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1[[quoteright:295:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/elviscostello.jpg]]
2->''Veronica sits in her favourite chair, she sits very quiet and still,\
3And they call her a name that they never get right, and if they don't then nobody else will.\
4But she used to have a carefree mind of her own, with a devilish look in her eye,\
5Saying "You can call me anything you like, but my name is Veronica"''
6-->-- "Veronica"
7
8Declan Patrick Aloysius [=MacManus=] [[UsefulNotes/KnightFever OBE]] (born 25 August 1954), better known by his {{stage name|s}} Elvis Costello, is a sometimes popular and always respectable British musician and songwriter who's been around since the late [[TheSeventies 1970s]].
9
10He honed his skills playing in the pub rock band Flip City at night while working as a computer operator at Revlon's London branch. Soon after that, he signed a contract with fledgling record label Stiff and adopted a new name – an ironic ShoutOut to Music/ElvisPresley (who died soon afterward) combined with his great-grandmother's maiden name.
11
12Costello was initially associated in the public mind with PunkRock, and in terms of attitude there was a resemblance. (He had enjoyed seeing the Music/SexPistols go head to head with morning TV host Bill Grundy.) Musically, his closest kinship was to classic [[TheSixties '60s]] pop: Music/TheKinks, Music/BobDylan, early [[Music/TheWho Who]] and especially Music/TheBeatles. While he had a [[CreativeDifferences troubled relationship]] with his backup band the Attractions, they were highly suited to interpreting his diverse catalog of songs.
13
14Although Costello is often associated with his use of puns and wordplay in lyrics, these elements are most noticeable in his early work. As he's matured, Costello's humor has become less brash and sarcastic, instead leaning towards a more jocular and [[SelfDeprecation self-mocking]] tone. His curiosity and desire to collaborate with others has -- among other adventures -- led him to compose a score for the ballet, tour with T-Bone Burnett as a country duo, and write both an album's worth of songs with Burt Bacharach and yet another backed only by string quartet.
15
16Costello is [[RenaissanceMan also an author]]. His first book, ''Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink'', was released in 2015. While working on it, he [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial denied it would be]] an autobiography, which is technically true -- it's a memoir. It also took much longer than expected to write; perhaps ending up [[DoorStopper more than double]] the length of the 300-and-some pages promised by the publisher had something to do with that.
17
18Costello hosted two seasons of a music/interview show called ''Spectacle: Elvis Costello with...'' which aired on the Sundance Channel in the US and Creator/Channel4 in the UK. UsefulNotes/{{Television}} has seen him being banned from ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' for a dozen years for changing songs unannounced, subbing for Creator/DavidLetterman during his heart surgery, and appearing AsHimself on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' and ''Film/TalladegaNightsTheBalladOfRickyBobby''. Charges that he is an [[Series/ThirtyRock international art thief]] are still being investigated.
19
20Costello was inducted into the UsefulNotes/RockAndRollHallOfFame in 2003.
21----
22!!Discography:
23!!!^=with the Attractions\
24^^=with the Imposters
25* ''Music/MyAimIsTrue'' (1977)
26* ''Music/ThisYearsModel''^ (1978)
27* ''Armed Forces''^ (1979)
28* ''Get Happy!!!''^ (1980)
29* ''Trust''^ (1981)
30* ''Almost Blue''^ (1981)
31* ''Imperial Bedroom''^ (1982)
32* ''Punch the Clock''^ (1983)
33* ''Goodbye Cruel World''^ (1984)
34* ''King of America'' (1986)
35* ''Music/BloodAndChocolate''^ (1986)
36* ''Spike'' (1989)
37* ''Mighty Like a Rose'' (1991)
38* ''The Juliet Letters'' (with the Brodsky Quartet) (1993)
39* ''Brutal Youth''^ (1994)
40* ''Kojak Variety'' (1995)
41* ''All This Useless Beauty''^ (1996)
42* ''Painted from Memory'' (with Burt Bacharach) (1998)
43* ''When I Was Cruel''^^ (2002)
44* ''North'' (2003)
45* ''The Delivery Man''^^ (2004)
46* ''The River in Reverse''^^ (with Music/AllenToussaint) (2006)
47* ''Momofuku''^^ (2008)
48* ''Secret, Profane & Sugarcane'' (2009)
49* ''National Ransom'' (2010)
50* ''Wise Up Ghost'' (with The Roots) (2013)
51* ''Look Now''^^ (2018)
52* ''Hey Clockface'' (2020)
53* ''The Boy Named If''^^ (2022)
54----
55!!Everyday I Write the Tropes:
56
57* AccentUponTheWrongSyllable:
58** "Sunday's Best" has two examples: "Be prepared for the EN-gaged sign" and "Don't look now, un-DER the bed".
