![]() When I Was Cruel (2002) [ larger cover art ] |
I exit through the spotlight glare
I stepped out into thin air
Into a perfume so rarefied
"Here comes the bride"
Not quite aside, they snide, "She's number four"
"There's number three just by the door"
Those in the know, don't ever flatter her, they go one better
"She was selling speedboats in a tradeshow when he met her"
Look at her now
She's starting to yawn
She looks like she was born to it
But it was so much easier
When I was cruel
She reaches out her arms to me
Imploring: "Another melody?"
So she can dance her husband out on the floor
The captains of industry just lie there where they fall
In an eau-de-nil and pale carnation creation
A satin sash and velvet elevation
She straightens the tipsy head-dress of her spouse
While her's recalls a honey house
There'll be no sorrows left to drown
Early in the morning in your evening gown
But it was so much easier
When I was cruel
The entrance hall was arranged with hostesses and ushers
Who turned out to be the younger wive's nursing schoolgirl crushes
Parting the waves of those few feint friends
Fingers once offered are now too heavy to extend
The ghostly first wife glides up stage whispering to raucous talkers
Spilling family secrets out to flunkeys and castrato walkers
See that girl,
Watch that scene
Digging the "Dancin' Queen"
Two newspaper editors like playground sneaks
Running a book on which of them is going to last the week
One of them calls to me.
And he says, "I know you"
"You gave me this tattoo back in '82"
"you were a spoilt child then with a record to plug"
"And I was a shaven headed seaside thug"
"Things haven't really changed that much"
"One of us is still getting paid too much"
There are some things I can't report
The memory of his last retort
But it was so much easier
When I was cruel
Look at me now
She's starting to yawn
She looks like she was born to it
Ah, but it was so much easier
When I was cruel
| tictocsailor (Seattle, WA) | Posted: Mar 29, 2006 - 00:28 Grating and painful. Everytime I take it down a notch. But now I'm at 1! Now what? A petition? No, the mute button will do. |
| jah_blessed (Netherlands) | Posted: Mar 29, 2006 - 00:28 Well-placed Satie sample. Good track. |
| fahartle | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 11:42 Clariposa wrote: I thought she was saying "boing".
She sounds like Bjork to me. Now that's funny! At least the next time this song rolls around I'll have the image of some woman standing up every few seconds . . . "boing" . . . "boing" |
| ploafmaster (Richmond, VA) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:45 Odyzzeuz wrote: I find this fascinating. The woman saying ''und'' in the background over and over is weirdly mesmerizing. I swear I'd rather listen to something experimental like this that endure another Counting Crows by-the-numbers thing. I mean, those who are knocking this, why are you listening to an alternative ''eclectic'' mix when you can get something owned by Clearchannel? They never surprise anybody. And go eat at McDonalds while you're at it, you clone.
Wow, you're so smart! I mean, obviously, because somebody doesn't like this song, this one song, they prefer the drivel spewed forth by Clear Channel. And don't forget that they're clones! You sure figured out everything pretty quickly! |
| Clariposa (Austin, TX) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:31 I thought she was saying "boing". She sounds like Bjork to me. |
| fahartle | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:29 LennytheB wrote: Call me crazy... I started with a 3 on this one.. found myself at a 6.
You're crazy. Time to seek professional help... |
| LennytheB (Duluth, Georgia) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:28 Call me crazy... I started with a 3 on this one.. found myself at a 6. |
| fahartle | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:27 It is cool to like Elvis Costello. Must be cool. Must remember to like this song while I'm driving ice picks in my ears to stop the monotony... |
| underarmor (Austin) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:27 radiojunkie wrote: It depends on your definition of "enjoy." There are quite a number of recordings I love listening to because they trigger an emotional reaction. Sometimes they cause me to sweat. Usually, they're not songs I would play if I had somebody else as a captive audience -- say, in the car. This is one of them. It's a personal experience. Listening to the drill at the dentist triggers an emotional reaction too. Sometimes causing me to sweat. Maybe that will be my first upload on RP. |
| tony620d (an office) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:26 Odyzzeuz wrote: I find this fascinating. The woman saying ''und'' in the background over and over is weirdly mesmerizing. I swear I'd rather listen to something experimental like this that endure another Counting Crows by-the-numbers thing. I mean, those who are knocking this, why are you listening to an alternative ''eclectic'' mix when you can get something owned by Clearchannel? They never surprise anybody. And go eat at McDonalds while you're at it, you clone.
