| Costello, 63, whose hits include "Oliver's 
				Army", "Everyday I write the Book" and "Alison", said he had 
				been forced to call off the final six dates of his tour which 
				included concerts in Croatia, Austria, Norway and Sweden on 
				medical grounds.
 "Six weeks ago my specialist called me and said, 'You should 
				start playing the Lotto'," Costello aid in a statement. "He had 
				rarely, if ever, seen such a small but very aggressive cancerous 
				malignancy that could be defeated by a single surgery."
 
 He said he had been elated that the tour could go ahead but did 
				not realize the demands that playing long performances on a 
				nightly basis would have on him as he recovered from the 
				treatment. His doctor had now advised him to take a break and 
				rest.
 
 "The spirit has been more than willing but I have to now accept 
				that it is going to take longer than I would have wished for me 
				to recover my full strength," he said. "Therefore, I must 
				reluctantly cancel all the remaining engagements of this tour."
 
 Costello, born Declan Patrick MacManus, rose to fame in the 
				1970s and has produced a string of influential albums since with 
				his bands the Attractions and the Imposters. He said he would 
				have a new record out in October.
 
 "We will return at the soonest opportunity to play that music 
				and your favorite songs that still make sense to us all," he 
				said.
 
 (Reporting by Michael Holden, editing by Andy Bruce)
 
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