59* AlbumTitleDrop: This is a common trope in his catalog and includes:
60** ''Music/MyAimIsTrue'' (from a line in "Alison"), ''Punch the Clock'' (from "The Greatest Thing"), ''King of America'' (from "Brilliant Mistake"), ''Blood and Chocolate'' (from "Uncomplicated"), and ''Brutal Youth'' (from "Favourite Hour").
61** PlayedWith:
62*** ''This Year's Model'': a line in "(I Don't Want To Go To) Chelsea" refers to "''last'' year's model", and another song on the album is titled "This Year's Girl".
63*** ''Mighty Like A Rose'': "The Other Side Of Summer" refers to "the mightiest rose, the absence of perfume".
64* AlliterativeTitle: ''Armed Forces'' has several examples, including "Senior Service", "Big Boys", "Busy Bodies", "Moods for Moderns", and "Chemistry Class".
65** Other examples include "Welcome to the Working Week", "Miracle Man", "Hand in Hand", "Motel Matches", "Beyond Belief", "Glitter Gulch", etc.
66* {{Angrish}}: At the end of "The Deportees' Club".
67* AnimatedMusicVideo: "Accidents Will Happen", which was later displayed at the Museum of Modern Art.
68* AnswerSong: Costello has said that "This Year's Girl" is this to the song "Stupid Girl" by Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}.
69%%* AntiLoveSong: Quite a few.
70* ArgentinaIsNaziland: Not just Argentina, but arguably the whole continent as suggested by this line from "Less Than Zero", which is about seeing British Fascist leader Oswald Mosley on television again:
71--> ''Well I hear that South America is coming into style''
72* ArtifactTitle: The album ''Almost Blue'' was named after a song considered for inclusion on it. Costello then decided that he would make an album of country covers and dropped the song from the album. The song later appeared on ''Imperial Bedroom'', which also had a TitleTrack that was taken out of the tracklist and later appeared on compilations and expanded versions of the album.
73* ArtistAndTheBand: While The Attractions were first a backing band for Elvis, they released their own album in 1980.
74* TheBandMinusTheFace:
75** The Attractions released ''Mad About the Wrong Boy'', a "solo" album without Costello on which they wrote and sang their own songs, in 1980. Costello later covered one of its songs, "Sad About Girls".
76** The Imposters is The Attractions minus Bruce Thomas.
77* BaroquePop: ''Imperial Bedroom'' has elements of this style.
78* BeYourself: From "Pay It Back" on ''My Aim Is True'':
79-->"And I tried so hard just to be myself\
80 But I keep on fading away"
81* BreakupSong: Quite a few, including "I'm Not Angry" and "I Felt the Chill". "Party Girl" is not so much a breakup song as a "I'm sorry, but we can never date" song.
82* CanonDiscontinuity: Costello hates his 1982 single "Party Party" and has eradicated it from his discography, refusing to allow it to be included on any of his albums - not even expanded reissues or outtake collections. This appears to be a RunningGag at this point.
83* CarefulWithThatAxe:
84** "ALMOST BEATEN TO THE PUNCH!"
85** Several songs have a more straightforward "OW!!!", namely "Five Gears in Reverse", "Tokyo Storm Warning", and "Button My Lip".
86** "Let Him Dangle" has a very passionate "STRING HIM UP!".
