who are
interested in getting into Costello’s music (besides buying one of
the two greatest hits packages out there), and stands as one of, if
not
the, best album he ever recorded.