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Showing posts with label Gus Dudgeon (Remasters). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gus Dudgeon (Remasters). Show all posts

Monday 4 April 2022

"Empty Sky" by ELTON JOHN – June 1969 UK Debut Album on DJM Records in Mono and Stereo (Stereo Mix Is Used for CD) – January 1975 USA Debut Album on MCA Records in Stereo Only - Featuring Caleb Quaye and Roger Pope (later with Hookfoot), Tony Murray of Plastic Penny and The Troggs, Don Fay, Graham Vickery of Shakey Vick and Nigel Olsson of Uriah Heep later with The Elton John Band (May 1995 UK Mercury/This Record Co Ltd CD Reissue with Four Bonus Tracks and Gus Dudgeon Remasters – Part Of 'The Classic Years' Series) - A Review by Mark Barry...



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"...Wish That I Had Wings..."
 
Picture the scene – fresh out of the recording sessions at Dick James Recording Studios, a young Elton John and his guitarist/pal Caleb Quaye (both he and Reg had worked for rival music publishing companies when they met by accident) are walking at four in the morning in April 1969 back to the Salvation Army Headquarters in London's Oxford Street to get some well-earned kip.
 
Steve Brown's Dad (Steve is Producer on the "Empty Sky" LP) lived above and ran the Capitol's famous refuge for the homeless and the hopeful. After three failed singles with Bluesology, countless Soul-sucking sessions on Budget Compilations and Top of the Pops LPs doing current cover versions and finding a lyrical partner of true worth in Lincolnshire-lad Bernie Taupin only a few years earlier – our Mister Dwight must surely have felt that things were finally on the up. 
 
Not quite - it would take until the next self-titled "Elton John" LP of 1970 and of course the beautiful melody of "Your Song" to make people listen. But this rather unloved yet strangely brill in places too debut album is where all the mayhem to 1975 started.
 
Elton has described his vocals and even his songwriting on "Empty Sky" as naïve and probably cringes re-listening to it now. Studio trickery on longer cuts like the three-part Side 2 finisher are terribly dated – instruments used that were thought to be cool on the day but quickly sounded passé - no real single to grab you by the netherlands. But there is also pride – the title track is stunning and you can feel greatness looming. To the Western Ford Gateway...
 
UK released 4 May 1995 - "Empty Sky" by ELTON JOHN on Mercury/This Record Co Ltd 528 157-2 (Barcode 731452815729) is an Expanded Edition CD Reissue and Remaster in The Classic Years Series with Four Bonus Tracks that plays out as follows (55:18 minutes):
 
1. Empty Sky (8:28 minutes) [Side 1]
2. Val-Hala (4:12 minutes)
3. Western Ford Gateway (3:16 minutes)
4. Hymn 2000 (4:29 minutes)
5. Lady What's Tomorrow (3:10 minutes) [Side 2]
6. Sails (3:45 minutes)
7. The Scaffold (3:18 minutes)
8. Skyline Pigeon (3:37 minutes)
9. Gulliver/It's Hay Chewed/Reprise (6:59 minutes)
Tracks 1 to 9 are his Debut Album "Empty Sky" – released June 1969 in the UK on DJM Records DJLP 403 (Mono) and DJLPS 403 (Stereo). It would remain unissued in the USA until January 1975 when MCA finally put out the LP. MCA Records MCA-2130 (same nine tracks, Stereo only) also came with different front sleeve artwork and pictures on the inner gatefold. Also note that on all original UK LPs, Part 2 of the final track on Side 2 (Track 9 on the CD) was simply called "Hay Chewed" (a pun no doubt on Hey Jude). But on this CD "It's" has been added into the title. Produced by Steve Brown - all songs are written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin and the STEREO MIX only of the album is used on this CD.
 
