Follow TV Tropes

Following

History AwesomeMusic / EltonJohn

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Spell My Name With An S was disambiguated due to cleanup. Dewicking and adding a new wick for Inconsistent Spelling in a place that better demonstrates the trope definition.


* Just one chord is all it takes for many listeners to recognise [[https://youtu.be/p5rQHoaQpTw "Bennie and the Jets",]] a satire of the excesses of early 1970s rock and the press that covered it.[[note]] Or perhaps it's [[SpellMyNameWithAnS "Benny and the Jets"?]] The track listing on the sleeve says "Benny", but the label on the LP says "Bennie".[[/note]] Taupin's lyrics paint a vivid picture of the girls in the band - Candy, Ronnie, and Bennie herself - and Elton's no-holds-barred performance on vocals and especially piano, particularly in the fadeout, elevates them to the next level, as overdubbed crowd noises create a sense that we are actually watching Bennie and the Jets live in concert for ourselves.

to:

* Just one chord is all it takes for many listeners to recognise [[https://youtu.be/p5rQHoaQpTw "Bennie and the Jets",]] a satire of the excesses of early 1970s rock and the press that covered it.[[note]] Or perhaps it's [[SpellMyNameWithAnS "Benny and the Jets"?]] Jets"? [[InconsistentSpelling The track listing on the sleeve says "Benny", but the label on the LP says "Bennie".[[/note]] ]][[/note]] Taupin's lyrics paint a vivid picture of the girls in the band - Candy, Ronnie, and Bennie herself - and Elton's no-holds-barred performance on vocals and especially piano, particularly in the fadeout, elevates them to the next level, as overdubbed crowd noises create a sense that we are actually watching Bennie and the Jets live in concert for ourselves.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
links shortening


* Elton has described [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlspP10nPaM "Skyline Pigeon"]] as the first song he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin about which they were genuinely excited. Taupin's lyrics, in which the pigeon is a metaphor for someone who feels trapped in a collapsing marriage (hence the reference to a "metal ring") and wants to break free and take flight, are given a straightforward vocal delivery, with Elton playing the only backing instruments (harpsichord, piano, and organ). In 1972, Elton [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e8IeZGBOw4 re-recorded the song]] with his usual collaborators - drummer Nigel Olsson, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, bassist Dee Murray, and guitarist Davey Johnstone[[note]] Their first recordings with Elton, in that order, were on his first four studio albums.[[/note]] - as the B-side to "Daniel", giving the track new life in a first-class arrangement closer to his signature style.

to:

* Elton has described [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlspP10nPaM [[https://youtu.be/zlspP10nPaM "Skyline Pigeon"]] as the first song he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin about which they were genuinely excited. Taupin's lyrics, in which the pigeon is a metaphor for someone who feels trapped in a collapsing marriage (hence the reference to a "metal ring") and wants to break free and take flight, are given a straightforward vocal delivery, with Elton playing the only backing instruments (harpsichord, piano, and organ). In 1972, Elton [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e8IeZGBOw4 [[https://youtu.be/1e8IeZGBOw4 re-recorded the song]] with his usual collaborators - drummer Nigel Olsson, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, bassist Dee Murray, and guitarist Davey Johnstone[[note]] Their first recordings with Elton, in that order, were on his first four studio albums.[[/note]] - as the B-side to "Daniel", giving the track new life in a first-class arrangement closer to his signature style.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBEqupVOdc "Your Song"]] marks the beginning of Elton's rise to superstardom, and it sticks in the listener's mind from the instantly familiar opening piano riff. Bernie Taupin's lyrics convey a palpable sense of hesitant hope that the song will be well-received by its intended object, and Elton's performance on vocals and piano are a perfect match for them, cementing them as one of popular music's great songwriting duos. Plus, this song proves that one can describe the feeling of romantic love without using the word 'love'.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBEqupVOdc [[https://youtu.be/lwBEqupVOdc "Your Song"]] marks the beginning of Elton's rise to superstardom, and it sticks in the listener's mind from the instantly familiar opening piano riff. Bernie Taupin's lyrics convey a palpable sense of hesitant hope that the song will be well-received by its intended object, and Elton's performance on vocals and piano are a perfect match for them, cementing them as one of popular music's great songwriting duos. Plus, this song proves that one can describe the feeling of romantic love without using the word 'love'.



* Taupin's lyrics for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm7b-32Mpbs "Border Song"]] were born from the alienation he was feeling in London and his desire to return home; Elton pairs them with a tune and vocal performance that pay homage to his keen interest in American soul music, complete with full choir belting out "'''Ho-ly Mo-ses!'''" at the end of the second and third verse which, coupled with the denser orchestration for these passages and the bridge, gives the song just the right amount of gravitas.

to:

* Taupin's lyrics for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm7b-32Mpbs [[https://youtu.be/Lm7b-32Mpbs "Border Song"]] were born from the alienation he was feeling in London and his desire to return home; Elton pairs them with a tune and vocal performance that pay homage to his keen interest in American soul music, complete with full choir belting out "'''Ho-ly Mo-ses!'''" at the end of the second and third verse which, coupled with the denser orchestration for these passages and the bridge, gives the song just the right amount of gravitas.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_yc231bMIk "Come Down in Time"]] uses a harp and guitar harmonics in place of piano to back Elton's sincere delivery of Taupin's lyrics about a man going to an agreed-upon meeting with his girlfriend, but finding himself wondering if she'll stand him up and leave him "counting the stars in the night". Paul Buckmaster's string score and Karl Jenkins on oboe further enhance the atmosphere of uncertainty, especially when the song appears to end halfway through a verse.
* Elton closes his album-long tribute to themes from country music with the all-stops-pulled-out, six-and-a-half-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdEQkRq_xrw "Burn Down the Mission".]] Taupin's lyrics tell the story of a man in a poor community who decides to rise up against the rich people grinding them down... only to be captured and taken off to an uncertain fate. Elton himself is in absolutely top-notch form on both piano and vocals, while the melody passes through multiple keys and suddenly takes off in intensity in the instrumental bridge to make the listener feel the struggle the protagonist is going through.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_yc231bMIk [[https://youtu.be/a_yc231bMIk "Come Down in Time"]] uses a harp and guitar harmonics in place of piano to back Elton's sincere delivery of Taupin's lyrics about a man going to an agreed-upon meeting with his girlfriend, but finding himself wondering if she'll stand him up and leave him "counting the stars in the night". Paul Buckmaster's string score and Karl Jenkins on oboe further enhance the atmosphere of uncertainty, especially when the song appears to end halfway through a verse.
* Elton closes his album-long tribute to themes from country music with the all-stops-pulled-out, six-and-a-half-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdEQkRq_xrw [[https://youtu.be/EdEQkRq_xrw "Burn Down the Mission".]] Taupin's lyrics tell the story of a man in a poor community who decides to rise up against the rich people grinding them down... only to be captured and taken off to an uncertain fate. Elton himself is in absolutely top-notch form on both piano and vocals, while the melody passes through multiple keys and suddenly takes off in intensity in the instrumental bridge to make the listener feel the struggle the protagonist is going through.



* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65CNtap6bow "Tiny Dancer"]] after touring California with Elton and meeting women unlike any he knew back in England, most notably his future first wife, Maxine Feibelman. Elton sets the lyrics to a complex yet mesmerisingly beautiful musical arrangement, in which his voice and piano are accompanied by pedal steel guitar, strings, and choir. Though the length (over six minutes) and lack of catchy hooks meant the song was slow to catch on when it was initially released, it deservedly ranks as one of his most popular today.
* The enigmatic protagonist of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9tK2_LnxxI "Levon"]] is one of Taupin's most fascinating creations, a balloon "magnate" who is proud of his war wound and named his son Jesus simply because he likes the name; Jesus, meanwhile, longs for a more exciting life than the one he has in his father's business. Elton's soulful rendition of the words really brings the character of Levon to life, and the tune is well-matched by a string score and the everpresent piano. The version frequently played at Elton's live shows expands the song from about 5 minutes to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INLxu5R7zfo nearly 11 minutes of epic rocking]] with fantastic solos by Elton and guitarist Davey Johnstone.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, percussion by Ray Cooper (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone, all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

to:

* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65CNtap6bow [[https://youtu.be/65CNtap6bow "Tiny Dancer"]] after touring California with Elton and meeting women unlike any he knew back in England, most notably his future first wife, Maxine Feibelman. Elton sets the lyrics to a complex yet mesmerisingly beautiful musical arrangement, in which his voice and piano are accompanied by pedal steel guitar, strings, and choir. Though the length (over six minutes) and lack of catchy hooks meant the song was slow to catch on when it was initially released, it deservedly ranks as one of his most popular today.
* The enigmatic protagonist of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9tK2_LnxxI [[https://youtu.be/U9tK2_LnxxI "Levon"]] is one of Taupin's most fascinating creations, a balloon "magnate" who is proud of his war wound and named his son Jesus simply because he likes the name; Jesus, meanwhile, longs for a more exciting life than the one he has in his father's business. Elton's soulful rendition of the words really brings the character of Levon to life, and the tune is well-matched by a string score and the everpresent piano. The version frequently played at Elton's live shows expands the song from about 5 minutes to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INLxu5R7zfo [[https://youtu.be/INLxu5R7zfo nearly 11 minutes of epic rocking]] with fantastic solos by Elton and guitarist Davey Johnstone.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs [[https://youtu.be/aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, percussion by Ray Cooper (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone, all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.



