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All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Let Them All Talk 2. Everyday I Write The Book 3. Greatest Thing, The 4. Element Within Her, The 5. Love Went Mad 6. Shipbuilding 7. TKO (Boxing Day) 8. Charm School 9. Invisible Man, The 10. Mouth Almighty 11. King Of Thieves 12. Pills And Soap 13. World And His Wife, The 14. Heathen Town 15. Flirting Kind, The 16. Walking On Thin Ice 17. Town Where Time Stood Still 18. Shatterproof 19. World And His Wife, The - (live) 20. Everyday I Write The Book - (live)
Album Notes Full performer name: Elvis Costello & The Attractions. Elvis Costello & The Attractions: Elvis Costello (vocals, guitar, keyboards); Steve Nieves (piano, organ, keyboards); Bruce Thomas (electric bass); Pete Thomas (drums). TKO Horns: Jeff Blythe (alto & baritone saxophones, clarinet); Paul Speare (tenor saxophone, flute); Dave Plews (trumpet); Jim Paterson (trombone). Additional personnel: Stuart Robson (trumpet, flugelhorn); Chet Baker (trumpet); Morris Pert (percussion); Claudia Fontaine, Caron Wheeler (background vocals). Producers: Clive Langer, Alan Winstanley, Allen Toussaint, Elvis Costello. Principally recorded at AIR Studios, London, England in 1983. Originally released on Columbia (38897). Includes liner notes by Elvis Costello. PUNCH THE CLOCK is Costello's most commercial, accessible pop album. Producers Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley had brought chart success to other early-'80s Brits like Madness, and they endeavored to do the same with Elvis. While an artiste like Costello proved not as easily malleable as their other clients, he was willing to meet his producers in the middle. The results, while markedly slicker than any other EC album, are far from overblown or saccharine. The arrangements add a bright pop sheen to R&B-influenced tracks like "Everyday I Write the Book" (the greatest song Smokey Robinson never wrote) and the bouncy, horn-driven "Let Them All Talk." Tunes such as "Pills and Soap" and "Shipbuilding" showcase Elvis at his most socio-political, with cutting lyrics that skewer their subjects, and gorgeous, elegant melodies that belie the songs' ominous nature. Editorial Reviews Q Magazine (05/01/1995) | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||||||
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