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Music review: Elton John – ‘Wonderful Crazy Night’

By Clint Rhodes for The 2 min read
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I’ve been an Elton John fan ever since I first heard 1972ĢƵ “Honky Chateau,” featuring the stirring “Rocket Man” and the winsome “Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters.”

Like the majority of my early musical influences, this 1972 effort from the flamboyant Englishman was “borrowed” from my oldest brotherĢƵ album collection. A year later, the release of “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” continued my fascination with JohnĢƵ astute musical flair and engaging lyrical prowess. By the time “Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy” hit the scene in 1975, I became completely hooked and would eagerly await every new album.

With JohnĢƵ 33rd studio release, my expectations were high for what the 68-year-old singer would have left in his bag of tricks. T Bone Burnett returns to oversee the material after successfully producing JohnĢƵ last solo effort as well as the 2010 collaboration between John and Leon Russell on “The Union.”

Celebrating nearly 50 years of songwriting together, John and Bernie Taupin weave a wonderfully up-tempo set of soulful scenarios that flow with the ease of two artists who share a magical bond and musical vision.

Many of the lyrical arrangements harken back to the extraordinary work that John and Taupin composed on 1970ĢƵ “Tumbleweed Connection.”

For the first time since 2006ĢƵ “The Captain & the Kid,” John records with this superb touring band along with longtime bandmates Nigel Olsson on drums and Davey Johnstone on guitar.

Highlights include the rousing title track, the graceful “In the Name of You,” the charming “Blue Wonderful” and the simplistically elegant “Tambourine.”

On my favorite track, JohnĢƵ piano and JohnstoneĢƵ guitar playfully joust on the spirited “Looking Up” as John declares, “I’m looking up more than I look down.”

“England and America” closes out the deluxe edition with a guitar-driven vigor reminiscent of the classic “Saturday NightĢƵ Alright for Fighting.”

“Wonderful Crazy Night” displays a delightful resurgence for an artist not yet ready to go gently into that good night.

Clint Rhodes is the ĢƵ music reviewer. He can be reached at crhodes@heraldstandard.com.

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