‘PUMP IT UP’ By ELVIS COSTELLO – 1978

45prm singles on vinyl

26 May 2025

Artist: ELVIS COSTELLO & THE ATTRACTIONS
Born Declan Patrick MacManus 71 years ago in London, the supreme songsmith
has released (so far) 32 albums solo and as a band leader. He also has multiple collaborative records to his credit.

Single: PUMP IT UP
Album: This Year’s Model
His 2nd one.
Year: 1978

Costello: “It was a satire. If you listen to the lyrics, it kind of goes against the grain
of hedonism. Well, just how much can you fuck, how many drugs can you do before
you get so numb you can’t really feel anything?”

EC: Instagram – Discography

ELVIS COSTELLO Didn’t Want To Go To CHELSEA 45 Years Ago

5 May 2023

45 years ago (17 March 1978) ELVIS COSTELLO and his Attractions
released their second LP, the fantastic This Year’s Model. One of the
singles was the equally fantastic I DON’T WANT TO GO TO CHELSEA.

A song Costello wrote when he was working as a computer programmer.
Lyrically, it was inspired by the films he had been watching as well as his
childhood trips to Chelsea, London.

Oh, no, it does not move me
Even though I’ve seen the movie
I don’t want to check your pulse
I don’t want nobody else
I don’t want to go to Chelsea

EC: Instagram – All Albums

ELVIS COSTELLO And THIS YEAR’S SPANISH MODEL

16 July 2021

Artist: ELVIS COSTELLO (age 66)
Active: Since 1970 / 31 studio LPs, so far

New album: SPANISH MODEL
What: An entire Spanish reimagining of his
outstanding 1978 LP This Year’s Model
recorded with The Attractions.
Release: 10 September 2021 via UMe

I don’t know if it’s due to the past lockdowns with artists having a lot
of time on their hands following canceled tours and shows, but in the
past 18 months, some of them came up with some weird ideas. But the
most bizarre project so far is Elvis Costello joining (armed) forces with
his frequent collaborator Sebastian Krys for a full Spanish remake of
This Year’s Model.

The duo picked a cast of Latin artists to sing each and every song
of the original – now remastered – album in Spanish. Que pasa?

Costello: “Part of the fun of this project is its unexpected nature. Although,
I think people in my audience that have been paying attention are pretty
much used to surprises by now.”

Krys: “When Elvis told me the idea, it took me about 15 seconds to answer.
I have been in so many situations where I was trying to turn Latin artists onto
Elvis’ music. The feedback I heard most often was ‘I love it. I wish I knew what
he was saying.’ Spanish Model is an opportunity to turn an entire side of the
world onto this great record and through these voices, get these ideas out. ”

Pump up the first taster right here…

Tracklist:

1. Nina Diaz – “No Action”
2. Raquel Sofía y Fuego – “(Yo No Quiero Ir A) Chelsea ((I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea)”
3. Draco Rosa – “Yo Te Vi (The Beat)”
4. Juanes – “Pump It Up”
5. La Marisoul – “Detonantes (Little Triggers)”
6. Luis Fonsi – “Tu Eres Para Mi (You Belong To Me)”
7. Francisca Valenzuela y Luis Humberto Navejas – “Hand In Hand”
8. Cami – “La Chica de Hoy (This Year’s Girl)”
9. Pablo López – “Mentira (Lip Service)”
10. Jesse & Joy – “Viviendo en el Paraiso (Living In Paradise)”
11. Morat – “Lipstick Vogue”
12. Jorge Drexler – “La Turba (Night Rally)”
13. Sebastián Yatra – “Llorar (Big Tears)”
14. Fito Páez – “Radio Radio”
15. Gian Marco y Nicole Zignago– “Crawling To The U.S.A.”
16. Vega – “Se Esta Perdiendo La Inocencia (Running Out Of Angels)”