* Elton's love for the musical traditions of New Orleans comes to the fore in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92s-MPAQBCU "Honky Cat",]] with jazzy piano punctuated by organ countermelodies (expanding to a brass section as the song develops) providing an energetic complement to Taupin's lyrics about a country boy who has gone to the bright lights of New Orleans in search of answers, in spite of his family telling him that such a journey will end badly and that he should stay on the farm.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLA-sTpSH0 "Rocket Man (I Think It's Gonna Be a Long, Long Time)"]] takes a more bleak view of the life of an astronaut; yes, he may be soaring off into space, but he's lonely and longs for the life he left behind and the loved ones he won't see for months. Elton's rendition of Taupin's lyrics brings out the tragedy of the spacefarer's situation as he laments the "long, long time" during which he's "burning up his fuse out here alone".
* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tRgYfQ48A0 "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters"]] when, on his first visit to New York City, he heard a gunshot outside his hotel window. Though this anecdote may suggest the song gives a kicking to TheBigRottenApple, not least when its first verse breaks apart the lyric "There's a rose in Spanish Harlem" from Jerry Leiber and Phil Spector's "Spanish Harlem", it develops into a celebration of what makes New York and its people special in spite of the grime and crime plaguing the city. The instrumental score focuses almost entirely on Spanish guitar and Elton's piano, making for one of his most direct songs.

to:

* Elton's love for the musical traditions of New Orleans comes to the fore in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92s-MPAQBCU [[https://youtu.be/92s-MPAQBCU "Honky Cat",]] with jazzy piano punctuated by organ countermelodies (expanding to a brass section as the song develops) providing an energetic complement to Taupin's lyrics about a country boy who has gone to the bright lights of New Orleans in search of answers, in spite of his family telling him that such a journey will end badly and that he should stay on the farm.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLA-sTpSH0 [[https://youtu.be/5nLA-sTpSH0 "Rocket Man (I Think It's Gonna Be a Long, Long Time)"]] takes a more bleak view of the life of an astronaut; yes, he may be soaring off into space, but he's lonely and longs for the life he left behind and the loved ones he won't see for months. Elton's rendition of Taupin's lyrics brings out the tragedy of the spacefarer's situation as he laments the "long, long time" during which he's "burning up his fuse out here alone".
* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tRgYfQ48A0 [[https://youtu.be/9tRgYfQ48A0 "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters"]] when, on his first visit to New York City, he heard a gunshot outside his hotel window. Though this anecdote may suggest the song gives a kicking to TheBigRottenApple, not least when its first verse breaks apart the lyric "There's a rose in Spanish Harlem" from Jerry Leiber and Phil Spector's "Spanish Harlem", it develops into a celebration of what makes New York and its people special in spite of the grime and crime plaguing the city. The instrumental score focuses almost entirely on Spanish guitar and Elton's piano, making for one of his most direct songs.



* The album opens with the Ivor Novello award-winning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA78e27R_J4 "Daniel",]] a solemn track in which the singer expresses admiration for an older brother who has gone blind but is flying to Spain; Taupin was inspired by stories he had read of Vietnam veterans who were hailed as heroes by their hometowns and families but who just wanted to get away and return to their previous lives in spite of the changes they had undergone.[[note]] A third verse that clarifies this was cut at Elton's suggestion, as he felt it made the song too long. Unfortunately, neither of them remember the words to the now discarded verse.[[/note]] Elton gives a heartfelt performance on vocals, and the usual piano is replaced by an electric keyboard and Mellotron to create a more gentle atmosphere.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0EozkBWuI "Crocodile Rock"]] is a musical love letter to the heady early days of rock and roll, its title paying tribute to Australian band Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" and the lyrics and melody referencing "Let's Dance" as performed by Chris Montez, "Rock Around the Clock" as performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, and "Speedy Gonzales" as performed by Pat Boone.[[note]] The similarities to the last named were so strong that a lawsuit was filed on behalf of "Speedy Gonzales" songwriter Buddy Kaye; they settled out of court.[[/note]] The vocals (particularly the "La-la-la-la-la" refrain) and piano/Farfisa organ accompaniment are so catchy that you might find your own feet "just can't keep still".

to:

* The album opens with the Ivor Novello award-winning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA78e27R_J4 [[https://youtu.be/UA78e27R_J4 "Daniel",]] a solemn track in which the singer expresses admiration for an older brother who has gone blind but is flying to Spain; Taupin was inspired by stories he had read of Vietnam veterans who were hailed as heroes by their hometowns and families but who just wanted to get away and return to their previous lives in spite of the changes they had undergone.[[note]] A third verse that clarifies this was cut at Elton's suggestion, as he felt it made the song too long. Unfortunately, neither of them remember the words to the now discarded verse.[[/note]] Elton gives a heartfelt performance on vocals, and the usual piano is replaced by an electric keyboard and Mellotron to create a more gentle atmosphere.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0EozkBWuI [[https://youtu.be/xw0EozkBWuI "Crocodile Rock"]] is a musical love letter to the heady early days of rock and roll, its title paying tribute to Australian band Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" and the lyrics and melody referencing "Let's Dance" as performed by Chris Montez, "Rock Around the Clock" as performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, and "Speedy Gonzales" as performed by Pat Boone.[[note]] The similarities to the last named were so strong that a lawsuit was filed on behalf of "Speedy Gonzales" songwriter Buddy Kaye; they settled out of court.[[/note]] The vocals (particularly the "La-la-la-la-la" refrain) and piano/Farfisa organ accompaniment are so catchy that you might find your own feet "just can't keep still".



* The album widely regarded as Elton's greatest opens with the eleven-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p_xAToFzck "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding".]] The instrumental "Funeral for a Friend" was Elton's answer to the self-posed question "What sort of music would I like to be played at my funeral?", and recording engineer David Hentschel's performance on ARP synthesiser - overdubbed in multiple layers - meshes with Elton's piano to create something truly otherworldly. After about five minutes, the synthesiser is replaced with electric guitar for "Love Lies Bleeding", the lyrics for which continue the death imagery of "Funeral for a Friend" as the singer tells his ex-girlfriend that it "kills me to think of you with another man" as "love lies bleeding in my hand".
* After hearing Music/JanisJoplin described as "a candle in the wind", Bernie Taupin was inspired to write a song ostensibly inspired by Creator/MarilynMonroe, but more generally about famous performers who were ruthlessly exploited until their premature deaths. The result was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80rHyABCb20 "Candle in the Wind",]] featuring a vocal performance in which the admiration and grief for the song's subject comes through in every note.
* Just one chord is all it takes for many listeners to recognise [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5rQHoaQpTw "Bennie and the Jets",]] a satire of the excesses of early 1970s rock and the press that covered it.[[note]] Or perhaps it's [[SpellMyNameWithAnS "Benny and the Jets"?]] The track listing on the sleeve says "Benny", but the label on the LP says "Bennie".[[/note]] Taupin's lyrics paint a vivid picture of the girls in the band - Candy, Ronnie, and Bennie herself - and Elton's no-holds-barred performance on vocals and especially piano, particularly in the fadeout, elevates them to the next level, as overdubbed crowd noises create a sense that we are actually watching Bennie and the Jets live in concert for ourselves.

to:

* The album widely regarded as Elton's greatest opens with the eleven-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p_xAToFzck [[https://youtu.be/3p_xAToFzck "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding".]] The instrumental "Funeral for a Friend" was Elton's answer to the self-posed question "What sort of music would I like to be played at my funeral?", and recording engineer David Hentschel's performance on ARP synthesiser - overdubbed in multiple layers - meshes with Elton's piano to create something truly otherworldly. After about five minutes, the synthesiser is replaced with electric guitar for "Love Lies Bleeding", the lyrics for which continue the death imagery of "Funeral for a Friend" as the singer tells his ex-girlfriend that it "kills me to think of you with another man" as "love lies bleeding in my hand".
* After hearing Music/JanisJoplin described as "a candle in the wind", Bernie Taupin was inspired to write a song ostensibly inspired by Creator/MarilynMonroe, but more generally about famous performers who were ruthlessly exploited until their premature deaths. The result was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80rHyABCb20 [[https://youtu.be/80rHyABCb20 "Candle in the Wind",]] featuring a vocal performance in which the admiration and grief for the song's subject comes through in every note.
* Just one chord is all it takes for many listeners to recognise [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5rQHoaQpTw [[https://youtu.be/p5rQHoaQpTw "Bennie and the Jets",]] a satire of the excesses of early 1970s rock and the press that covered it.[[note]] Or perhaps it's [[SpellMyNameWithAnS "Benny and the Jets"?]] The track listing on the sleeve says "Benny", but the label on the LP says "Bennie".[[/note]] Taupin's lyrics paint a vivid picture of the girls in the band - Candy, Ronnie, and Bennie herself - and Elton's no-holds-barred performance on vocals and especially piano, particularly in the fadeout, elevates them to the next level, as overdubbed crowd noises create a sense that we are actually watching Bennie and the Jets live in concert for ourselves.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDOL7iY8kfo "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road"]] forms an interesting counterpoint to "Honky Cat" from the previous year, as Taupin's lyrics paint a picture of a country boy who has grown disillusioned with the city life he has led as the plaything of a rich socialite, and who has decided to go back to the simple life he led before. As in all of their greatest collaborations, Elton is on fine form on both vocals and piano to make us feel for the protagonist, who has finally realised just how misled and used he has been all these years, and how he should have listened to his "old man" when he tried to warn him against following the "yellow brick road".
* The hard-rocking [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26wEWSUUsUc "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting"]] stands apart from Elton's usual output by putting electric guitars front and centre, and the man himself gives a positively adrenaline-charged rendition of Taupin's testosterone-poisoned lyrics paying tribute to youthful anger of the early years of rock and roll, the singer hell-bent on spending his Saturday "getting a little action in" by getting good and drunk and then getting in a fight.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDOL7iY8kfo [[https://youtu.be/DDOL7iY8kfo "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road"]] forms an interesting counterpoint to "Honky Cat" from the previous year, as Taupin's lyrics paint a picture of a country boy who has grown disillusioned with the city life he has led as the plaything of a rich socialite, and who has decided to go back to the simple life he led before. As in all of their greatest collaborations, Elton is on fine form on both vocals and piano to make us feel for the protagonist, who has finally realised just how misled and used he has been all these years, and how he should have listened to his "old man" when he tried to warn him against following the "yellow brick road".
* The hard-rocking [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26wEWSUUsUc [[https://youtu.be/26wEWSUUsUc "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting"]] stands apart from Elton's usual output by putting electric guitars front and centre, and the man himself gives a positively adrenaline-charged rendition of Taupin's testosterone-poisoned lyrics paying tribute to youthful anger of the early years of rock and roll, the singer hell-bent on spending his Saturday "getting a little action in" by getting good and drunk and then getting in a fight.



