Elvis Costello regarded acclaim and women with equal suspicion. A year after the release of Imperial Bedroom, he insisted on quashing a reporter’s memories of what had been, in 1982, a critical triumph. “In each song there’s some fake psychedelia or a ’40s-style riff or things written with a strict format after the fashion of a standard ballad. I wanted to see what effect I could achieve,” he explained while promoting his follow-up record, Punch the Clock. Fair enough. But then he went further: “It just reached a point where I was getting so carried away trying to reflect the lyrics, the whole thing would end up sounding unbalanced.” So unlike other artists, he can judge the quality of his own material.
While not a punk himself, Costello exploited punk’s energy into onslaughts against political and romantic hypocrisy. He did well in the UK and America from the start with the release of his 1977 solo debut, My Aim Is True, and the following year with This Year’s Model, where he was joined by his backing band the Attractions. For a while, they could do anything, at home with tub-thumpers like “Pump It Up” and midtempo flourishes like “Accidents Will Happen.” Steve Nieve’s keyboards absorbed Booker T. & the M.G.’s and ABBA; the rhythm section of bassist Bruce Thomas and drummer Pete Thomas lent enough sinew to their leader’s metaphorical contortions to make them sound natural.
Costello’s fluency with the burgeoning pop-rock canon made him the Boomer generation’s favorite quasi-punk. Linda Ronstadt covered “Alison.” Lindsay Buckingham regarded him as an influence when he pushed Fleetwood Mac into the experiments of Tusk. In a tacit admission of his debts, Costello & the Attractions released the beautiful Motown and Stax homage Get Happy!! in 1980; meanwhile, three years of an eye-popping booze and drug diet and his use of disgusting racial slurs got Costello into an unflattering fight with Stephen Stills’ band in a Columbus, Ohio hotel bar.
“History repeats the old conceits.” The first line from Imperial Bedroom’s first track—sung in the higher register Costello preferred—sums up the adventures of a garrulous singer-songwriter whose stylistic range huffed alongside the jingle-jangle of his wordplay. Reluctant to dwell in what “Beyond Belief” calls “a very fashionable hovel,” he bade farewell to longtime producer Nick Lowe and hired Beatles engineer Geoff Emerick, who, with the assistance of Jon Jacobs, gives Imperial Bedroom a buttery sheen. This was the best Costello had sounded to date.