ELVIS COSTELLO: Facebook

ELVIS COSTELLO Released Masterpiece ‘THIS YEAR’S MODEL’ 40 Years Ago…

Going back in sonic history looking for memorable albums…

15 March 2018

ARTIST: ELVIS COSTELLO

ALBUM: THIS YEAR’S MODEL – his second LP – first with The Attractions

RELEASED: 17 March 1978 – 40 years ago

ROLLING STONE wrote: “Listening to Costello is like walking down a dark, empty street and hearing another set of heels. His music doesn’t make you dance, it makes you jump. It doesn’t matter that he’s stalking his obsessions and not you, because nobody ought to be this sure of his obsessions… ‘This Year’s Model’, his second album in less than a year, is Costello’s attempt to make certain those wounds stay open. ‘This Year’s Model’ has the triumph of an adrenalin kick: “The Beat” or “Pump It Up” are not titles chosen randomly. There’s bravado in the way his’ machine-gun mouth sprays out each image, but like all obsessives, he has to get the details right, connect them through the sheer force of his will. So he’s reeling and running, shooting from the hip but taking careful aim. He’s ready to challenge all comers, it doesn’t matter whether it’s the rock & roll industry (“Radio, Radio”) or the National Front (“Night Rally”). “Don’t you know I’m an animal,” he sings on “Hand in Hand.” But later, in “Lipstick Vogue,” he amends that: “Sometimes I almost feel just like a human being.” Taken together, these are the words of a brutally honest optimist.”

TURN UP THE VOLUME says: Virtuoso singer-songwriter and living legend Elvis Costello proved with his first two albums in under a year,’My Aim Is True‘ and this turbulent magnum opus that he intended to go a long way, a really long way paved with countless king-sized achievements…

THREE HIGHLIGHTS: Pump It Up / (I Don’t Want To Go To) Chelsea / This Year’s Girl

* PUMP IT UP – wham bloody bam…

* (I DON’T WANT TO GO TO) CHELSEA – funky punch…

*THIS YEAR’S GIRL – 1978 live rendition…

Full album

10 Fabulous Longplayers Turning 40 in 2018!…

1978: An effervescent year to dive into!
Here’s my selection – 10 superb ones!

1/ ‘All Mod Cons’ by THE JAM
NME wrote: “Not only several light years ahead of anything they’ve done before but also the album that’s going to catapult ‘The Jam’ right into the front rank of international rock and roll.”
Released: 3 November 1978 – their outstanding 3rd LP
Listen here

2/ ‘Darkness On The Edge Of Town’ by BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
Rolling Stone wrote: “It poses once more the question that rock & roll’s epiphanic moments always raise: Do you believe in magic? And once again, the answer is yes. Absolutely.”
Released: 2 June 1978 – passionate 4th longplayer
Listen here

3/ ‘This Year’s Model’ by ELVIS COSTELLO
All Music wrote: “The songs on This Year’s Model are typically catchy and help the vicious sentiments sink into your skin, but the most remarkable thing about the album is the sound. Costello and the Attractions never rocked this hard, or this vengefully, ever again.
Released: 17 March 1978 – sparkling second LP
Listen here

4/ ‘Another Music in a Different Kitchen’ by THE BUZZCOCKS
All Music wrote: “The big secret is Shelley’s worship of Krautrock’s obsessive focus on
repetition and rhythm, which transforms what would be “simply” basic punk songs into
at-times monstrous epics.”

Released: 10 March 1978 – their thunderous debut LP
Listen here

5/ ‘The Modern Dance’ by PERE UBU
All Music wrote: “The Modern Dance is the signature sound of the avant-garage:
art rock, punk rock, and garage rock mixing together joyously and fearlessly.”

Released: January 1978 – fascinating debut album
Listen here

6/ ‘Real Life’ by MAGAZINE
Melody Maker wrote: “No one that has the slightest interest in the present
and future of rock ‘n’ roll should rest until they’ve heard Real Life”

Released: June 1978 – their gloomy debut LP
Listen here

7/ ‘More Songs About Buildings And Food’ by TALKING HEADS
Rolling Stone wrote: “The eclecticism of ‘More Songs about Buildings and Food’, its witty distillations of disco and reggae rhythms, its reconciliation of ‘art’ and punk rock is masterful, The music represents a triumph over diversity.”
Released: 7 July 1978 – their funky second album
Listen here

8/ ‘Germ Free Adolescents’ by X-RAY SPEX
All Music wrote: “Poly Styrene’s frantic claustrophobia permeates the record. It’s full of kick-out-the-jams rockers, with a few up-tempo thrashers and surprisingly atmospheric pieces with
a raw, wailing saxophone.”

Released: 10 November 1978 – smashing debut
Listen here

9/ ‘The Scream’ by SIOUXSIE AND THE BANSHEES
Melody Maker wrote: “Strong, abrasive, visceral and constantly inventive,
with a thrust that makes the spaces equal partners to the notes

Released: 13 November 1978 – black pitch debut longplayer
Listen here

10/ ‘Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!’ by DEVO
Rolling Stone wrote: “It’s a brittle, small masterpiece of Seventies pop irony, but its shriveling, ice-cold absurdism might not define the Seventies as much as jump the gun on the Eighties.”
Released: 28 August 1978 – mental debut LP
Listen here