BONUS TRACKS:
10. Lady Samantha
11. All Across The Havens
Tracks 10 and 11 are the A&B-sides of his second UK 45-single issued 17 January 196 on Philips BF 1735, Both Tracks Non-LP
 
12. It’s Me That You Need
13. Just Like Strange Rain
Tracks 12 and 13 are the A&B-sides of his third UK 45-single issued 16 May 1969 on DJM Records DJS 205, Both Tracks Non-LP
 
Note: His Debut solo UK 45-single "I've Been Loving You" b/w "Here's To The Next Time" issued 1 March 1968 on Philips BF 1643 is not dealt with on this CD nor are the three (unsuccessful) 45s Elton did with the Bluesology group that preceded his Solo career (credited under his real name of Reg Dwight).
 
MUSICIANS:
ELTON JOHN – Piano, Organ, Electric Piano and Harpsichord
CALEB QUAYE – Electric and Acoustic Guitars, Conga Drums
TONY MURRAY – Bass
ROGER POPE – Drums and Percussion
DON FAY – Tenor Saxophone and Flute
GRAHAM VICKERY – Harmonica
NIGEL OLSEN – Drums on "Lady What's Tomorrow"
 
The 8-leaf foldout inlay is both good and bad. Gone are the Tony Brandon and David Symonds testimonials along with Elton's hand-written note on 'hard work' and 'thanks' that covered much of the rear sleeve. It does perhaps most important of all keep the inner gatefold where the lyrics were printed over photos of Elton and Bernie. In their place are excellent liner notes from JOHN TOBLER on EJ's history to and into the debut. They include comments from EJ on his amazement at having gotten to that starter place at all. Should have had the lyrics to the singles too though.
 
It won't take fans long to notice that the debut solo 7" single "I've Been Loving You" and its Non-LP B-side isn't on here when there was room - still the four bonus 45 sides and the LP have benefited from the original mix tapes being 'enhanced' after decades had softened them up. Long-time EJ Producer GUS DUDGEON explains in the liner notes how The Sadie Digital System has been applied to these versions to better the sound but not fundamentally alter it. 
 
The Mono Mix of the LP is completely AWOL. I can remember when I worked in Rarities in Reckless Records in Berwick Street how we would occasionally see the mottled-effect gatefold sleeves for "Empty Sky" arrive with 'Stereo' stickers on the rear covering the 'Mono DJLP 403' reference up in the top right corner. DJM Records must have shifted so few of the Mono variant that they pulped them and took the more sellable DJSLP Stereo pressing of the LP and stuck them in Mono gatefold covers with stickers on the back. Let's deal with what we do have audiowise...
 
For damn sure, when you hear the whack off the superb "Empty Sky" opening track clocking in 8:29 minutes - it's far better than what we've been forced to endure before. It's a rocker at heart (a good opening) but Graham Vickory's Harmonica passage could have been given some more Zeppelin-type oomph and that down-to-a-whisper back-up-to-rocking bit towards the end feels too obvious. But I still love it - a track that indeed points to the balls-to-the-wall Rock brilliance of "Funeral For A Friend/Loves Lies Bleeding" that would open "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" in 1973.
 
Thor above his Mountain is looking down on his children for the Harpsichord-driven "Val-Hala" - a great follow-up track to the rawk of its Side 1 predecessor. Punchy multi-layered guitars open "Western Ford Gateway" with new Remastered power, but an ill-advised treated vocal that dominates the left speaker too much kind of does for the song. Flutes and piano introduce "Hymn 2000" - Taupin having a sideways go at organized religion as someone shakes a tambourine. 
 
Side 2's "Lady What's Tomorrow" has Elton signing with warmth in the vocals and an overall sound-stage that's clearer and more suited - could even have been a 45 for the LP. "Sails" throws in some Guitar-Funk (good Remaster) that feels both cool and hammy at one and the same time - a young girl called Lucy mixed up with seagulls and sails and collars pulled up to protect. A hissy-intro leads in "The Scaffold" - a slow electric keyboard tale of the Amazon and Minotaurs with bloody hands. It's indicative of the whole album, a good track, an interesting song, but never rising much further upwards from that. Back to Harpsichord for the LP's most famous cut "Skyline Pigeon" - a flying high flying away melody that's searching in the shadows of the world for better days and bigger dreams (probably the best Remaster on the whole disc). 
 
