• > Home
  • > Artists
  • > Elvis Costello
  • > Albums
  • > Brutal Youth (Expanded)
  • Elvis Costello

    Elvis Costello

    Brutal Youth (Expanded)

    Elvis Costello - Brutal Youth (Expanded)

    02/19/2002 | Rhino/wea Uk 

    Bookmark and Share

    Videos from Brutal Youth (Expanded)

    All Music Guide Review

    Like the All This Useless Beauty bonus disc, the second disc for Rhino's expanded reissue of Brutal Youth, Elvis Costello's 1994 release for Warner, does not contain every B-side from the album's accompanying singles (covers of Lennon/McCartney's "Step Inside Love" and "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away" have been left behind, for instance, and his brilliant version of Springsteen's "Brilliant Disguise" remains isolated on a B-side, appearing neither here or on Beauty). Instead, Costello & Co. pile on the demos and alternate versions, with ten of the album's 15 songs. Since the bonus disc runs 15 songs as well, this leaves just five new unique songs, the best of which is the opener "Life Shrinks," since "Abandon Words" and "Poisoned Letter" are admitted works-in-progress (deemed so in Costello's typically excellent, informative liner notes), and "Idiophone" and "A Drunken Man's Praise of Sobriety" too deliberately experimental to truly catch hold. Not a great haul in regards to new material, but the demos, early takes, and alternate versions that populate this second disc are welcome, since the songs shine through when stripped of the muddled production that sank the proper album. The songs are still a mixed batch even in this setting, ranging from the excellent ("Sulky Girl," "Favourite Hour"), the very good ("You Tripped at Every Step," "This Is Hell," "London's Brilliant Parade," "13 Steps Lead Down"), the good ("Pony St.," "Just About Glad," "Kinder Murder," "All the Rage"), and the ones so misdirected, they're positively bewildering ("Clown Strike," "My Science Fiction Twin"). The main difference is, they're often better to hear here, even when it's just a raw acoustic demo, than the anti-polish of the album. It's still a record that's just for the dedicated, of course, but only the dedicated would buy a double-disc reissue, anyway. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

    Credits of Brutal Youth (Expanded)

    • Elvis Costello
    • Bass, Guitar, Piano, Vocals, Producer, Main Performer, Text


    MP3 Downloads

    What's Hot from ARTISTdirect