* The album races out of the gate with the electric rocker [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lh3gmOZQiiQ "The Bitch is Back",]] its title coming from Taupin's wife Maxine's preferred quip whenever Elton was in a bad mood. Elton saw the funny side of the lyrics and effectively adopted the song as a personal theme tune, unafraid to hide his temperamental, confrontational side (even when sober).
* The plaintive [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxuqWG-Hxgo "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me"]] sees Taupin writing from the perspective of someone who has helped a friend, only to be repaid with rejection. Elton's vocals and piano go even further toward conveying the feelings of hurt and need, especially in the refrain:

to:

* The album races out of the gate with the electric rocker [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lh3gmOZQiiQ [[https://youtu.be/lh3gmOZQiiQ "The Bitch is Back",]] its title coming from Taupin's wife Maxine's preferred quip whenever Elton was in a bad mood. Elton saw the funny side of the lyrics and effectively adopted the song as a personal theme tune, unafraid to hide his temperamental, confrontational side (even when sober).
* The plaintive [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxuqWG-Hxgo [[https://youtu.be/QxuqWG-Hxgo "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me"]] sees Taupin writing from the perspective of someone who has helped a friend, only to be repaid with rejection. Elton's vocals and piano go even further toward conveying the feelings of hurt and need, especially in the refrain:



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZRRd4bW91c "Someone Saved My Life Tonight"]] is one of Elton's most intensely personal songs, a setting of lyrics in which Taupin describes an incident in 1968 when Long John Baldry - the "someone" in the title - found Elton, who felt trapped in his life and relationship, with his head in the gas oven (although with the window open) and talked him into turning his life around by ending his engagement and finding solace in his friends and musical career. The vocals make us feel every bit of Elton's journey from life-crushing despair to unending gratitude toward the person who pulled him back from the edge.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZRRd4bW91c [[https://youtu.be/VZRRd4bW91c "Someone Saved My Life Tonight"]] is one of Elton's most intensely personal songs, a setting of lyrics in which Taupin describes an incident in 1968 when Long John Baldry - the "someone" in the title - found Elton, who felt trapped in his life and relationship, with his head in the gas oven (although with the window open) and talked him into turning his life around by ending his engagement and finding solace in his friends and musical career. The vocals make us feel every bit of Elton's journey from life-crushing despair to unending gratitude toward the person who pulled him back from the edge.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywJ1MD4-Cns "Island Girl"]] is something of a forgotten commercial success for Elton, which is a shame, as Taupin's lyrics about a Jamaican prostitute in New York and the man who wants to take her away from the life into which she has fallen are superbly complemented by a sound that blends aspects of Caribbean and gospel music, with distorted slide guitar, marimba, and a synthesiser solo by a young Music/JamesNewtonHoward.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywJ1MD4-Cns [[https://youtu.be/ywJ1MD4-Cns "Island Girl"]] is something of a forgotten commercial success for Elton, which is a shame, as Taupin's lyrics about a Jamaican prostitute in New York and the man who wants to take her away from the life into which she has fallen are superbly complemented by a sound that blends aspects of Caribbean and gospel music, with distorted slide guitar, marimba, and a synthesiser solo by a young Music/JamesNewtonHoward.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16EavZW5o68 "One Horse Town"]] is about the industrialization of a typical Southern American town, beginning with a brooding chamber trio (electric piano, vibraphone, and cello) before roaring to life with a gong and guitar solo, picking up steam as the narrator recounts how he "saw a Cadillac for the first time yesterday" and wants to bust out. Roger Pope's lightning-fast drumming is a highlight in the second half as well.
* Though a growing sense of burnout and frustration for both Elton and Bernie is evident throughout ''Blue Moves'', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w142CaROC0 "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"]] remains a classic, with lyrics lamenting the breakdown of a romantic relationship in which the participants seem unable to find the strength to apologise for their roles in the breakdown, dooming any attempt at reconciliation.[[note]] Bernie's marriage to Maxine Feibelman was collapsing when he wrote the lyrics; they divorced in 1976.[[/note]] The solemn vocals and orchestration only add to the sense that this is truly "a sad, sad situation, and it's getting more and more absurd".
* A much needed breather is provided after the preceding track with the bubbling instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX1KQNciyzA "Out of the Blue"]].[[note]]''Not'' to be confused with "Someday out of the Blue", a pop song he wrote with Tim Rice for ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' but still a worthy song in its own right.[[/note]] Driven off a heavy riff layered by guitars, synthesizer, and vibraphone, the song is a powerful return to Elton's progressive rock and jazz fusion influences that hadn't been this potent since "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding", and also impressed the BBC enough to make it the original end credits theme of ''Series/TopGear''.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16EavZW5o68 [[https://youtu.be/16EavZW5o68 "One Horse Town"]] is about the industrialization of a typical Southern American town, beginning with a brooding chamber trio (electric piano, vibraphone, and cello) before roaring to life with a gong and guitar solo, picking up steam as the narrator recounts how he "saw a Cadillac for the first time yesterday" and wants to bust out. Roger Pope's lightning-fast drumming is a highlight in the second half as well.
* Though a growing sense of burnout and frustration for both Elton and Bernie is evident throughout ''Blue Moves'', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w142CaROC0 [[https://youtu.be/5w142CaROC0 "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"]] remains a classic, with lyrics lamenting the breakdown of a romantic relationship in which the participants seem unable to find the strength to apologise for their roles in the breakdown, dooming any attempt at reconciliation.[[note]] Bernie's marriage to Maxine Feibelman was collapsing when he wrote the lyrics; they divorced in 1976.[[/note]] The solemn vocals and orchestration only add to the sense that this is truly "a sad, sad situation, and it's getting more and more absurd".
* A much needed breather is provided after the preceding track with the bubbling instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX1KQNciyzA [[https://youtu.be/TX1KQNciyzA "Out of the Blue"]].[[note]]''Not'' to be confused with "Someday out of the Blue", a pop song he wrote with Tim Rice for ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' but still a worthy song in its own right.[[/note]] Driven off a heavy riff layered by guitars, synthesizer, and vibraphone, the song is a powerful return to Elton's progressive rock and jazz fusion influences that hadn't been this potent since "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding", and also impressed the BBC enough to make it the original end credits theme of ''Series/TopGear''.



* The largely instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGPBUpB-4tw "Song for Guy"]] received its title when Elton learned that on the same day he finished composing the track, 17-year-old Rocket Records message boy Guy Burchett had been killed in a motorcycle accident. As Elton was already obsessing over his own death at the time, he decided to make the piece a tribute to the late Burchett, and the layered keyboards, drum machine, and bass guitar add up to a touching memorial, punctuated near the end by the only words: "Life isn't everything, isn't everything, isn't everything..."

to:

* The largely instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGPBUpB-4tw [[https://youtu.be/iGPBUpB-4tw "Song for Guy"]] received its title when Elton learned that on the same day he finished composing the track, 17-year-old Rocket Records message boy Guy Burchett had been killed in a motorcycle accident. As Elton was already obsessing over his own death at the time, he decided to make the piece a tribute to the late Burchett, and the layered keyboards, drum machine, and bass guitar add up to a touching memorial, punctuated near the end by the only words: "Life isn't everything, isn't everything, isn't everything..."



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fw1ulSbMBiw "Mama Can't Buy You Love"]] was Elton's last major hit of the 1970s, reaching No. 9 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 and continuing his amazing run of success. By now, just about everything he was recording was guaranteed to be at least a modest hit.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fw1ulSbMBiw [[https://youtu.be/fw1ulSbMBiw "Mama Can't Buy You Love"]] was Elton's last major hit of the 1970s, reaching No. 9 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 and continuing his amazing run of success. By now, just about everything he was recording was guaranteed to be at least a modest hit.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wlz6mTyiMZc "Little Jeannie"]] is one of Elton's most commercially successful tracks not to be co-written with Bernie Taupin; instead, Elton teamed up with Gary Osborne to write this upbeat love ballad. With its lively vocals, electric piano, and a brass score punctuated with a saxophone solo in the instrumental bridge, it's not hard to see why audiences have always liked it.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wlz6mTyiMZc [[https://youtu.be/Wlz6mTyiMZc "Little Jeannie"]] is one of Elton's most commercially successful tracks not to be co-written with Bernie Taupin; instead, Elton teamed up with Gary Osborne to write this upbeat love ballad. With its lively vocals, electric piano, and a brass score punctuated with a saxophone solo in the instrumental bridge, it's not hard to see why audiences have always liked it.



* The slow ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CiyKeSnSxk "Blue Eyes"]] marks another stellar collaboration between Elton and Gary Osborne, its lyrics paying tribute to the singer's lover's... well, the clue is in the title. Elton is in top form on vocals, and the mellow keyboard and string score provide the ideal instrumental backing to the tonally complex melody (with different keys for the verses, chorus, and instrumental bridge/coda).

to:

* The slow ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CiyKeSnSxk [[https://youtu.be/4CiyKeSnSxk "Blue Eyes"]] marks another stellar collaboration between Elton and Gary Osborne, its lyrics paying tribute to the singer's lover's... well, the clue is in the title. Elton is in top form on vocals, and the mellow keyboard and string score provide the ideal instrumental backing to the tonally complex melody (with different keys for the verses, chorus, and instrumental bridge/coda).



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHwVBirqD2s "I'm Still Standing"]] is an outstanding anthem of defiance, Taupin's lyrics asserting that everything the object of the song may have done to knock the singer down has done nothing to dent their self-respect, and Elton's electrifying vocal performance lets us know that despite everything that has befallen him over the years, he's "still standing better than [he] ever did."
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6KYAVn8ons "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues"...]] what's that? Why ''do'' they call it the blues? The song doesn't really answer that question, but who cares? Elton gives a top drawer performance on vocals and piano as he sings Taupin's lyrics about a man who has to leave his girlfriend (in the video, because he's been called up for National Service) but who promises to return to her. Bonus points for a harmonica solo in the instrumental bridge by Music/StevieWonder.[[note]] The video is also notable for featuring a rare appearance by Elton without his glasses.[[/note]]

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHwVBirqD2s [[https://youtu.be/ZHwVBirqD2s "I'm Still Standing"]] is an outstanding anthem of defiance, Taupin's lyrics asserting that everything the object of the song may have done to knock the singer down has done nothing to dent their self-respect, and Elton's electrifying vocal performance lets us know that despite everything that has befallen him over the years, he's "still standing better than [he] ever did."
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6KYAVn8ons [[https://youtu.be/h6KYAVn8ons "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues"...]] what's that? Why ''do'' they call it the blues? The song doesn't really answer that question, but who cares? Elton gives a top drawer performance on vocals and piano as he sings Taupin's lyrics about a man who has to leave his girlfriend (in the video, because he's been called up for National Service) but who promises to return to her. Bonus points for a harmonica solo in the instrumental bridge by Music/StevieWonder.[[note]] The video is also notable for featuring a rare appearance by Elton without his glasses.[[/note]]



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6qlLJp53EM "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"...]] and Elton should know, as he's written enough of them over the years. As Taupin's lyrics attest, sometimes, when we're feeling down, rather than forcing ourselves to feel happy by listening to upbeat music, we can find more solace in sad songs to which we can more closely relate. Elton's vocal performance makes it clear how much he believes that, far from dragging people further down, sad songs can have the power to ''heal'' a broken heart. What makes it particularly awesome is that the song itself [[LyricalDissonance is incredibly upbeat at the same time]].