EJ brings it all to a close with the long and clumsy three-parter "Gulliver/Hay Chewed/Reprise" - a good opener "Gulliver" is ruined by a Jazzy romp about three-minutes in. Then the ill-placed Jazz and Pop section of Hay Chewed with its too loud guitars rants drags in snippets of all the LP's songs brought in at the end as a Reprise. Still, the sound is excellent. But it ends his debut on a gimmick instead of highlighting his knack for melody.
 
Bonuses: I never did understand why "Lady Samantha" made the A-side when I prefer the more EJ-vibe of its flip "All Across The Havens" - a mother of mercy tale of waterfalls and forgiveness over there somewhere (lovely sound quality to both too - better than some of the LP tracks). "Hey there, you in the mirror..." Elton asks in the over-stringed and over-guitared "It's Me That You Need" that has its rather good melody drowned out by intrusive instruments. "Just Like Strange Rain" has perhaps the most muddled of sounds on this CD, but fans will love its presence. 

"Empty Sky" is very much a beginning that could have done with major rethinks before release and perhaps EJ called his far better second album "Elton John" for a reason - because it was the real starting place. 
 
Still, I go back to the title track "Empty Sky" and "Val-Hala" and "Skyline Pigeon" and Saturday Night fighting Reg Dwight and his Salvation Army Crew is all wight with me (sorry couldn't resist)...

Thursday 1 April 2021

"Don't Shoot Me I'm Only The Piano Player" by ELTON JOHN – January 1973 UK and US Eight Studio Album on DJM Records and Uni Records in the USA – featuring Davey Johnstone, Dee Murray, Nigel Olsson with Lyrics by Bernie Taupin and Arrangements by Paul Buckmaster (May 1995 UK Mercury Records/The Rocket Co Ltd CD Reissue – Expanded Edition in 'The Classic Years' Series with Four Bonus Tracks – Gus Dudgeon Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...




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US AND THEM - 1973

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"...Keeping The Classroom Sane..."

I'll come clean here - I have a few genuine pet hates in music and the abomination that is "Crocodile Rock" is right up there with Eurovision drivel and tomcat poo. 

But that single-song hiccup aside, re-listening to the songsmith class on show in the opening trio alone - "Daniel", "Teacher I Need You" (lyrics above) and "Elderberry Wine" - it doesn't surprise me in the least that Elton's eight studio album went to No. 1 on both sides of the pond in that huge year for him, Bernie Taupin and his band – 1973. 

Plus, it had 'artwork' – those great days back in the Seventies when people took these things seriously and the makers of albums knew it. That 12-page booklet sleeve was a fab thing to behold and still is – full-colour plates, sepia tinted photos and all the lyrics in large type. It was lavish and gave the album a feeling of 'event'. The 20-page CD booklet does reasonably well repro-ing all of it – also throwing in new JOHN TOBLER liner notes that do a typically bang-up job of explaining the history and the heartache. To the music...

UK released May 1995 - "Don't Shoot Me I'm Only The Piano Player" by ELTON JOHN on Mercury/The Record Co Ltd 528 154-2 (Barcode 731452815422) is an Expanded Edition in 'The Classic Years' CD Reissue and Remaster Series. It has Four Bonus Tracks and plays out as follows (56:25 minutes):

1. Daniel [Side 1]
2. Teacher I Need You
3. Elderberry Wine 
4. Blues For My Baby And Me 
5. Midnight Creeper 
6. Have Mercy On The Criminal [Side 2]
7. I'm Going To Be A Teenage Idol
8. Texas Love Song
9. Crocodile Rock 
10. High Flying Bird 
Tracks 1 to 10 are his sixth studio album (eight overall) "Don't Shoot Me I'm Only The Piano Player" – released 22 January 1973 in the UK on DJM Records DJLPH 427 and 26 January 1973 in the USA on MCA Records MCA-2100. Produced by GUS DUDGEON – it peaked at No. 1 on the LP charts in both countries. It was also his second No. 1 in the USA after 1972's "Honky Chateau". 

