Alison (song)

"Alison"
Single by Elvis Costello
from the album My Aim is True
Released 21 May 1977
Recorded 1977
Genre Pub Rock, New Wave
Length 3:21
Label Stiff Records
Writer(s) Elvis Costello (credited as Declan Patrick MacManus)
Producer Nick Lowe
Elvis Costello singles chronology
"Less Than Zero"
(1977)
"Alison"
(1977)
"(The Angels Wanna Wear My) Red Shoes"
(1977)

"Alison" is the fifth track on Elvis Costello's first album, My Aim Is True, released in 1977. Because "Alison" was recorded before Elvis Costello and the Attractions formed, his backing band was Clover. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked it #318 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and Entertainment Weekly voted it as one of Costello's top 10 greatest tunes.[1] The song features in the film Adaptation. (2002). The line "my aim is true" gives the album its title.

Contents

Background

Costello has divulged little on the meaning of the song other than to say that it is about "disappointing somebody"[2] and to deny suggestions that the lines "somebody better put out the big light" and "my aim is true" refer to murder. He has also declined to reveal who the song is about, writing in the liner notes for Girls Girls Girls, "Much could be undone by saying more."[3]

The chorus is based on "Ghetto Child" by The Detroit Spinners.[4]

Release

"Alison" was released as a single in the United Kingdom with a B-side of "Welcome to the Working Week" and as two singles in the United States; one with a mono version of the same song on the B-side, the other with "Miracle Man".

The US (and Canadian) single versions of "Alison" are unique in that someone at CBS in the US decided to add synth-strings, background singers and echo to the song.

Covers

Linda Ronstadt recorded a version of "Alison" on her album Living In The USA, in 1978, which sold over 2 million copies. Years later, Costello joked that he might have been publicly derisive of Ronstadt's version, "but I didn’t mind spending the money that she earned me".[5]

Everything but the Girl recorded an acoustic version on their Covers E.P., which was also included on their album Acoustic. The song also played a role in the movie Get Over It.

Butch Walker recorded a live version on his EP Cover Me Badd (2005) during his acoustic solo tour 2004.

Brandon Boyd (the lead singer of Incubus) covered the song for GAP's Favorite Songs album (2005).

Costello and Billie Joe Armstrong, of Green Day, played the song live together on VH1 Classic's "Decades Rock Live". The performance originally aired on May 19, 2006.

References

  1. ^ "Alison". Pump It Up: Elvis Costello's 10 Greatest Tunes (Entertainment Weekly). 2004-10-09. http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20047186_20047196_700956,00.html. 
  2. ^ "Alison". 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (Rolling Stone). 2004-12-09. http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/elviscostello/articles/story/6596163/alison. 
  3. ^ (1988) Album notes for Girls Girls Girls by Elvis Costello [Inset]. USA: Columbia Records (C2K-46897).
  4. ^ (2001) Album notes for My Aim Is True by Elvis Costello [Inset]. USA: Rhino Entertainment (R2 74285).
  5. ^ Griggs, Simon (26 November 1998). "Elvis Costello Interview". http://www.simongrigg.info/ecinterview.htm. Retrieved 2008-07-25.