you are so unique, just like everyone else. |
| Atombender (Frankfurt, Germany) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:26 UNN |
| tony620d (an office) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:25 welcome to playlist portion of our show, our playlist have miraculous healing powers. |
| emeraldrose63 (Mississippi) | Posted: Mar 14, 2006 - 06:23 not really my speed |
| Odyzzeuz (Austin, Texas) | Posted: Feb 27, 2006 - 15:02 I find this fascinating. The woman saying ''und'' in the background over and over is weirdly mesmerizing. I swear I'd rather listen to something experimental like this that endure another Counting Crows by-the-numbers thing. I mean, those who are knocking this, why are you listening to an alternative ''eclectic'' mix when you can get something owned by Clearchannel? They never surprise anybody. And go eat at McDonalds while you're at it, you clone. |
| ruthless (Walkin in Memphis) | Posted: Feb 27, 2006 - 15:00 jadewahoo wrote: The dark litany of this song really got a hold of me, drew me into its limbo and insisted that there is no safe way out. Powerful. Beautiful.
You pegged it!! |
| Beanie | Posted: Feb 27, 2006 - 14:59 jadewahoo wrote: The dark litany of this song really got a hold of me, drew me into its limbo and insisted that there is no safe way out. Powerful. Beautiful.
The trite and superficial version of the above: Why is it that the very act of listening to this song makes me feel cooler than I am? Like "stiletto-wielding-blonde-Russian-secret-agent-named-Svetlana" cool. |
| passsion8 (within blast zone of NYC) | Posted: Feb 27, 2006 - 14:58 Shesdifferent wrote: RP your really being cruel with this one....what an awful song...and the girl in the background makes it even worse :puke:
Abso - friggin - lutely! :puke: :puke: I was just about to leave work & now I'll have to stay for a few more songs to get this mess out of my mental audio banks....when will it end??? AAAAAggghhhhhh |
| radiojunkie (Don't get out much) | Posted: Feb 12, 2006 - 20:54 Shimmer wrote: Is there anyone who actually enjoys this song? I can appreciate it on some abstract intellectual level, but I can't imagine playing it for pleasure.
It depends on your definition of "enjoy." There are quite a number of recordings I love listening to because they trigger an emotional reaction. Sometimes they cause me to sweat. Usually, they're not songs I would play if I had somebody else as a captive audience -- say, in the car. This is one of them. It's a personal experience. |
| Shesdifferent (Just visiting this planet) | Posted: Feb 12, 2006 - 20:50 RP your really being cruel with this one....what an awful song...and the girl in the background makes it even worse :puke: |
| rjs (Atlanta, GA) | Posted: Jan 14, 2006 - 13:28 Shimmer wrote: Is there anyone who actually enjoys this song? I can appreciate it on some abstract intellectual level, but I can't imagine playing it for pleasure.
Yeah, I do. I will not always be in the exact mood for it. But it's a cool song, perfectly eclectic for RP, and is also quite intense as part of an almost three hour live show in a big club where you're standing 25 feet directly in front of him. |
| tictocsailor (Seattle, WA) | Posted: Jan 14, 2006 - 13:21 Govi wrote: I, too. This one I could happily never hear again. Sometimes I get stuck in a situation in which it is inconvenient to change or shut it off, and I feel like I've been cornered by a rabid dog. And today it shrinks further to a 2. But I'm not quite ready to compare it to a rabid dog! |
| Mugro (Lane Village, Red Sox Nation) | Posted: Dec 16, 2005 - 13:22 I like this song. It has that Elvis Costello self loathing and dark slickness that I have come to know and love. |
| honeygirl (New England... USA) | Posted: Dec 16, 2005 - 13:20 Prefer... Once upon a time You let me feel you deep inside And nobody knew, nobody saw Do you remember the way you cried? But I don't want no one but you to love me Oh I wouldn't lie You know I'm not that kind of guy E.C.'s version of Cohen's I'm Your Man |
| Govi (Left Coast) | Posted: Dec 16, 2005 - 13:18 tictocsailor wrote: Lots of the RP songs grow on me. This one shrinks. Down to 4. I can go a long time without hearing "und" again.
