4.2 • 5.5K Ratings
🗓️ 18 December 2024
⏱️ 18 minutes
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0:00.0 | Listener supported WNYC Studios. |
0:10.6 | This is the New Yorker Radio Hour, |
0:13.0 | a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker. |
0:17.8 | This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. |
0:19.7 | I'm David Remnick. |
0:23.1 | When rock and roll emerged in the days of Little Richard and Chuck Berry, Elvis and the Beatles, no one thought about long careers, the way a |
0:29.7 | musician's work might evolve over time. But that was then. Now there are careers that are |
0:35.1 | 40, 50 years long. Elvis Costell has been on the scene since the mid-70s, a leader of the new wave. |
0:41.9 | But since then, he's led a vital and brilliant career of experiment and variation. |
0:47.3 | And I've been following it all along. |
0:51.1 | Tell me, how does it feel? |
0:55.5 | In the hour of deception, in the moment of pretend. |
1:03.5 | Costello's newest album, Hey Clock Face, is out this month, |
1:07.2 | and it was largely recorded before the pandemic. |
1:10.3 | I spoke with him as he sat outside his |
1:11.9 | house near the harbor in Vancouver, British Columbia, which is why you might even hear a foghorn |
1:16.9 | in the background. I wonder how you approach new music like that. If you feel that a new album must |
1:23.9 | have either a new sound, a new thematic approach. |
1:29.9 | How do you approach that idea of a new record? |
1:35.1 | Well, about 2010, I told people I was going to concentrate on live performance. |
1:40.7 | I think that was coming to terms with the fact that the model that we had lived by for the previous years |
1:48.0 | wasn't no longer in existence. |
... |
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