87** The intro and outro to "Man Out Of Time", which were grafted on from an earlier, more raucous version.
88* CheckpointCharlie: Costello uses the phrase in "Oliver's Army" as part of the song’s evocation of a UsefulNotes/ColdWar milieu.
89* ConceptAlbum: ''The Juliet Letters'' is based around the concept of letters, with different songs representing different types of correspondence.
90* ContentWarning: A tongue-in-cheek one was affixed on the front cover of ''Almost Blue'', warning buyers that the album "[[NewSoundAlbum contains country music]]".
91* CoverAlbum: ''Almost Blue'' and ''Kojak Variety''.
92* DeadArtistsAreBetter: "The Loved Ones" is an aversion. It's "a tale about the morbid practice of refusing to leave a nice clean corpse by contriving the legend of your decline."
93* DeadpanSnarker: His persona, and most likely his real demeanor, at least in the early stages of his career. His attitude has mellowed a little with time. On the other hand, given that his response to the death of Margaret Thatcher was to dust off some of his old anti-Thatcherite songs, he hasn't exactly gone soft.
94* DigitalPiracyIsOkay: On 2004's ''The Delivery Man'', the standard FBI anti-piracy warning is prefaced by a note reading: ''"The artist does not endorse the following statement. The FBI doesn't have his home phone number and he hopes they don't have yours."''
95* FilmNoir: "Watching the Detectives" is a stylish run through the signifiers of the genre. "Episode of Blonde" also has elements of the form.
96* GenerationXerox: His father Ross [=McManus=] was a singer, songwriter and trumpet player who'd spent several decades working with British big band leader Joe Loss.
97* GodwinsLaw: "Two Little Hitlers".
98* GoneHorriblyRight: His attempt to "bring a tiresome conversation to a swift conclusion" by using the "N word".
99* IHaveManyNames: Though most often credited as Elvis Costello, for a while in the late eighties and early nineties, he used the name Declan [=MacManus=] in most of his songwriting credits. Other identities pop up at whim: The Imposter has been used as the name of a writer/performer for a few assorted singles, occasionally also showing up in some production credits of Costello material. A 1982 track (which Costello wrote, produced, sang and played all instruments on) was credited to The Emotional Toothpaste. Napoleon Dynamite[[note]]No relation to [[Film/NapoleonDynamite the movie]] according to its creators, though Costello was skeptical and considered litigation[[/note]] was used as a performance pseudonym for a 1982 single and in the credits of a 1986 album. The name The Little Hands Of Concrete (or L.H.C.) is used in the credits of ''King Of America'' to identify Costello's contributions. Howard Coward is Costello's identity when performing as part of the Coward Brothers with T-Bone Burnett; the name has also popped up in a few production credits. He uses Eamonn Singer as an identity for some of the paintings and designs on albums and singles. A recent collector's-only 10" vinyl single from 2017 is credited to Sgt. Larry Singer. On the 1987 12" single "Blue Chair", Costello uses a number of these identities: the single is credited to Elvis Costello as a performer; the credited writer of all four tracks is "[=MacManus=]; track 1 is a Coward Brothers production, co-mixed by Howard Coward; track 3 features acoustic guitar by L.H.C.; track 4 is "A Napoleon Dynamite Production"; the 12" package as a whole is co-designed by Eamonn Singer.
100* InactionVideo: "I Wanna Be Loved". Costello notes:
101-->"The video clip made for this song is the only one that I feel really adds anything much to the performance. It was shot by Evan English while we were on tour in Melbourne. Having insisted that I stay up all night so that I was feeling quite overwrought, and this being a period of particularly difficult personal circumstances, Evan then placed me in a photo-booth set. As I performed the song, sometimes singing live over the track as well as lip-synching, a great variety of people entered the frame, whispering, blowing in my ear, or kissing me on the cheek. The effect was very unsettling, and the range of reactions seen were entirely genuine and somehow added gravity to a rather plastic-sounding record."
102* InkSuitActor: Played himself on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''.