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6qlLJp53EM [[https://youtu.be/v6qlLJp53EM "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"...]] and Elton should know, as he's written enough of them over the years. As Taupin's lyrics attest, sometimes, when we're feeling down, rather than forcing ourselves to feel happy by listening to upbeat music, we can find more solace in sad songs to which we can more closely relate. Elton's vocal performance makes it clear how much he believes that, far from dragging people further down, sad songs can have the power to ''heal'' a broken heart. What makes it particularly awesome is that the song itself [[LyricalDissonance is incredibly upbeat at the same time]].



* Taupin's lyrics for the UsefulNotes/ColdWar-set love story [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xoleoV77eo "Nikita"]] see the singer lamenting his hopeless crush on an East German border guard, with eyes described as [[AlbumTitleDrop "like ice on fire"]]. The synthesiser solo in the instrumental bridge is one of Elton's finest of the 1980s, while Music/GeorgeMichael and Nik Kershaw make guest appearances on backing vocals for added awesome.

to:

* Taupin's lyrics for the UsefulNotes/ColdWar-set love story [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xoleoV77eo [[https://youtu.be/-xoleoV77eo "Nikita"]] see the singer lamenting his hopeless crush on an East German border guard, with eyes described as [[AlbumTitleDrop "like ice on fire"]]. The synthesiser solo in the instrumental bridge is one of Elton's finest of the 1980s, while Music/GeorgeMichael and Nik Kershaw make guest appearances on backing vocals for added awesome.



* The anguished "doomed relationship" ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaJRvZZBnX8 "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That"]] was Elton's biggest American commercial success of the decade, boasting lyrics by Taupin about the singer feeling unimportant to his partner (who has developed a roving eye and heart), backing vocals by Elton's long-time touring bandmates Davey Johnstone, Dee Murray,[[note]] This was Murray's last appearance on an Elton John album before his death in 1992.[[/note]] and Nigel Olsson, and a suitably tense performance on lead vocals and digital keyboard by the man himself.

to:

* The anguished "doomed relationship" ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaJRvZZBnX8 [[https://youtu.be/kaJRvZZBnX8 "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That"]] was Elton's biggest American commercial success of the decade, boasting lyrics by Taupin about the singer feeling unimportant to his partner (who has developed a roving eye and heart), backing vocals by Elton's long-time touring bandmates Davey Johnstone, Dee Murray,[[note]] This was Murray's last appearance on an Elton John album before his death in 1992.[[/note]] and Nigel Olsson, and a suitably tense performance on lead vocals and digital keyboard by the man himself.



* The high point of Elton's last album of the 1980s is the soulful [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQu8oL2mfz0 "Sacrifice",]] which he and Taupin regarded as a "bookend" to "Your Song" from nearly two decades earlier. The lyrics see the singer feeling philosophical about the breakdown of a relationship that has run its course, thinking its ending is "no sacrifice at all", and facing the future with the belief that life can and will go on.

to:

* The high point of Elton's last album of the 1980s is the soulful [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQu8oL2mfz0 [[https://youtu.be/yQu8oL2mfz0 "Sacrifice",]] which he and Taupin regarded as a "bookend" to "Your Song" from nearly two decades earlier. The lyrics see the singer feeling philosophical about the breakdown of a relationship that has run its course, thinking its ending is "no sacrifice at all", and facing the future with the belief that life can and will go on.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]] continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA [[https://youtu.be/B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]] continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.



* John Lennon often described Elton's 1974 cover of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic2hlOwCif4 "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"]] as superior to Music/TheBeatles' original, and with an arrangement that makes the psychedelic imagery described in the song feel even more bizarre and otherworldly, it's not hard to see why he was so fond of it.
* Of all the covers included in the soundtrack for the 1975 film version of Music/TheWho's ''Music/{{Tommy}}'', Elton's rendition of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgg-ryFdrOI "Pinball Wizard"]] remains one of the most popular, as he makes the song his own by replacing the guitar riff from the original with a piano riff, and adds an instrumental version of "I Can't Explain" to the end of the song, all adding up to a first class tribute to Pete Townshend for encouraging him in the early years of his career. It remains the only cover of a song by the Who to reach the Top 10.[[note]] Elton's performance as the Local Lad in the film was a stroke of luck; the producers originally wanted Music/RodStewart to reprise the role he had performed in the 1972 orchestral version, and when Rod asked Elton for advice, he told him not to touch it with a bargepole - but when the producers then offered ''him'' the role, Elton decided he couldn't turn it down. Stewart was reportedly not amused, although he and Elton remain friends.[[/note]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MIxOkJQ2J7E "Philadelphia Freedom"]] doubles as a tribute to the tennis team of the same name headed by Billie Jean King and a love letter to the Philadelphia music scene. To capture the latter, Elton forgoes his usual piano in favour of a string and horn arrangement similar to those made famous by such artists as Music/BarryWhite (to the point of featuring an orchestration by White's usual arranger, Gene Page) and the MFSB session band (who liked the song so much they recorded a cover version).
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0qW9P-uYfM "Don't Go Breaking My Heart"]], the Ivor Novello award-winning duet Elton recorded with Kiki Dee in 1976, is a startling ray of sunlight amid the otherwise pessimistic songs Elton and Bernie were writing at the time. Throughout, the two singers affirm their devotion to each other and optimism for the future, with Kiki assuring Elton that she will not, indeed, go breaking his heart. Elton's piano and his usual session musicians, including Ray Cooper on percussion and Davey Johnstone on guitar, are in fine form throughout.

to:

* John Lennon often described Elton's 1974 cover of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic2hlOwCif4 [[https://youtu.be/Ic2hlOwCif4 "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"]] as superior to Music/TheBeatles' original, and with an arrangement that makes the psychedelic imagery described in the song feel even more bizarre and otherworldly, it's not hard to see why he was so fond of it.
* Of all the covers included in the soundtrack for the 1975 film version of Music/TheWho's ''Music/{{Tommy}}'', Elton's rendition of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgg-ryFdrOI [[https://youtu.be/cgg-ryFdrOI "Pinball Wizard"]] remains one of the most popular, as he makes the song his own by replacing the guitar riff from the original with a piano riff, and adds an instrumental version of "I Can't Explain" to the end of the song, all adding up to a first class tribute to Pete Townshend for encouraging him in the early years of his career. It remains the only cover of a song by the Who to reach the Top 10.[[note]] Elton's performance as the Local Lad in the film was a stroke of luck; the producers originally wanted Music/RodStewart to reprise the role he had performed in the 1972 orchestral version, and when Rod asked Elton for advice, he told him not to touch it with a bargepole - but when the producers then offered ''him'' the role, Elton decided he couldn't turn it down. Stewart was reportedly not amused, although he and Elton remain friends.[[/note]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MIxOkJQ2J7E [[https://youtu.be/MIxOkJQ2J7E "Philadelphia Freedom"]] doubles as a tribute to the tennis team of the same name headed by Billie Jean King and a love letter to the Philadelphia music scene. To capture the latter, Elton forgoes his usual piano in favour of a string and horn arrangement similar to those made famous by such artists as Music/BarryWhite (to the point of featuring an orchestration by White's usual arranger, Gene Page) and the MFSB session band (who liked the song so much they recorded a cover version).
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0qW9P-uYfM [[https://youtu.be/z0qW9P-uYfM "Don't Go Breaking My Heart"]], the Ivor Novello award-winning duet Elton recorded with Kiki Dee in 1976, is a startling ray of sunlight amid the otherwise pessimistic songs Elton and Bernie were writing at the time. Throughout, the two singers affirm their devotion to each other and optimism for the future, with Kiki assuring Elton that she will not, indeed, go breaking his heart. Elton's piano and his usual session musicians, including Ray Cooper on percussion and Davey Johnstone on guitar, are in fine form throughout.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* A much needed breather is provided after the preceding track with the bubbling instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX1KQNciyzA "Out of the Blue"]]. [[note]]''Not'' to be confused with "Someday out of the Blue", a pop song he wrote with Tim Rice for ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' but still a worthy song in its own right.[[/note]] Driven off a heavy riff layered by guitars, synthesizer, and vibraphone, the song is a powerful return to Elton's progressive rock and jazz fusion influences that hadn't been this potent since "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding", and also impressed the BBC enough to make it the original end credits theme of ''Series/TopGear''.

to:

* A much needed breather is provided after the preceding track with the bubbling instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX1KQNciyzA "Out of the Blue"]]. [[note]]''Not'' to be confused with "Someday out of the Blue", a pop song he wrote with Tim Rice for ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' but still a worthy song in its own right.[[/note]] Driven off a heavy riff layered by guitars, synthesizer, and vibraphone, the song is a powerful return to Elton's progressive rock and jazz fusion influences that hadn't been this potent since "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding", and also impressed the BBC enough to make it the original end credits theme of ''Series/TopGear''.

Added: 463

Changed: 686

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16EavZW5o68 "One Horse Town"]] is about the industrialization of a typical Southern American town, beginning with a brooding chamber trio (electric piano, vibraphone, and cello) before roaring to life with a gong and guitar solo, picking up steam as the narrator recounts how he "saw a Cadillac for the first time yesterday" and wants to bust out. Roger Pope's lightning-fast drumming is a highlight in the second half as well.




to:

* A much needed breather is provided after the preceding track with the bubbling instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TX1KQNciyzA "Out of the Blue"]]. [[note]]''Not'' to be confused with "Someday out of the Blue", a pop song he wrote with Tim Rice for ''WesternAnimation/TheRoadToElDorado'' but still a worthy song in its own right.[[/note]] Driven off a heavy riff layered by guitars, synthesizer, and vibraphone, the song is a powerful return to Elton's progressive rock and jazz fusion influences that hadn't been this potent since "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding", and also impressed the BBC enough to make it the original end credits theme of ''Series/TopGear''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Changed YouTube link. (Previous one is dead.)


* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBWfUc5jKiM "Tiny Dancer"]] after touring California with Elton and meeting women unlike any he knew back in England, most notably his future first wife, Maxine Feibelman. Elton sets the lyrics to a complex yet mesmerisingly beautiful musical arrangement, in which his voice and piano are accompanied by pedal steel guitar, strings, and choir. Though the length (over six minutes) and lack of catchy hooks meant the song was slow to catch on when it was initially released, it deservedly ranks as one of his most popular today.

to:

* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBWfUc5jKiM com/watch?v=65CNtap6bow "Tiny Dancer"]] after touring California with Elton and meeting women unlike any he knew back in England, most notably his future first wife, Maxine Feibelman. Elton sets the lyrics to a complex yet mesmerisingly beautiful musical arrangement, in which his voice and piano are accompanied by pedal steel guitar, strings, and choir. Though the length (over six minutes) and lack of catchy hooks meant the song was slow to catch on when it was initially released, it deservedly ranks as one of his most popular today.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBEqupVOdc "Your Song"]] marks the beginning of Elton's rise to superstardom, and it sticks in the listener's mind from the instantly familiar opening piano riff. Bernie Taupin's lyrics convey a palpable sense of hesitant hope that the song will be well-received by its intended object, and Elton's performance on vocals and piano are a perfect match for them, cementing them as one of popular music's great songwriting duos.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBEqupVOdc "Your Song"]] marks the beginning of Elton's rise to superstardom, and it sticks in the listener's mind from the instantly familiar opening piano riff. Bernie Taupin's lyrics convey a palpable sense of hesitant hope that the song will be well-received by its intended object, and Elton's performance on vocals and piano are a perfect match for them, cementing them as one of popular music's great songwriting duos. Plus, this song proves that one can describe the feeling of romantic love without using the word 'love'.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]], from 1997, continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]], from 1997, Tonight"]] continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.

Added: 603

Removed: 1118

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Per the sentence at the top of the page, tracks from The Lion King go on their own page, and "Something About the Way You Look Tonight" is not a non-album track.


[[AC:''The Big Picture'' (1997)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]], from 1997, continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjgWWjkNbhU "Can You Feel the Love Tonight"]], the love theme from ''[[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994 The Lion King]]'', which brilliantly showcased the relationship between the main protagonist, Simba, and his sweetheart, Nala. The music video contains montages of Elton performing the song and scenes from the film, including the romantic scenes between Simba and Nala. Fans agreed, and in 1994, it became the latest top 5 hit for John, who by now was approaching 25 years since his first American hit.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]], from 1997, which continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.

Added: 1452

Changed: 14

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[AC:''The Thom Bell Sessions'' (1979)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fw1ulSbMBiw "Mama Can't Buy You Love"]] was Elton's last major hit of the 1970s, reaching No. 9 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 and continuing his amazing run of success. By now, just about everything he was recording was guaranteed to be at least a modest hit.



* John Lennon often described Elton's 1974 cover of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic2hlOwCif4 "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"]] as superior to Music/TheBeatles' original, and with an arrangement that makes the imagery described in the song feel even more bizarre and otherworldly, it's not hard to see why he was so fond of it.

to:

* John Lennon often described Elton's 1974 cover of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic2hlOwCif4 "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"]] as superior to Music/TheBeatles' original, and with an arrangement that makes the psychedelic imagery described in the song feel even more bizarre and otherworldly, it's not hard to see why he was so fond of it.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0qW9P-uYfM "Don't Go Breaking My Heart",]] the Ivor Novello award-winning duet Elton recorded with Kiki Dee in 1976, is a startling ray of sunlight amid the otherwise pessimistic songs Elton and Bernie were writing at the time. Throughout, the two singers affirm their devotion to each other and optimism for the future, with Kiki assuring Elton that she will not, indeed, go breaking his heart. Elton's piano and his usual session musicians, including Ray Cooper on percussion and Davey Johnstone on guitar, are in fine form throughout.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0qW9P-uYfM "Don't Go Breaking My Heart",]] Heart"]], the Ivor Novello award-winning duet Elton recorded with Kiki Dee in 1976, is a startling ray of sunlight amid the otherwise pessimistic songs Elton and Bernie were writing at the time. Throughout, the two singers affirm their devotion to each other and optimism for the future, with Kiki assuring Elton that she will not, indeed, go breaking his heart. Elton's piano and his usual session musicians, including Ray Cooper on percussion and Davey Johnstone on guitar, are in fine form throughout.throughout.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjgWWjkNbhU "Can You Feel the Love Tonight"]], the love theme from ''[[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994 The Lion King]]'', which brilliantly showcased the relationship between the main protagonist, Simba, and his sweetheart, Nala. The music video contains montages of Elton performing the song and scenes from the film, including the romantic scenes between Simba and Nala. Fans agreed, and in 1994, it became the latest top 5 hit for John, who by now was approaching 25 years since his first American hit.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B93Tir6l5FA "Something About the Way You Look Tonight"]], from 1997, which continued to prove Elton's staying power and showcased his ability to convey a love song, going on 30 years after his earliest recordings. Coupled with a tribute version of "Candle In the Wind" (recorded in the wake of Princess Diana's death that August), "... Tonight" went to No. 1 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100 (where it stayed for 14 weeks) and sold 11 million copies in the United States, making it one of the biggest selling double A-sided singles of all time.

Changed: 236

Removed: 253



* The enigmatic protagonist of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9tK2_LnxxI "Levon"]] is one of Taupin's most fascinating creations, a balloon "magnate" who is proud of his war wound and named his son Jesus simply because he likes the name; Jesus, meanwhile, longs for a more exciting life than the one he has in his father's business. Elton's soulful rendition of the words really brings the character of Levon to life, and the tune is well-matched by a string score and the everpresent piano.
** The original "Levon"? Album time's about five minutes. The version frequently played at Elton's live shows? [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INLxu5R7zfo Nearly 11 minutes of epic rocking]] with fantastic solos by Elton and guitarist Davey Johnstone.

to:

* The enigmatic protagonist of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9tK2_LnxxI "Levon"]] is one of Taupin's most fascinating creations, a balloon "magnate" who is proud of his war wound and named his son Jesus simply because he likes the name; Jesus, meanwhile, longs for a more exciting life than the one he has in his father's business. Elton's soulful rendition of the words really brings the character of Levon to life, and the tune is well-matched by a string score and the everpresent piano.
** The original "Levon"? Album time's about five minutes.
piano. The version frequently played at Elton's live shows? shows expands the song from about 5 minutes to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INLxu5R7zfo Nearly nearly 11 minutes of epic rocking]] with fantastic solos by Elton and guitarist Davey Johnstone.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** The original "Levon"? Album time's about five minutes. The version frequently played at Elton's live shows? [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INLxu5R7zfo Nearly 11 minutes of epic rocking]] with fantastic solos by Elton and guitarist Davey Johnstone.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Some edits.


'''Note:''' Elton's contributions to the soundtrack for ''Disney/TheLionKing'' appear on AwesomeMusic.TheLionKing1994.

to:

'''Note:''' Elton's contributions to the soundtrack for ''Disney/TheLionKing'' ''WesternAnimation/{{The Lion King|1994}}'' (1994) appear on AwesomeMusic.TheLionKing1994.[[AwesomeMusic/TheLionKing1994 that film's Awesome Music page]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6qlLJp53EM "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"...]] and Elton should know, as he's written enough of them over the years. As Taupin's lyrics attest, sometimes, when we're feeling down, rather than forcing ourselves to feel happy by listening to upbeat music, we can find more solace in sad songs to which we can more closely relate. Elton's vocal performance makes it clear how much he believes that, far from dragging people further down, sad songs can have the power to ''heal'' a broken heart.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6qlLJp53EM "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"...]] and Elton should know, as he's written enough of them over the years. As Taupin's lyrics attest, sometimes, when we're feeling down, rather than forcing ourselves to feel happy by listening to upbeat music, we can find more solace in sad songs to which we can more closely relate. Elton's vocal performance makes it clear how much he believes that, far from dragging people further down, sad songs can have the power to ''heal'' a broken heart.
heart. What makes it particularly awesome is that the song itself [[LyricalDissonance is incredibly upbeat at the same time]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


'''Note:''' Elton's contributions to the soundtrack for ''Disney/TheLionKing'' appear on AwesomeMusic.TheLionKing.

to:

'''Note:''' Elton's contributions to the soundtrack for ''Disney/TheLionKing'' appear on AwesomeMusic.TheLionKing.TheLionKing1994.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Elton has described [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlspP10nPaM "Skyline Pigeon"]] as the first song he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin about which they were genuinely excited. Taupin's lyrics, in which the pigeon is a metaphor for someone who feels trapped in a collapsing marriage (hence the reference to a "metal ring") and wants to break free and take flight, are given a straightforward vocal delivery, with Elton playing the only backing instruments (harpsichord, piano, and organ). In 1972, Elton [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e8IeZGBOw4 re-recorded the song]] with his usual collaborators - drummer Nigel Olsson, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, bassist Dee Murray, and guitarist Davey Johnstone[[note]] Their first recordings with Elton, in that order, were on his first four studio albums.[[/note]] - as the B-side to "Daniel", giving the song new life in a first-class arrangement closer to his signature style.

to:

* Elton has described [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlspP10nPaM "Skyline Pigeon"]] as the first song he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin about which they were genuinely excited. Taupin's lyrics, in which the pigeon is a metaphor for someone who feels trapped in a collapsing marriage (hence the reference to a "metal ring") and wants to break free and take flight, are given a straightforward vocal delivery, with Elton playing the only backing instruments (harpsichord, piano, and organ). In 1972, Elton [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e8IeZGBOw4 re-recorded the song]] with his usual collaborators - drummer Nigel Olsson, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, bassist Dee Murray, and guitarist Davey Johnstone[[note]] Their first recordings with Elton, in that order, were on his first four studio albums.[[/note]] - as the B-side to "Daniel", giving the song track new life in a first-class arrangement closer to his signature style.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


%%[[AC:''Empty Sky'' (1969)]]
%%

to:

%%[[AC:''Empty [[AC:''Empty Sky'' (1969)]]
%%* Elton has described [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlspP10nPaM "Skyline Pigeon"]] as the first song he co-wrote with Bernie Taupin about which they were genuinely excited. Taupin's lyrics, in which the pigeon is a metaphor for someone who feels trapped in a collapsing marriage (hence the reference to a "metal ring") and wants to break free and take flight, are given a straightforward vocal delivery, with Elton playing the only backing instruments (harpsichord, piano, and organ). In 1972, Elton [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e8IeZGBOw4 re-recorded the song]] with his usual collaborators - drummer Nigel Olsson, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, bassist Dee Murray, and guitarist Davey Johnstone[[note]] Their first recordings with Elton, in that order, were on his first four studio albums.[[/note]] - as the B-side to "Daniel", giving the song new life in a first-class arrangement closer to his signature style.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, percussion by Ray Cooper (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (also marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, percussion by Ray Cooper (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (also marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), Johnstone, all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

Added: 1547

Changed: 1757

Removed: 34

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, percussion by Ray Cooper (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (marking (also marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.



