Amazon.com essential video
What began as a songwriting collaboration conducted entirely by phone and fax bloomed into one of 1998's most acclaimed pop albums and, now, a satisfying video companion. Recruited to jointly pen a big, romantic ballad for
Grace of My Heart, director Allison Anders's 1996 musical drama about the heady days of '60s pop, once and future angry young man Elvis Costello and eternal '60s mainstream maestro Burt Bacharach proved a match made in pop heaven. Bacharach's canny, classic pop inspired Costello's most emotionally direct lyrics; those lyrics, in turn, were arguably the sharpest ever wedded to the composer's lush, intricate music. That ballad ("God, Give Me Strength") led to 1998's album-length collaboration,
Painted from Memory, which provides the compositional spine for this terrific episode taped for PBS's
Sessions from W. 54th, hosted by David Byrne.
With Bacharach conducting from the podium or his piano bench, Costello steps into the pre-rock shoes of a crooner, clad in an Eisenhower-era single-breasted tux, his hair cropped close. If that image defies his post-punk zeitgeist, the music doesn't lie, its exquisite heartbreak borne out by Costello's heartfelt vocals. His partner's sleek, subtle orchestrations likewise confirm that we're hearing classic love songs (including "In the Darkest Place," "Toledo," "I Still Have That Other Girl," and "Painted from Memory"), which build toward the climactic performance of "God, Give Me Strength." In between, the duo is interviewed by Byrne, and Costello slips in a solid version of his own "Accidents Will Happen," arranged by long-time Attractions keyboard player Steve Nieve. That the net effect of the program is mesmerizing, however, is no accident at all. --Sam Sutherland