Secret, Profane And Sugarcane

Posted over 2 years ago



Listen to the latest effort form the prolific Declan McManus, I'm kinda on the fence. Certainly worth the vinyl and there is no denying his talent or sincerity. I guess I like it. I'll give it time to grow.


From Amazon:
Product Description
The record was produced by T Bone Burnett and recorded by Mike Piersante during a three-day session at Nashville's Sound Emporium Studio.

Joining Costello were Jerry Douglas (dobro), Stuart Duncan (fiddle), Mike Compton (mandolin), Jeff Taylor (accordion) and Dennis Crouch (double bass), some of the most highly regarded recording artists and musicians in traditional American country music, Bluegrass and beyond.

The album includes ten previously unrecorded songs. "Sulphur to Sugarcane" and "The Crooked Line", were co-written with T Bone Burnett while, "I Felt The Chill" marks Costello's second recorded songwriting collaboration with Loretta Lynn.

Costello revisits two songs from his catalogue in string band style. Both songs were originally written for Johnny Cash. "Hidden Shame" was indeed included on Cash's album, "Boom Chicka Boom".

The album title makes reference to "The Secret Songs", Costello's unfinished commission for the Royal Danish Opera about the life of Hans Christian Andersen.

Seeking a new connection from the author to the Anglophone world, Costello wrote about the Andersen's relationship with the world famous singer, Jenny Lind in "She Handed Me A Mirror" and "How Deep Is The Red".

"She Was No Good", relates some of the chaotic details of Lind's famous "All-American" concert tour of 1850, which was promoted by P.T. Barnum. In its aftermath, "Red Cotton" imagines Barnum reading an Abolishionist pamphlet, while manufacturing cheap souvenirs of the adventure.

These four episodes were newly adapted for the instrumentation of this record.

Indeed these are first Costello compositions to be predominantly rooted in acoustic music since his 1986 album, "King Of America", which was produced by T Bone Burnett. He also produced the 1989 album, "Spike".

T Bone adds his distinctive Kay electric guitar to several of numbers, the only amplified instrument on the recording.

Jim Lauderdale takes the close vocal harmony part throughout the record and Emmylou Harris contributed a third vocal part on the chorus of "The Crooked Line" on the final day of recording.

The record concludes with the waltz, "Changing Partners", a song made famous by Bing Crosby.

The cover artwork of "Secret, Profane & Sugarcane" is an ink drawing by the renowned cartoonist, illustrator and author, Tony Millionaire.

Elvis Costello first recorded in Nashville with George Jones in 1979 and returned to the city for "Almost Blue", his 1981 album of classic country covers.

He returned to the city in 2004 to record a duet rendition of "The Scarlet Tide" with Emmylou Harris.

This song, co-written with T Bone Burnett, received an Academy Award nomination for Alison Krauss' rendition in the motion picture, "Cold Mountain" in 2003.

Comments (8)

  1. inrumford says
    Permalink posted 06/03/2009
  2. deadmandeadman says

    Elvis Costello is one of those artists.   I am shamefully ignorant.  Oh...I know some.....like a flea on the tip of an iceberg.

    Permalink posted 06/03/2009
  3. Klyde says

    I just received it UPS. It's going in as I type. I will listen and I've got to admit, my hopes are high. Thanks for the informative post.

    Permalink posted 06/03/2009
  4. dermahrk says

    Being a big bluegrass/acoustic fan and a Costello fan as well, this release has certainly captured my interest, but I hadn't heard any until today.

    From what I've heard, it may sound like King of America but the songs are better.

    Permalink posted 06/04/2009
  5. BerkeleyBob says

    This is a recording which may take more than one listen to fully appreciate. Elvis is always interesting and his musical range is about as wide as anyone who comes  to mind. I am a big fan of T Bone Burnett, who has turned into a master in the record studio. I really enjoyed the Costello television variety/interview show on Sundance, and heard it was being renewed for a second year.

    Permalink posted 06/04/2009
  6. Naomi17 says

    I'd buy this for the album art alone - but I liked the selection, too.

    Permalink posted 06/05/2009
  7. inrumford says

    Hey Naomi - you'd be surprised at how many CDs I opted to listen to based only on the fact I liked the cover art! And more often than not, I liked the CD! Quality seems to permeate

    Permalink posted 06/05/2009
  8. MusicRX says

    Certainly very different for his Starbucks debut, but quality work I enjoy.

    Permalink posted 06/06/2009

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