Andrew Smith's Reviews > Elton John: Captain Fantastic on the Yellow Brick Road

Elton John by Gillian G. Gaar
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really liked it
bookshelves: music, netgalley, non-fiction, photography

I’ve been a big fan of Elton John since the early 1970s. My elder brother bought a copy of his album Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Piano Player and played it continually in our house. He then added Madman Across the Water and I was completely hooked, this becoming my favourite album of all time – by anybody! I subsequently added other albums to the family collection, in fact all Elton's albums up to and including the biographical Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy. Keep in mind that in the the first half of the 1970s Elton was releasing a new album at roughly six-monthly intervals. After captain Fantastic I admit that I somewhat neglected EJ for a period; his music had diversified somewhat as he explored a new writing partnership and he lost me for a bit. I was to return again later, re-listening to the early albums, though I never did invest in his work from 1976 onwards, with the exception of the excellent Songs from the West Coast (2001).

This book details Elton’s rise to fame, explores his early life, his fledgling career and walks us through each album (complete with critique) and then practically every major event in his life to date. It’s comprehensive, up to date and has loads of photos to supplement the text. I found that there’s a great deal I didn’t previously know about the singer/song writer, for instance: that he’d been a session player on Tom Jones’s Delilah and also the Hollies track He Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother and that an album called Reg Dwight’s Piano Goes Pop was once release in which he sings covers of songs by artists such as Mungo Jerry and Canned Heat.

If I had to find something to criticise, it would be that I don’t agree with some of the thoughts here on the merits of a number of Elton’s albums and also that I found the writing a little ‘dry’. In addition, I noted that a reference to the song Tiny Dancer states that Bernie Taupin wrote the lyrics to recount the time he met his first wife - something he refutes in his own memoire Scattershot: Life, Music, Elton, and Me. But I know that this is nitpicking, this book really is as comprehensive a study of the man and his work as I’ve come across and the collection of photos here really are fantastic. This book would make a fabulous addition to the bookshelf or coffee table of any Elton John fan.

My thanks to Quarto Publishing Group for providing a copy of this book via NetGalley in return for an honest review.
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Reading Progress

January 1, 2024 – Started Reading
January 1, 2024 – Shelved
January 1, 2024 – Shelved as: music
January 1, 2024 – Shelved as: netgalley
January 1, 2024 – Shelved as: non-fiction
January 1, 2024 – Shelved as: photography
January 2, 2024 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)

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message 1: by Melki (new)

Melki I also kind of tuned out after Captain Fantastic, though I remember waiting in line to buy Rock of the Westies the day it was released. He got me through adolescence, and introduced me to an astonishing number of other artists, so - cheers to the man.


Andrew Smith I must try Rock of the Westies, actually. But like you, Elton's music was a constant companion to me through my teens and early 20s in particular. Went to see him a few years back, and he was still able to stir the emotions, even if his voice has changed over the years.


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