B-B-B-Bennie and the Jets...\\

to:

B-B-B-Bennie B-B-B-B-B-Bennie and the Jets...\\



%%[[AC:''Rock of the Westies'' (1976)]]
%%

to:

%%[[AC:''Rock [[AC:''Rock of the Westies'' (1976)]]
%%* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywJ1MD4-Cns "Island Girl"]] is something of a forgotten commercial success for Elton, which is a shame, as Taupin's lyrics about a Jamaican prostitute in New York and the man who wants to take her away from the life into which she has fallen are superbly complemented by a sound that blends aspects of Caribbean and gospel music, with distorted slide guitar, marimba, and a synthesiser solo by a young Music/JamesNewtonHoward.



%%[[AC:''A Single Man'' (1978)]]

to:

%%[[AC:''A [[AC:''A Single Man'' (1978)]](1978)]]
* The largely instrumental [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGPBUpB-4tw "Song for Guy"]] received its title when Elton learned that on the same day he finished composing the track, 17-year-old Rocket Records message boy Guy Burchett had been killed in a motorcycle accident. As Elton was already obsessing over his own death at the time, he decided to make the piece a tribute to the late Burchett, and the layered keyboards, drum machine, and bass guitar add up to a touching memorial, punctuated near the end by the only words: "Life isn't everything, isn't everything, isn't everything..."

%%[[AC:''Victim of Love'' (1979)]]



%%[[AC:''Victim of Love'' (1979)]]

to:

%%[[AC:''Victim [[AC:''21 at 33'' (1980)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wlz6mTyiMZc "Little Jeannie"]] is one
of Love'' (1979)]]Elton's most commercially successful tracks not to be co-written with Bernie Taupin; instead, Elton teamed up with Gary Osborne to write this upbeat love ballad. With its lively vocals, electric piano, and a brass score punctuated with a saxophone solo in the instrumental bridge, it's not hard to see why audiences have always liked it.

%%[[AC:''The Fox'' (1981)]]



%%[[AC:''21 at 33'' (1980)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''The Fox'' (1981)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''Jump Up!'' (1982)]]
%%

to:

%%[[AC:''21 at 33'' (1980)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''The Fox'' (1981)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''Jump
[[AC:''Jump Up!'' (1982)]]
%%* The slow ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CiyKeSnSxk "Blue Eyes"]] marks another stellar collaboration between Elton and Gary Osborne, its lyrics paying tribute to the singer's lover's... well, the clue is in the title. Elton is in top form on vocals, and the mellow keyboard and string score provide the ideal instrumental backing to the tonally complex melody (with different keys for the verses, chorus, and instrumental bridge/coda).



%%[[AC:''Ice on Fire'' (1985)]]

to:

%%[[AC:''Ice [[AC:''Ice on Fire'' (1985)]](1985)]]
* Taupin's lyrics for the UsefulNotes/ColdWar-set love story [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xoleoV77eo "Nikita"]] see the singer lamenting his hopeless crush on an East German border guard, with eyes described as [[AlbumTitleDrop "like ice on fire"]]. The synthesiser solo in the instrumental bridge is one of Elton's finest of the 1980s, while Music/GeorgeMichael and Nik Kershaw make guest appearances on backing vocals for added awesome.

%%[[AC:''Leather Jackets'' (1986)]]



%%[[AC:''Leather Jackets'' (1986)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''Reg Strikes Back'' (1988)]]
%%

to:

%%[[AC:''Leather Jackets'' (1986)]]
%%
%%[[AC:''Reg
[[AC:''Reg Strikes Back'' (1988)]]
%%* The anguished "doomed relationship" ballad [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kaJRvZZBnX8 "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That"]] was Elton's biggest American commercial success of the decade, boasting lyrics by Taupin about the singer feeling unimportant to his partner (who has developed a roving eye and heart), backing vocals by Elton's long-time touring bandmates Davey Johnstone, Dee Murray,[[note]] This was Murray's last appearance on an Elton John album before his death in 1992.[[/note]] and Nigel Olsson, and a suitably tense performance on lead vocals and digital keyboard by the man himself.

Added: 507

Changed: 714

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_yc231bMIk "Come Down in Time"]] uses a harp and guitar harmonics in place of piano to back Elton's sincere delivery of Taupin's lyrics about a man going to an agreed-upon meeting with his girlfriend, but finding himself wondering if she'll stand him up and leave him "counting the stars in the night". Paul Buckmaster's string score and Karl Jenkins on oboe further enhance the atmosphere of uncertainty, especially when the song appears to end halfway through a verse.



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLA-sTpSH0 "Rocket Man"]] takes a more bleak view of the life of an astronaut; yes, he may be soaring off into space, but he's lonely and longs for the life he left behind and the loved ones he won't see for months. Elton's rendition of Taupin's lyrics brings out the tragedy of the spacefarer's situation as he laments the "long, long time" during which he's "burning up his fuse out here alone".

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLA-sTpSH0 "Rocket Man"]] Man (I Think It's Gonna Be a Long, Long Time)"]] takes a more bleak view of the life of an astronaut; yes, he may be soaring off into space, but he's lonely and longs for the life he left behind and the loved ones he won't see for months. Elton's rendition of Taupin's lyrics brings out the tragedy of the spacefarer's situation as he laments the "long, long time" during which he's "burning up his fuse out here alone".
* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tRgYfQ48A0 "Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters"]] when, on his first visit to New York City, he heard a gunshot outside his hotel window. Though this anecdote may suggest the song gives a kicking to TheBigRottenApple, not least when its first verse breaks apart the lyric "There's a rose in Spanish Harlem" from Jerry Leiber and Phil Spector's "Spanish Harlem", it develops into a celebration of what makes New York and its people special in spite of the grime and crime plaguing the city. The instrumental score focuses almost entirely on Spanish guitar and Elton's piano, making for one of his most direct songs.

Added: 928

Changed: 80

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


-->And you can tell everybody this is your song\\
It may be quite simple, but now that it's done\\
I hope you don't mind, I hope you don't mind that I put down in words\\
How wonderful life is while you're in the world



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic during visiting hours at an asylum (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.
-->We'll come again next Thursday afternoon\\
The in-laws hope they'll see you very soon\\
But is it in your conscience that you're after\\
Another glimpse of the madman across the water?


Added DiffLines:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0qW9P-uYfM "Don't Go Breaking My Heart",]] the Ivor Novello award-winning duet Elton recorded with Kiki Dee in 1976, is a startling ray of sunlight amid the otherwise pessimistic songs Elton and Bernie were writing at the time. Throughout, the two singers affirm their devotion to each other and optimism for the future, with Kiki assuring Elton that she will not, indeed, go breaking his heart. Elton's piano and his usual session musicians, including Ray Cooper on percussion and Davey Johnstone on guitar, are in fine form throughout.

Added: 494

Changed: 1106

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


%%[[AC:Empty Sky (1969)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Empty Sky %%[[AC:''Empty Sky'' (1969)]]



[[AC:Elton John (1970)]]

to:

[[AC:Elton John [[AC:''Elton John'' (1970)]]



[[AC:Tumbleweed Connection (1970)]]

to:

[[AC:Tumbleweed Connection [[AC:''Tumbleweed Connection'' (1970)]]



[[AC:Madman Across the Water (1971)]]

to:

[[AC:Madman [[AC:''Madman Across the Water Water'' (1971)]]




[[AC:Honky Château (1972)]]
* Elton's love for the musical traditions of New Orleans comes to the fore in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92s-MPAQBCU "Honky Cat",]] with jazzy piano punctuated by organ countermelodies providing an energetic complement to Taupin's lyrics about a country boy who has gone to the bright lights of New Orleans in search of answers, in spite of his family telling him that such a journey will end badly and that he should stay on the farm.

to:

\n[[AC:Honky Château * [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWrzhWnzhAs "Madman Across the Water"]] matches lyrics about a ranting lunatic (Taupin was amused by persistent rumours that he specifically had UsefulNotes/RichardNixon in mind) with a string score by Paul Buckmaster, organ by a pre-Music/{{Yes}} Rick Wakeman, electric guitar by Chris Spedding, and acoustic guitar by Davey Johnstone (marking the beginning of a long working relationship with Elton), all of them providing a suitably sharp and dramatic backing for the angsty vocals and piano of Elton himself.

[[AC:''Honky Château''
(1972)]]
* Elton's love for the musical traditions of New Orleans comes to the fore in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92s-MPAQBCU "Honky Cat",]] with jazzy piano punctuated by organ countermelodies (expanding to a brass section as the song develops) providing an energetic complement to Taupin's lyrics about a country boy who has gone to the bright lights of New Orleans in search of answers, in spite of his family telling him that such a journey will end badly and that he should stay on the farm.