103* InTheStyleOf:
104** "The Other Side of Summer" was intended to evoke the classic sound of Music/TheBeachBoys from TheSixties, but it's been pointed out that it sounds more like The Beach Boys circa ''Music/SurfsUp'' or ''Music/{{Holland|1973}}''.
105** "Oliver's Army" is in the style of Music/{{ABBA}}.
106* LastNoteNightmare: The sudden ending of the already unnerving "Night Rally".
107* JackBauerInterrogationTechnique: ''Watching The Detectives'':
108-->They beat him up until the teardrops start\
109But he can't be wounded 'cause he's got no heart...
110* LonelyPianoPiece: "Someone Took the Words Away", particularly effective since Costello is known for writing songs with a lot of words crammed into them.
111* LongingLook: Mentioned by name in "Everyday I Write the Book."
112* LyricalColdOpen: Costello's first three albums each open with one: "Welcome to the Working Week", "No Action", and "Accidents Will Happen", respectively. Other examples include "Mystery Dance", "I Hope You're Happy Now", "Next Time 'Round", "Indoor Fireworks", "Big Boys", and "Poisoned Rose".
113* LyricalDissonance:
114** The upbeat music that Costello tends to employ often masks how dark the lyrics are. One example is "Veronica", whose tune is so happy and poppy that you have to pay close attention to the lyrics to get that the song is about an elderly woman with Alzheimer's Disease.
115** Those twinkling keyboard riffs in "Green Shirt" accompany such lyrics as:
116--->Better cut off all identifying labels\
117Before they put you on the torture table\
118'Cause somewhere in the Quisling clinic\
119There's a shorthand typist taking seconds over minutes
120** An even more well-known example of this trope is "Oliver's Army", an upbeat Music/{{ABBA}}-inspired song (no, really; compare it with "Dancing Queen") that sounds quite cheerful until you realise it's about sending young working-class men, barely out of school, off to fight and die in foreign wars.
121** "I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down" mixes this with TheCoverChangesTheMeaning. The original version by Sam & Dave is slower and more anguished. Costello's version is [[RearrangeTheSong up-tempo]], and the video features Costello and The Attractions dancing their way through the song; however, the lyrics are still about a broken-hearted lover lamenting that his girlfriend has left him.
122* MeaningfulRename: "Elvis Costello" is a double ShoutOut to Music/ElvisPresley and his father Ross [=McManus=], who recorded a CoverVersion of [[Music/TheBeatles "The Long and Winding Road"]] in 1970 under the name Day Costello, which became [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff a hit in Australia]]. In 1972 (as Big Ross and the Memphis Sound) [=McManus=] recorded an Elvis CoverAlbum which later got reissued as ''[[https://www.bear-family.com/mcmanus-ross-elvis-dad-sings-elvis-cd.html Elvis' Dad Sings Elvis]]''.
123* MurderBallad:
124** "Let Him Dangle" and "Kinder Murder".
125** His cover of Leon Payne's "Psycho".
126* NerdGlasses: One of his visual trademarks.
127* NomDeMom: Costello is often reported as his mother's maiden name, but in reality it belonged to his great-grandmother.
128* NonAppearingTitle: "Couldn't Call It Unexpected No. 4", which relates to the line "I can't believe I'll never believe in anything again".
129** "The Long Division" from the Burt Bacharach collaboration also qualifies.
130** "Room With No Number" is technically an example of this. The refrain is always sung as "room without a number", never as the title phrase.
131* ObsessionSong: "I Want You". At emphatic length.
132-->It's the stupid details that my heart is breaking for\
133It's the way your shoulders shake and what they're shaking for\
134It's knowing that he knows you now after only guessing\
135It's the thought of him undressing you or you undressing...
136* PrecisionFStrike:
137** "Suit of Lights":
138-->It's a force of habit\
139If it moves, then you fuck it, if it doesn't move you stab it
140** "How To Be Dumb":
141-->And beautiful people stampede to the doorway of the funniest '''fucker''' in the world
142* ProtestSong:
143** "Shipbuilding," an anti-UsefulNotes/TheFalklandsWar song.
