Under Lime

Album: Look Now (2018)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This is a sequel to Costello's 2010 track "Jimmie Standing in the Rain," which tells the story of a vaudeville performer in the '30s who has fallen on hard times. In "Under Lime," it's 20 years later and he is attempting a comeback, but having a rough go of it. He agrees to appear as the "mystery guest" on a TV quiz show, where a young, female production assistant does her best to dodge his advances and get him to the stage. Once on the show, he make a fool of himself, setting back his career even further.
  • The phrase "under lime" has a dual meaning (as we've come to expect from Mr. Costello). It could relate to the "limelight," meaning on stage under the lights. Lime can also be used to hasten decomposition when burying a body, so if you're "under lime," you are dead and buried.
  • As we hear about the song's vaudevillian character's seedy interaction with a production assistant it's difficult not to label him a misogynist.

    In the violent strip of an undressing room
    She loosened his grip and started
    Tell me your story if you feel so inclined
    He was a mess, almost resigned


    "Those kinds of exchanges have been in my songs all along, not because I'm that person, but..." Costello nodded to The Independent. "I wish I could write like Lionel Richie – heartfelt love songs with nothing insincere about them. But that's just not what I do. I find the other angle, or maybe two or three different angles in the same story."

Comments: 1

  • Didi from Maceration40 years on it's a lot more layers than that.
    This album is deep, with links to not only IB and PFM, but obviosly to Secret Profane and Sugarcane, and blatantly to Penny Lane.
    Lime Street is a famous Liverpool boulevard associated with the train station, around the corner from Penny Lane, and home to ballrooms and nightclubs. Under Lime is lower still than "down among the wines and spirits."
    No reason to accept the time frames in the thirties and fifties, since the title song has obvious #MeToo connotations.
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Bill Withers

Bill WithersSongwriter Interviews

Soul music legend Bill Withers on how life experience and the company you keep leads to classic songs like "Lean On Me."

Curt Kirkwood of Meat Puppets

Curt Kirkwood of Meat PuppetsSongwriter Interviews

The (Meat)puppetmaster takes us through songs like "Lake Of Fire" and "Backwater," and talks about performing with Kurt Cobain on MTV Unplugged.

Song Cities

Song CitiesMusic Quiz

Nirvana, Billy Joel and Bruce Springsteen are among those who wrote songs with cities that show up in this quiz.

John Lee Hooker

John Lee HookerSongwriter Interviews

Into the vaults for Bruce Pollock's 1984 conversation with the esteemed bluesman. Hooker talks about transforming a Tony Bennett classic and why you don't have to be sad and lonely to write the blues.

Tom Waits Lyrics Quiz

Tom Waits Lyrics QuizMusic Quiz

Pool balls, magpies and thorns without roses - how well do you know your Tom Waits lyrics?

Chris Rea

Chris ReaSongwriter Interviews

It took him seven years to recover from his American hit "Fool (If You Think It's Over)," but Chris Rea became one of the top singer-songwriters in his native UK.