[[AC:Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player (1973)]]

to:

[[AC:Don't [[AC:''Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player Player'' (1973)]]



[[AC:Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973)]]

to:

[[AC:Goodbye [[AC:''Goodbye Yellow Brick Road Road'' (1973)]]



[[AC:Caribou (1974)]]

to:

[[AC:Caribou [[AC:''Caribou'' (1974)]]



[[AC:Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy (1975)]]

to:

[[AC:Captain [[AC:''Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy Cowboy'' (1975)]]



%%[[AC:Rock of the Westies (1976)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Rock %%[[AC:''Rock of the Westies Westies'' (1976)]]



[[AC:Blue Moves (1976)]]

to:

[[AC:Blue Moves [[AC:''Blue Moves'' (1976)]]



%%[[AC:A Single Man (1978)]]

to:

%%[[AC:A %%[[AC:''A Single Man Man'' (1978)]]



%%[[AC:Victim of Love (1979)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Victim %%[[AC:''Victim of Love Love'' (1979)]]



%%[[AC:21 at 33 (1980)]]

to:

%%[[AC:21 %%[[AC:''21 at 33 33'' (1980)]]



%%[[AC:The Fox (1981)]]

to:

%%[[AC:The Fox %%[[AC:''The Fox'' (1981)]]



%%[[AC:Jump Up! (1982)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Jump Up! %%[[AC:''Jump Up!'' (1982)]]



[[AC:Too Low for Zero (1983)]]

to:

[[AC:Too [[AC:''Too Low for Zero Zero'' (1983)]]



[[AC:Breaking Hearts (1984)]]

to:

[[AC:Breaking Hearts [[AC:''Breaking Hearts'' (1984)]]



%%[[AC:Ice on Fire (1985)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Ice %%[[AC:''Ice on Fire Fire'' (1985)]]



%%[[AC:Leather Jackets (1986)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Leather Jackets %%[[AC:''Leather Jackets'' (1986)]]



%%[[AC:Reg Strikes Back (1988)]]

to:

%%[[AC:Reg %%[[AC:''Reg Strikes Back Back'' (1988)]]



[[AC:Sleeping with the Past (1989)]]

to:

[[AC:Sleeping [[AC:''Sleeping with the Past Past'' (1989)]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* The album opens with the Ivor Novello award-winning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA78e27R_J4 "Daniel",]] a solemn track in which the singer expresses admiration for an older brother who has gone blind but is flying to Spain; Taupin was inspired by stories he had read of Vietnam veterans who were hailed as heroes by their hometowns and families but who just wanted to get away and return to their previous lives in spite of the changes they had undergone. Elton gives a heartfelt performance on vocals, and the usual piano is replaced by an electric keyboard and Mellotron to create a more gentle atmosphere.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0EozkBWuI "Crocodile Rock"]] is a musical love letter to the heady early days of rock and roll, its title paying tribute to Australian band Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" and the lyrics and melody referencing "Let's Dance" as performed by Chris Montez, "Rock Around the Clock" as performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, and "Speedy Gonzales" as performed by Pat Boone.[[note]] The similarities to the last named were so strong that a lawsuit was filed on behalf of "Speedy Gonzales" songwriter Buddy Kaye; they settled out of court.[[/note]] The vocals and piano/Farfisa organ accompaniment are so catchy that you might find your own feet "just can't keep still".

to:

* The album opens with the Ivor Novello award-winning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA78e27R_J4 "Daniel",]] a solemn track in which the singer expresses admiration for an older brother who has gone blind but is flying to Spain; Taupin was inspired by stories he had read of Vietnam veterans who were hailed as heroes by their hometowns and families but who just wanted to get away and return to their previous lives in spite of the changes they had undergone. [[note]] A third verse that clarifies this was cut at Elton's suggestion, as he felt it made the song too long. Unfortunately, neither of them remember the words to the now discarded verse.[[/note]] Elton gives a heartfelt performance on vocals, and the usual piano is replaced by an electric keyboard and Mellotron to create a more gentle atmosphere.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0EozkBWuI "Crocodile Rock"]] is a musical love letter to the heady early days of rock and roll, its title paying tribute to Australian band Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" and the lyrics and melody referencing "Let's Dance" as performed by Chris Montez, "Rock Around the Clock" as performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, and "Speedy Gonzales" as performed by Pat Boone.[[note]] The similarities to the last named were so strong that a lawsuit was filed on behalf of "Speedy Gonzales" songwriter Buddy Kaye; they settled out of court.[[/note]] The vocals (particularly the "La-la-la-la-la" refrain) and piano/Farfisa organ accompaniment are so catchy that you might find your own feet "just can't keep still".



* After hearing Music/JanisJoplin described as "a candle in the wind", Bernie Taupin was inspired to write a song ostensibly inspired by Creator/MarilynMonroe, but really about famous performers who were ruthlessly exploited until their premature deaths. The result was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80rHyABCb20 "Candle in the Wind",]] featuring a vocal performance in which the admiration and grief for the song's subject comes through in every note.

to:

* After hearing Music/JanisJoplin described as "a candle in the wind", Bernie Taupin was inspired to write a song ostensibly inspired by Creator/MarilynMonroe, but really more generally about famous performers who were ruthlessly exploited until their premature deaths. The result was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80rHyABCb20 "Candle in the Wind",]] featuring a vocal performance in which the admiration and grief for the song's subject comes through in every note.



* Though Elton's growing sense of burnout and frustration is evident throughout ''Blue Moves'', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w142CaROC0 "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"]] remains a classic, with lyrics by Taupin lamenting the breakdown of a romantic relationship in which the participants seem unable to find the strength to apologise for their roles in the breakdown, dooming any attempt at reconciliation. The solemn vocals and orchestration only add to the sense that this is truly "a sad, sad situation, and it's getting more and more absurd".

to:

* Though Elton's a growing sense of burnout and frustration for both Elton and Bernie is evident throughout ''Blue Moves'', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w142CaROC0 "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"]] remains a classic, with lyrics by Taupin lamenting the breakdown of a romantic relationship in which the participants seem unable to find the strength to apologise for their roles in the breakdown, dooming any attempt at reconciliation. reconciliation.[[note]] Bernie's marriage to Maxine Feibelman was collapsing when he wrote the lyrics; they divorced in 1976.[[/note]] The solemn vocals and orchestration only add to the sense that this is truly "a sad, sad situation, and it's getting more and more absurd".



* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6KYAVn8ons "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues"...]] what's that? ''Why'' do they call it the blues? The song doesn't really answer that question, but who cares? Elton gives a top drawer performance on vocals and piano as he sings Taupin's lyrics about a man who has to leave his girlfriend (in the video, because he's been called up for National Service) but who promises to return to her. Bonus points for a harmonica solo in the instrumental bridge by Music/StevieWonder.[[note]] The video is also notable for featuring a rare appearance by Elton without his glasses.[[/note]]

to:

* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6KYAVn8ons "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues"...]] what's that? ''Why'' do Why ''do'' they call it the blues? The song doesn't really answer that question, but who cares? Elton gives a top drawer performance on vocals and piano as he sings Taupin's lyrics about a man who has to leave his girlfriend (in the video, because he's been called up for National Service) but who promises to return to her. Bonus points for a harmonica solo in the instrumental bridge by Music/StevieWonder.[[note]] The video is also notable for featuring a rare appearance by Elton without his glasses.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:


[[AC:Non-album tracks]]
* John Lennon often described Elton's 1974 cover of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ic2hlOwCif4 "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds"]] as superior to Music/TheBeatles' original, and with an arrangement that makes the imagery described in the song feel even more bizarre and otherworldly, it's not hard to see why he was so fond of it.
* Of all the covers included in the soundtrack for the 1975 film version of Music/TheWho's ''Music/{{Tommy}}'', Elton's rendition of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgg-ryFdrOI "Pinball Wizard"]] remains one of the most popular, as he makes the song his own by replacing the guitar riff from the original with a piano riff, and adds an instrumental version of "I Can't Explain" to the end of the song, all adding up to a first class tribute to Pete Townshend for encouraging him in the early years of his career. It remains the only cover of a song by the Who to reach the Top 10.[[note]] Elton's performance as the Local Lad in the film was a stroke of luck; the producers originally wanted Music/RodStewart to reprise the role he had performed in the 1972 orchestral version, and when Rod asked Elton for advice, he told him not to touch it with a bargepole - but when the producers then offered ''him'' the role, Elton decided he couldn't turn it down. Stewart was reportedly not amused, although he and Elton remain friends.[[/note]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MIxOkJQ2J7E "Philadelphia Freedom"]] doubles as a tribute to the tennis team of the same name headed by Billie Jean King and a love letter to the Philadelphia music scene. To capture the latter, Elton forgoes his usual piano in favour of a string and horn arrangement similar to those made famous by such artists as Music/BarryWhite (to the point of featuring an orchestration by White's usual arranger, Gene Page) and the MFSB session band (who liked the song so much they recorded a cover version).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Damn it...


[[AC:Captain Fantastic and the Dirt Brown Cowboy (1975)]]

to:

[[AC:Captain Fantastic and the Dirt Brown Dirt Cowboy (1975)]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
With Rocketman winding down its cinematic run, this seems like a good time to get this page off the ground. Truthfully, my own interest in Elton's music wanes after about 1975 (with a few exceptions), but I'm sure fans of his who find this page can add examples from the 1990s onwards.

Added DiffLines:

At his commercial peak, Music/EltonJohn was responsible for 5% of ''all record sales worldwide''. Why? Because his music is ''just that awesome''.

'''Note:''' Elton's contributions to the soundtrack for ''Disney/TheLionKing'' appear on AwesomeMusic.TheLionKing.
----
%%[[AC:Empty Sky (1969)]]
%%
[[AC:Elton John (1970)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lwBEqupVOdc "Your Song"]] marks the beginning of Elton's rise to superstardom, and it sticks in the listener's mind from the instantly familiar opening piano riff. Bernie Taupin's lyrics convey a palpable sense of hesitant hope that the song will be well-received by its intended object, and Elton's performance on vocals and piano are a perfect match for them, cementing them as one of popular music's great songwriting duos.
* Taupin's lyrics for [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm7b-32Mpbs "Border Song"]] were born from the alienation he was feeling in London and his desire to return home; Elton pairs them with a tune and vocal performance that pay homage to his keen interest in American soul music, complete with full choir belting out "'''Ho-ly Mo-ses!'''" at the end of the second and third verse which, coupled with the denser orchestration for these passages and the bridge, gives the song just the right amount of gravitas.