144** "Tramp The Dirt Down", where he imagines himself standing on the grave of UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher and stamping on it. The song experienced a brief spike in popularity following her death.
145* PungeonMaster: His earlier works dripped with puns, ''Get Happy!!'' especially.
146-->''"I'm so affected in the face of your affection"''\
147''"You lack lust, you're so lackluster"''
148* RadioSong: "Radio Radio":
149-->Radio is a sound salvation\
150Radio is cleaning up the nation\
151They say you better listen to the voice of reason\
152But they don't give you any choice 'cause they think that it's treason\
153So you had better do as you are told\
154You better listen to the radio ...\
155I wanna bite the hand that feeds me\
156I wanna bite that hand so badly\
157I wanna make them wish they'd never seen me
158* RecordProducer:
159** As well as the producing credits on his own albums, Costello has produced albums for Music/TheSpecials, Music/ThePogues and Music/{{Squeeze|Band}}. He also almost produced Music/TheyMightBeGiants' ''Apollo 18''.
160** On the other hand...
161*** Music/NickLowe produced many of his most acclaimed releases, including ''This Year's Model'', ''My Aim Is True'', ''Armed Forces'', and ''Blood & Chocolate''.
162*** Geoff Emerick, former engineer for Music/TheBeatles, produced ''Imperial Bedroom'' and ''All This Useless Beauty''.
163*** T-Bone Burnett produced ''King of America'' and ''Spike''.
164*** Legendary country producer Billy Sherrill did the honors for ''Almost Blue''.
165* RecycledSoundtrack: Some variation; 1981's "Watch Your Step" sounds suspiciously similar to 1980's "Secondary Modern".
166* {{Retraux}}: The cover for ''Get Happy!!'', as well as its production style, was influenced by RAndB from TheSixties.
167* RevisitingTheRoots: The popular perception of ''Brutal Youth'' was as a reunion of the original Attractions lineup and a restoration of their original sound, but Costello openly rejected that idea, since he ended up working with Steve Nieve, Bruce Thomas and Pete Thomas again more out of happenstance than design. Of course, this could also be viewed as DistinctionWithoutADifference.
168* RhymingWithItself: The chorus of "Lip Service":
169-->''"Lip service is all you'll ever get from me" [3x]''\
170''"But if you change your mind, you can send it in a letter to me"''
171* RunningGag:
172** Almost every version of ''Get Happy!!'' places emphasis on the number of tracks in its promotion. The original vinyl album featured twenty tracks on one record, and Elvis recorded a television promo promoting this fact while the album included a note from producer Nick Lowe to assuage customer fears that the quality would be sacrificed to fit the songs on. The 1994 Rykodisc reissue contained ten bonus tracks and a note from Elvis reading, "Thanks to the wonders of technology, we are able to present the new and improved ''Get Happy!!'' containing, count them, THIRTY TRACKS!!!" Nine years later, the Rhino reissue added a bonus disc containing {{th|ereIsNoKillLikeOverkill}}irty bonus tracks, bringing the total to 50. This trend died with the [[VanillaEdition 2007 Hip-O releases, which drop the bonus tracks and liner notes]].
173** Elvis's commentary on his music videos from the DVD ''The Right Spectacle'' always points out how bizarre Steve Nieve's outfit is, from green shoes to a shirt made from a KFC bucket to a red jumper and a cowboy hat.
174* {{Scatting}}: The jazzy "Almost Ideal Eyes".
175* SelfBackingVocalist: The Attractions/Imposters often provide backing vocals, but Costello also provides his own harmony vocals much of the time. One song where this is particularly noticeable is "King Horse".
176* SelfDeprecation: Described himself in a mid-[[TheEighties 1980's]] interview as "Rock 'n' roll's ''TabletopGame/{{Scrabble}}'' champion".
177* SeparatedByACommonLanguage: Since breaking into the American market, his work has started to focus on the Stateside audience and it shows in the lyrics, especially in his later work.
