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The discography of the English singer-songwriter Elvis Costello includes 33 studio albums, 6 live albums, 17 compilation albums, 6 tribute albums, 2 extended plays, 62 singles and 4 box sets. This page distinguishes between United States and United Kingdom release dates and record labels .
"High Fidelity" is a song written and performed by new wave musician Elvis Costello on his 1980 album, Get Happy!! Written about an adulterous couple where one member still hopes for reconciliation, "High Fidelity" reflected the personal struggles that Costello had been suffering at the time as a result of increased fame and controversy.
Blood & Chocolate was produced by Nick Lowe (pictured in 2017), who had not produced a Costello album since 1981's Trust.. Only six months after the Los Angeles sessions for King of America, Costello entered Olympic Studios in London with the Attractions—the keyboardist Steve Nieve, the bassist Bruce Thomas and the drummer Pete Thomas (no relation)—to record an album.
The Best of Elvis Costello and the Attractions is a compilation album by English musician Elvis Costello and his backing band the Attractions, released in 1985. It was the first of what would be many career-spanning compilation albums of previously released material for Costello.
It should only contain pages that are Elvis Costello songs or lists of Elvis Costello songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Elvis Costello songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Trust was the last of five consecutive Costello albums produced by musician Nick Lowe (pictured in 2017).. Costello and the Attractions demoed material at London's Eden Studios throughout September 1980 before commencing work in October at DJM Studios in Holborn, central London, with the team of Nick Lowe and Roger Béchirian returning from prior albums.
King of America is the tenth studio album by the English singer-songwriter Elvis Costello, released on 21 February 1986.Co-produced by Costello and T Bone Burnett, the album originated following a series of tours the two made under the name "the Coward Brothers".
Costello was initially disappointed with Punch the Clock. [28] He bemoaned its "lack of heart", "misplaced arrangements" and felt it disregarded longevity: "A lot of the planning, the imaginary production of the record relates to pop music of the moment." Later on, he lambasted the "passionless fads of that charmless time: the early '80s."