I, too. This one I could happily never hear again. Sometimes I get stuck in a situation in which it is inconvenient to change or shut it off, and I feel like I've been cornered by a rabid dog. |
| Shimmer (Bethesda, MD) | Posted: Dec 16, 2005 - 13:17 Is there anyone who actually enjoys this song? I can appreciate it on some abstract intellectual level, but I can't imagine playing it for pleasure. |
| ceebeedubya (Baltimore, MD, USA) | Posted: Dec 16, 2005 - 13:17 Disclaimer: I am a rabid Elvis fan. I've been thinking about this song for weeks but my old fogey brain couldn't come up with the title or album it was on. Thanks RP! I've been dying to hear this! |
| tictocsailor (Seattle, WA) | Posted: Dec 01, 2005 - 22:58 Lots of the RP songs grow on me. This one shrinks. Down to 4. I can go a long time without hearing "und" again. |
| jadewahoo (Sedona Az, Beautiful Earth) | Posted: Nov 17, 2005 - 07:50 The dark litany of this song really got a hold of me, drew me into its limbo and insisted that there is no safe way out. Powerful. Beautiful. |
| RabbitEars | Posted: Nov 17, 2005 - 07:46 elvis vs. elvis... Two newspaper editors like playground sneaks Running a book on which of them is going to last the week One of them calls to me And he says, "I know you" "You gave me this tattoo back in '82" "You were a spoilt child then with a record to plug" "And I was a shaven headed seaside thug" "Things haven't really changed that much" "One of us is still getting paid too much" There are some things I can't report The memory of his last retort But it was so much easier When I was cruel ....... Don't stop thinking of me, don't make me feel this way, Come on over here and love me, you know what I want you to say. Don't be cruel to a heart that's true. Why should we be apart? I really love you baby, cross my heart. |
| algrif | Posted: Nov 17, 2005 - 07:44 daedalus wrote: Elvis Costello isn't one of my favorite singers, but there's something about this I like - D'you know I think it might be the 'und' !!!
The reference to Abba s 'Dancing Queen' came out of left field. And from futher out 'Gymnopidea' (??) from Eric Satie way in the back ground |
| Dunnski (Louisville, KY) | Posted: Nov 17, 2005 - 07:43 Where's the fast-forward button? |
| RabbitEars | Posted: Nov 17, 2005 - 07:39 Govi wrote: The concidence of given names does not make Mr. Costello a performer equal to Mr. Presley. no it doesn't. presley's influence aside as a crooner, leather-wearer and hip shaker, he can't touch costello with a ten-foot pole when it comes to musicianship. |
| Govi (Left Coast) | Posted: Nov 02, 2005 - 16:10 Screature wrote: Elivis Rules!! Long live the King, the king isn't dead, same name, different guy!!