178* SequelSong: Sometimes his compositions just have too many words for one song. "American Without Tears No. 2" and "...Dust" are good examples of this. "When I Was Cruel No. 2" is unusual in that not only is it a completely different song than "When I Was Cruel No. 1", but it is on the album while "No. 1" was a B-side.
179* SerialSpouse: He's been married three times, most recently (2003-present) to Canadian jazz artist Diana Krall.
180* SesameStreetCred:
181** Joined Elmo (both dressed in jacket, tie, fedora, and hipster "NHS glasses") to sing about the time [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KxardpBReQc "the monster went and ate my red 2".]], a [[ParodyAssistance rewrite]] of "The Angels Wanna Wear My Red Shoes".
182** He duetted with Music/GwenStefani on his composition, "I Throw My Toys Around" on ''WesternAnimation/TheRugratsMovie'' soundtrack.
183* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: A hallmark of much of Costello's early work, although after his collaboration with Music/BurtBacharach the tendency towards using a lot of words has eased slightly. He jokingly referred to himself as "rock and roll's ''Scrabble'' champion" for this reason.
184* SillyLoveSongs: ''North'' is full of heartfelt love songs, having been written in the period when he started dating Diana Krall.
185* SongStyleShift: "Man Out of Time" begins with a loud wail and a fast-paced guitar riff for a few bars, before it abruptly changes to the slower-paced guitar chords of the main melody. Then, at the end, it suddenly shifts back to the fast-paced guitar chords and loud wails of the beginning.
186* StopAndGo: "God's Comic".
187* TakeThat[=/=]TheVillainSucksSong:
188** "Less Than Zero" is one to former British Union of Fascists leader Sir Oswald Mosley; Costello was inspired to write the song after seeing Mosley on a televised interview in which he attempted to deny his racist past.
189** "Tramp the Dirt Down" is a long anti-UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher rant.
190** One of the more pointed ones, "How To Be Dumb," is about the Attractions' bass player, Bruce Thomas.
191** The words to a number of the songs on ''Punch The Clock'' ("The Greatest Thing" and "Love Went Mad") (reputedly) contain swipes at the macho posturing/anti-hard work themes of [[Music/GeorgeMichael Wham!'s]] "Wham! Rap (Enjoy What You Do)" and "Young Guns (Go For It)" ([[PoesLaw though the Wham! songs themselves might have been parodies]]).
192* TelephoneSong: "No Action" is sung from the perspective of a man who no longer feels anything for his girlfriend -- mentioning several times how, every time they talk on the phone, all he wants to do is hang up.
193* TextlessAlbumCover: ''King of America''.
194* TruckDriversGearChange: Used subtly and effectively in "Oliver's Army".
195* UsefulNotes/TheTroubles: Part of the subject of "Oliver's Army".
196* VanillaEdition: Many of his Universal/Hip-O reissues, after the Rykodisc and Rhino reissues of his 1977-1986 catalog featured bonus tracks, even ''Goodbye Cruel World''. Universal has released "deluxe editions" of some of his best albums like ''My Aim Is True'' and ''This Year's Model''.
197* WallOfText: The lyrics on the original release of ''Imperial Bedroom'' were printed this way.
198* WitchWithACapitalB: From "Love Went Mad":
199-->"I wish you luck with a capital F"
200* WroteTheBook: "Every Day I Write The Book".
201* YouCanLeaveYourHatOn: PlayedWith, to incredibly dark effect, in "She's Pulling Out The Pin", which starts out describing a striptease ("She's pulling out the pin / That lets her hair fall down"), implies a dark relationship scenario in the character's background ("She's slipping off the hook / Unbuttoning her dress / There's just enough to make some man a mess"), drops a sinister hint ("Do you hear something ticking?"), and ultimately suggests that "she" (probably a different “she”) has done something very terrible, and the pin isn't just in her hair and the mess isn't just emotional...
202-->''Full of shattered glass and mayhem''\
203''Not one softly whispered amen...''\
204''She's knocking down some doors''\
205''And the smoke begins to fill''\
206''Where the world without her ends''\
207''And the next one begins''\
208''She's pulling out the pin.''
209----

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