When things are really trucking along, you don’t know where exactly an Elton John song is going to go - sometimes he’ll change course musically two or three times in one tune, as on the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road opener, “Funeral for a Friend,” or when “Madman Across the Water” skates from eerily beautiful harmonics to crashing drums and dissonance. And then 20 years after that, the same “blue jean baby” was capable of inspiring Britney Spears to return to the recording studio in 2022 to team up for “Hold Me Closer.” All it took was a lyrical fragment and a couple emoji on Instagram to immediately spur a fan frenzy. Take for example the way that a song like “Tiny Dancer” could skip across the surface of a lake when it was released in 1971 only to make a true splash because of an emotional needle drop in Almost Famous almost 30 years later. But still, his catalogue is so deep that there are several dozen songs where the line between ubiquity and universality has blurred over time. Luckily the good ear and good sense of his label - or more often rogue radio DJs - prevailed, sending unexpected tracks rocketing up charts. John famously argued on several occasions against releasing some of his most enduring tunes, notably “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me,” to radio. Not every one of his best songs was a hit, or even a single. He frequently mused about how he’d handle the inevitable fall from grace, the coming apocalypse when he would be out of favor and fashion - and when his late pivot to disco (and an untimely trial separation from Taupin) finally broke his Midas touch, he spiraled spectacularly for a good stretch of the 1980s and early ’90s. “I never feel as if I’ve really arrived,” he complained in 1975. Asked about any new album, he’d predict it to be both the biggest success ever and quite likely to fall right out of the bottom of the charts. Through it all, he waited anxiously for the other shoe to drop. He created offhand feuds almost faster than new hits, alternately pumping up and then trashing his friends and peers (including Rod Stewart, Tina Turner, and even Princess Diana), along with more than a few hotel rooms, along the way. The boisterous, flamboyant front man could often be mistaken for the ringleader of a one-man circus. John’s trajectory from seeming overnight success in 1970 to dangerous near-overexposure happened at a dizzying pace, though he’d put in the work before that he was classically trained at London’s Royal Academy of Music and played in blues bar bands since he was a teen. And Goodbye Yellow Brick Road is the mind-melting double-disc epic that could stand in for an encyclopedia entry on “music of the 1970s.” They’re the kind of albums that other artists would eat a feathered boa to pull off once, let alone back to back to back. Madman Across the Water levies a scorched-earth rebuke of critics. Honky Château is the album equivalent of the most perfectly paired French red wine and mellow weed Tumbleweed Connection is solid Americana on par with anything you’d hear from a Yankee in the 20th century. Elton John is as bold and excellent a first proper debut for a new artist as has maybe ever been released. Half a century ago, he released a total of seven LPs (including one double album!) in just shy of four years, all co-written with lyricist Bernie Taupin and often composed and recorded in a matter of hours or, at most, days. The 76-year-old songwriter hasn’t just set a curve for success against which other artists’ best songs can be judged. The biggest obstacle to creating a ranked list of every Elton John song ever is Elton John himself.
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