To all you Elvis detractors all I can say is: Children, children! Play nice! The concidence of given names does not make Mr. Costello a performer equal to Mr. Presley. |
| poprocker1 (San Diego) | Posted: Nov 02, 2005 - 16:07 This song is pretty cool, und interesting, to say the least. Und you haters need to go und listen to FM if it's a little too wierd und strange for you. Und if you think i keep typing just so i can use "und" in a sentence, you're right. Und i'm out. |
| Screature (Gatineau, Quebec, Canada) | Posted: Oct 04, 2005 - 09:13 Elivis Rules!! Long live the King, the king isn't dead, same name, different guy!! To all you Elvis detractors all I can say is: |
| daedalus (over your hill) | Posted: Oct 04, 2005 - 09:05 Elvis Costello isn't one of my favorite singers, but there's something about this I like - D'you know I think it might be the 'und' !!! The reference to Abba s 'Dancing Queen' came out of left field. |
| Gregorama (Austin, TX) | Posted: Oct 04, 2005 - 09:03 Jeez! Somebody tries something new, that you've never heard anywhere else, and you'd think the guy was a criminal. Lighten up everybody. It is a great song and Costello is one of the most sensible singer songwriters around today. So what if you don't like something because it's new? Get over it. Back to work. If you want to whine about something that matters, whine about the shrub, who actually is a criminal. Whine about the deficit that you will be paying off decades in the future. Whine about having McJobs with no benefits. Whine about all of the endangered species that he has suddenly decided no longer matter. Whine about all of the pork that his buddies are getting, while you can no longer qualify for a student loan. Whine about the price of gas, that now costs more than twice what it did when Clinton was president. Mmmm-Kay? |
| pvcnote | Posted: Oct 04, 2005 - 08:57 that guy is from mars, is an alien. please stop it! this is boring very boring.... |
| tony620d (an office) | Posted: Oct 04, 2005 - 08:56 were on roll now...right into the ground. |
| pilate (high seas) | Posted: Sep 19, 2005 - 15:13 Costello is bad enough. Why go the extra mile and make it more annoying by adding those uns? Though I don't like this guy, I never gave any of his songs a 1. I guess this would be it. |
| randr (New York, NY) | Posted: Sep 19, 2005 - 15:13 I like his "dark pop". Love the James Bond bass--early 60's English thing. |
| Roverfish (Tucson, AZ - Thanks for visiting, please drive through!) | Posted: Aug 20, 2005 - 22:24 I would SWEAR there's a hint of Satie's Gnossienne No1 in the background, esp. near the end. Or I'm losing it, I'll accept either. Decent tune. The "und" reminds me more of Grace Slick's "one" in Jefferson Airplane's "White Rabbit". |
| Shesdifferent (Just visiting this planet) | Posted: Aug 20, 2005 - 22:22 |
| SDBob (San Diego, CA) | Posted: Aug 20, 2005 - 22:19 This song is just plain worn out. There are so many other great Elvis Coostello songs... this one should be retired from the rotation. |
| labkpr (Here and Now!) | Posted: Aug 06, 2005 - 01:15 Arguably his best to date. (My Opinion, not necessarily yours). |
| labkpr (Here and Now!) | Posted: Aug 06, 2005 - 01:11 gEniUs... |
| pyxxel (Dublin, Ireland) | Posted: Jul 22, 2005 - 06:22 What I REALLY don't like about this song (and other Costello outputs) is his voice - not the "und". Guess you either love or hate him... personally I think he is overplayed here. |
| Antigone (Tasha's house, VA) | Posted: Jul 22, 2005 - 06:20 sirrus wrote: Funny how everyone comments about the vocal samp that is repeated throughout the tune. Why should this be heard differently than any other instrument? If this was a snare drum or a hihat or a fretlass bass, noone would gripe about it, but because it sounds like a human voice, it has a different connotation.
Vocal percussion... works for me! My feelings exactly. Seems like it's easier to hate than to listen with open ears. |
| cmrump | Posted: Jul 22, 2005 - 06:18 ginathelintqueen wrote: I love Elvis Costello, but about halfway through the song I said to my SO, "Ok, if she never 'oing'd' again, it be too soon."
Sigh. Suppose I'm narrow-minded or something, but this was just torturous. and cruel 2 |
| Ellesbee (Baltimore, MD) | Posted: Jul 22, 2005 - 06:18 Great point! I like this song and gave it a 9 unds and all sirrus wrote: Funny how everyone comments about the vocal samp that is repeated throughout the tune. Why should this be heard differently than any other instrument? If this was a snare drum or a hihat or a fretlass bass, noone would gripe about it, but because it sounds like a human voice, it has a different connotation.
Vocal percussion... works for me! |
