Brilliant Mistake

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Released21 February 1986 (1986-02-21)
RecordedJuly–September 1985
StudioOcean Way, Sunset Sound, & Sound Factory Studio, Los Angeles
"Brilliant Mistake"
Artwork for the 2005 single
Song by Elvis Costello
from the album King of America
Released21 February 1986 (1986-02-21)
RecordedJuly–September 1985
StudioOcean Way, Sunset Sound, & Sound Factory Studio, Los Angeles
Genre
LabelF-Beat (UK)
Columbia (US)
Songwriter(s)Elvis Costello
Producer(s)T Bone Burnett
Elvis Costello singles chronology
"Monkey to Man"
(2004)
"Brilliant Mistake"
(2005)
"No Hiding Place"
(2008)

"Brilliant Mistake" is a song by the English singer-songwriter Elvis Costello that was first released on his 1986 album King of America. Written about Costello's experiences in America, the song features introspective lyrics and a performance from the Confederates, who performed on the track after his usual backing band the Attractions could not perform to Costello's liking.

Released on King of America as the opening track, the song has since seen positive reception from critics and has appeared on compilation albums.

Costello first came up with the title of "Brilliant Mistake" in a conversation with David Was of Was (Not Was), who Costello had collaborated with to write "Shadows And Jimmy" for the latter's 1988 album What Up, Dog?.[2] They had been discussing Costello's experiences in America; he later described the track as "about being deluded or imagining a life in exile".[3][4]

Lyrically, the song continues what Costello describes as continuing the "theme of exile and a simultaneous attraction and repulsion to an ideal" that he cites as defining the King of America album.[2] The song also contains the title lyric for its parent album, King of America; in the song, the "King" falls in love with a woman who works "for the ABC News / It was as much of the alphabet as she knew how to use".[5] Costello later explained the song's meaning,

It's a sad song, but it's also sort of funny. It's about America and it's about lost ambition, not lack of inspiration. It's about a disappointed or frustrated belief. It's a song that people are going to read wrong. One line in it is, 'There's a trick they do with mirrors and with chemicals.' It means celluloid and mirrors, movie cameras. It occurred to me the other day that people will think it's a reference to cocaine. I could have written a big song about America, like Paul Simon's 'American Tune'. But I think 'Brilliant Mistake' is more like 'Peace Like a River', a personal thing in the face of a big disappointing artifice.[6]

Recording

Release and reception

References

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