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Made in England

Elton John

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Album Review

Made in England could as easily be the follow-up to Elton John's self-titled 1970 album as his first recording since the success of his songs for the Lion King soundtrack. John has brought back some of his old associates, including percussionist Ray Cooper, guitarist Davey Johnstone, and, particularly, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, who gave the Elton John album its distinctive sound 25 years ago and contributes four string charts here. John remains a musical jukebox: "Please" has a twangy guitar riff that sounds like the Searchers, circa 1965, while guest organist Paul Carrack brings a soulful Booker T.-like feel to "Man." As usual, though, John's main vocal influence remains John Lennon, especially on the album's first single, "Believe," the lyrics to which also echo the tone of several of Lennon's solo ballads. Lyricist Bernie Taupin is unusually personal, writing mostly in short, simple, declarative sentences and giving his songs one-word titles ("House," "Cold," "Pain," etc.). His overall theme posits a positive conclusion ("Blessed") eventually triumphing over adversity ("Lies"). John never works up much feeling for this concept, though he does come off alternately angry and solemn as the lyrics seem to require, though without ever upsetting the melodic flow. It sounds, in other words, as if Taupin had a lot to get off his chest this time around, but his mouthpiece, as usual, was more interested in the sound of the words than in their meaning. Which, given the predictability of the message, seems to have been just as well.

Customer Reviews

Good effort from Elton

This was an overall good effort from Elton. Believe and Blessed are two of Elton's better singles. Believe takes you back to Madman Across the Water days. Blessed is the beginning of Elton cranking out ballads that did not end in the 90's. I do like Blessed, but he can do these in his sleep. There are other songs on here that would make any Elton fan happy. Pain is a great rocker that shows his appreciation to the Rolling Stones. Latitude and Please are very good songs that will remind you of early Beatles. Man has a Whiter Shade of Pale sound to it. Overall this is a good effort that any fan should already own and non-fans should find pleasing.

high point of the 90's

Yeah, I have pretty much every song he's ever recorded - and that's a LOT of songs - so I'm fairly attune to Elton's musical output. In my opinion this is his best overall album of the 1990s; chock full of bright, rockin' and poppin' tunes that reward repeated listenings and stack up strongly with some his best career work. The title tune and 'Pain' basically explode thru your speakers at middle to high volume with two of EJ's most forceful vocal performances ever. I've always been a fan of Bernie Taupin's lyrics whether they made sense or not because I'm one of those fans who just enjoys how Elton sings them and frames them musically, but on this disc some of the words are in fact more personal than usual. All the better. The orchestral flourishes are another great plus thanks to Paul Buckmaster. Buy a few tunes from this album and you'll want them all, along with a few hundred others in this superstar's incredible library.

Songs from my childhood

My mom got me started on Elton John growing up, and this was certainly one of my favorites. Still an album that has stuck with me for the years; I don't think that there's a bad song on here.

Biography

Born: March 25, 1947 in Pinner, Middlesex, England

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

In terms of sales and lasting popularity, Elton John was the biggest pop superstar of the early '70s. Initially marketed as a singer/songwriter, John soon revealed he could craft Beatlesque pop and pound out rockers with equal aplomb. He could dip into soul, disco, and country, as well as classic pop balladry and even progressive rock. His versatility, combined with his effortless melodic skills, dynamic charisma, and flamboyant stage shows, made him the most popular recording artist of the '70s....
Full Bio

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