[[AC:Tumbleweed Connection (1970)]]
* Elton closes his album-long tribute to themes from country music with the all-stops-pulled-out, six-and-a-half-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdEQkRq_xrw "Burn Down the Mission".]] Taupin's lyrics tell the story of a man in a poor community who decides to rise up against the rich people grinding them down... only to be captured and taken off to an uncertain fate. Elton himself is in absolutely top-notch form on both piano and vocals, while the melody passes through multiple keys and suddenly takes off in intensity in the instrumental bridge to make the listener feel the struggle the protagonist is going through.

[[AC:Madman Across the Water (1971)]]
* Taupin was inspired to write [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBWfUc5jKiM "Tiny Dancer"]] after touring California with Elton and meeting women unlike any he knew back in England, most notably his future first wife, Maxine Feibelman. Elton sets the lyrics to a complex yet mesmerisingly beautiful musical arrangement, in which his voice and piano are accompanied by pedal steel guitar, strings, and choir. Though the length (over six minutes) and lack of catchy hooks meant the song was slow to catch on when it was initially released, it deservedly ranks as one of his most popular today.
* The enigmatic protagonist of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U9tK2_LnxxI "Levon"]] is one of Taupin's most fascinating creations, a balloon "magnate" who is proud of his war wound and named his son Jesus simply because he likes the name; Jesus, meanwhile, longs for a more exciting life than the one he has in his father's business. Elton's soulful rendition of the words really brings the character of Levon to life, and the tune is well-matched by a string score and the everpresent piano.

[[AC:Honky Château (1972)]]
* Elton's love for the musical traditions of New Orleans comes to the fore in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92s-MPAQBCU "Honky Cat",]] with jazzy piano punctuated by organ countermelodies providing an energetic complement to Taupin's lyrics about a country boy who has gone to the bright lights of New Orleans in search of answers, in spite of his family telling him that such a journey will end badly and that he should stay on the farm.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5nLA-sTpSH0 "Rocket Man"]] takes a more bleak view of the life of an astronaut; yes, he may be soaring off into space, but he's lonely and longs for the life he left behind and the loved ones he won't see for months. Elton's rendition of Taupin's lyrics brings out the tragedy of the spacefarer's situation as he laments the "long, long time" during which he's "burning up his fuse out here alone".

[[AC:Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player (1973)]]
* The album opens with the Ivor Novello award-winning [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UA78e27R_J4 "Daniel",]] a solemn track in which the singer expresses admiration for an older brother who has gone blind but is flying to Spain; Taupin was inspired by stories he had read of Vietnam veterans who were hailed as heroes by their hometowns and families but who just wanted to get away and return to their previous lives in spite of the changes they had undergone. Elton gives a heartfelt performance on vocals, and the usual piano is replaced by an electric keyboard and Mellotron to create a more gentle atmosphere.
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw0EozkBWuI "Crocodile Rock"]] is a musical love letter to the heady early days of rock and roll, its title paying tribute to Australian band Daddy Cool's "Eagle Rock" and the lyrics and melody referencing "Let's Dance" as performed by Chris Montez, "Rock Around the Clock" as performed by Bill Haley and His Comets, and "Speedy Gonzales" as performed by Pat Boone.[[note]] The similarities to the last named were so strong that a lawsuit was filed on behalf of "Speedy Gonzales" songwriter Buddy Kaye; they settled out of court.[[/note]] The vocals and piano/Farfisa organ accompaniment are so catchy that you might find your own feet "just can't keep still".

[[AC:Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973)]]
* The album widely regarded as Elton's greatest opens with the eleven-minute epic [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p_xAToFzck "Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding".]] The instrumental "Funeral for a Friend" was Elton's answer to the self-posed question "What sort of music would I like to be played at my funeral?", and recording engineer David Hentschel's performance on ARP synthesiser - overdubbed in multiple layers - meshes with Elton's piano to create something truly otherworldly. After about five minutes, the synthesiser is replaced with electric guitar for "Love Lies Bleeding", the lyrics for which continue the death imagery of "Funeral for a Friend" as the singer tells his ex-girlfriend that it "kills me to think of you with another man" as "love lies bleeding in my hand".
* After hearing Music/JanisJoplin described as "a candle in the wind", Bernie Taupin was inspired to write a song ostensibly inspired by Creator/MarilynMonroe, but really about famous performers who were ruthlessly exploited until their premature deaths. The result was [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80rHyABCb20 "Candle in the Wind",]] featuring a vocal performance in which the admiration and grief for the song's subject comes through in every note.
* Just one chord is all it takes for many listeners to recognise [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5rQHoaQpTw "Bennie and the Jets",]] a satire of the excesses of early 1970s rock and the press that covered it.[[note]] Or perhaps it's [[SpellMyNameWithAnS "Benny and the Jets"?]] The track listing on the sleeve says "Benny", but the label on the LP says "Bennie".[[/note]] Taupin's lyrics paint a vivid picture of the girls in the band - Candy, Ronnie, and Bennie herself - and Elton's no-holds-barred performance on vocals and especially piano, particularly in the fadeout, elevates them to the next level, as overdubbed crowd noises create a sense that we are actually watching Bennie and the Jets live in concert for ourselves.
-->Oh Candy and Ronnie, have you seen them yet\\
Oh, but they're so spaced out\\
B-B-B-Bennie and the Jets...\\
Oh, but they're weird and they're wonderful\\
Oh Bennie, she's really keen\\
She's got electric boots, a mohair suit\\
You know I read it in a magazi-ine, ohh...\\
B-B-B-Bennie and the Jets!
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDOL7iY8kfo "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road"]] forms an interesting counterpoint to "Honky Cat" from the previous year, as Taupin's lyrics paint a picture of a country boy who has grown disillusioned with the city life he has led as the plaything of a rich socialite, and who has decided to go back to the simple life he led before. As in all of their greatest collaborations, Elton is on fine form on both vocals and piano to make us feel for the protagonist, who has finally realised just how misled and used he has been all these years, and how he should have listened to his "old man" when he tried to warn him against following the "yellow brick road".
* The hard-rocking [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26wEWSUUsUc "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting"]] stands apart from Elton's usual output by putting electric guitars front and centre, and the man himself gives a positively adrenaline-charged rendition of Taupin's testosterone-poisoned lyrics paying tribute to youthful anger of the early years of rock and roll, the singer hell-bent on spending his Saturday "getting a little action in" by getting good and drunk and then getting in a fight.

[[AC:Caribou (1974)]]
* The album races out of the gate with the electric rocker [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lh3gmOZQiiQ "The Bitch is Back",]] its title coming from Taupin's wife Maxine's preferred quip whenever Elton was in a bad mood. Elton saw the funny side of the lyrics and effectively adopted the song as a personal theme tune, unafraid to hide his temperamental, confrontational side (even when sober).
* The plaintive [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxuqWG-Hxgo "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me"]] sees Taupin writing from the perspective of someone who has helped a friend, only to be repaid with rejection. Elton's vocals and piano go even further toward conveying the feelings of hurt and need, especially in the refrain:
-->Don't let the sun go down on me\\
Although I search myself, it's always someone else I see\\
I'd just allow a fragment of your life to wander free\\
But losing everything is like the sun going down on me...

[[AC:Captain Fantastic and the Dirt Brown Cowboy (1975)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZRRd4bW91c "Someone Saved My Life Tonight"]] is one of Elton's most intensely personal songs, a setting of lyrics in which Taupin describes an incident in 1968 when Long John Baldry - the "someone" in the title - found Elton, who felt trapped in his life and relationship, with his head in the gas oven (although with the window open) and talked him into turning his life around by ending his engagement and finding solace in his friends and musical career. The vocals make us feel every bit of Elton's journey from life-crushing despair to unending gratitude toward the person who pulled him back from the edge.

%%[[AC:Rock of the Westies (1976)]]
%%
[[AC:Blue Moves (1976)]]
* Though Elton's growing sense of burnout and frustration is evident throughout ''Blue Moves'', [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5w142CaROC0 "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word"]] remains a classic, with lyrics by Taupin lamenting the breakdown of a romantic relationship in which the participants seem unable to find the strength to apologise for their roles in the breakdown, dooming any attempt at reconciliation. The solemn vocals and orchestration only add to the sense that this is truly "a sad, sad situation, and it's getting more and more absurd".

%%[[AC:A Single Man (1978)]]
%%
%%[[AC:Victim of Love (1979)]]
%%
%%[[AC:21 at 33 (1980)]]
%%
%%[[AC:The Fox (1981)]]
%%
%%[[AC:Jump Up! (1982)]]
%%
[[AC:Too Low for Zero (1983)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHwVBirqD2s "I'm Still Standing"]] is an outstanding anthem of defiance, Taupin's lyrics asserting that everything the object of the song may have done to knock the singer down has done nothing to dent their self-respect, and Elton's electrifying vocal performance lets us know that despite everything that has befallen him over the years, he's "still standing better than [he] ever did."
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6KYAVn8ons "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues"...]] what's that? ''Why'' do they call it the blues? The song doesn't really answer that question, but who cares? Elton gives a top drawer performance on vocals and piano as he sings Taupin's lyrics about a man who has to leave his girlfriend (in the video, because he's been called up for National Service) but who promises to return to her. Bonus points for a harmonica solo in the instrumental bridge by Music/StevieWonder.[[note]] The video is also notable for featuring a rare appearance by Elton without his glasses.[[/note]]

[[AC:Breaking Hearts (1984)]]
* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6qlLJp53EM "Sad Songs (Say So Much)"...]] and Elton should know, as he's written enough of them over the years. As Taupin's lyrics attest, sometimes, when we're feeling down, rather than forcing ourselves to feel happy by listening to upbeat music, we can find more solace in sad songs to which we can more closely relate. Elton's vocal performance makes it clear how much he believes that, far from dragging people further down, sad songs can have the power to ''heal'' a broken heart.

%%[[AC:Ice on Fire (1985)]]
%%
%%[[AC:Leather Jackets (1986)]]
%%
%%[[AC:Reg Strikes Back (1988)]]
%%
[[AC:Sleeping with the Past (1989)]]
* The high point of Elton's last album of the 1980s is the soulful [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yQu8oL2mfz0 "Sacrifice",]] which he and Taupin regarded as a "bookend" to "Your Song" from nearly two decades earlier. The lyrics see the singer feeling philosophical about the breakdown of a relationship that has run its course, thinking its ending is "no sacrifice at all", and facing the future with the belief that life can and will go on.
----

Top