BONUS TRACKS: 
11. Screw You (Young Man's Blues)
Track 11 is the Non-LP 45-single B-side of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" released September 1973 in the UK on DJM Records DJS 285 - credited as "Screw You". The 45-single for "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" was issued in the USA in October 1973 on MCA Records MCA-40148 but with the B-side credited as "Young Man's Blues" – hence the two titles for the same song. 

12. Jack Rabbit 
13. Whenever You're Ready (We'll Go Steady Again)
Tracks 12 and 13 were the Non-LP B-sides of "Saturday Night's Alright For Fighting" issued June 1973 as a 3-Track EP in the UK on DJM Records DJX 502. 

14. Skyline Pigeon (Piano Version)
Track 14 is the Non-LP Version B-side of "Daniel" - a March 1973 US 45-single on MCA Records MCA-40046. The original version of "Skyline Pigeon" was one of the highlights on Elton’s 1969 debut album "Empty Sky" – this 1973 recorded version features EJ on Piano rather than Harpsichord. The UK 45 (released January 1973) on DJM Records DJS 275 has the same B-side. 

Elton had met the legendary American comedian Grouch Marx in Hollywood where the sharpest tongue amongst the Marx Brothers jabbed at the wildly dressed Englishman that our Reg probably had his name round back-to-front. In an off-the-cuff reply, EJ spat out the album’s title and so it came to pass that "Don't Shoot Me I'm Only The Piano Player" became the album title. It was all done in jest of course. In fact, if you look to the right of the box office booth on the front sleeve, you will see a small billboard advertising their 1940 Marx Brothers screwball masterpiece "Go West" as a tribute to that moment.

Original Producer GUS DUDGEON handled the Remaster and explains in the booklet that after some 20-plus years those master tapes needed some transfer love - and he has done them proud. There is amazing clarity in the piano and humming opening to deep dive tracks like "High Flying Bird" (raven in the night time) or the Davey Johnstone guitars and Paul Buckmaster Strings doing battle in "Have Mercy On The Criminal" before they fade into the back of the mix in that out-to-kill piano section. There is a warmth too when those acoustic guitars pop out of the left and right speakers in "Blues For My Baby And Me". The bonus tracks feature the buckshot mandolin hootenanny "Jack Rabbit" - but far better is "When You're Ready..." - left poor Elton on the weekend - a dirty and lowdown trick - a B-side hat could easily have been on the main album (Davey Johnstone putting in some fantastic slide guitar). And on it goes...Daniel leaving on a plane...

Although "Piano" is somehow forgotten now and in many ways overshadowed by the double-album "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" that would annihilate all comers in October 1973 (another No. 1 on both sides of the Atlantic) – real EJ fans hold a candle for the gems inside its elaborate booklet sleeve - and the evidence is here. 

In fact, as a sort-of viable alternative, a fan might want to pop their wallets open a bit wider and go for the Japanese SHM-CD Reissue of August 2019 in all its Mini LP repro artwork glory. Mercury UICY-78960 (Barcode 4988031340677) uses a new Remaster made in 2018 based on UK original tapes - but it is sans those great four bonuses, which feels like a bit too much of a loss to me. 

"How can I ever get it together...without a wife in line..." - our Reg sang on the brass-cool "Elderberry Wine" all those decades ago. Well he may have taken a few more decades to get it together, but man what a journey he had. 

Whatever 'West' way you 'Go' – this is an Elton John album from a long distant past that still warrants a night out at the aural movies. And it's less than a fiver to Blighty types - brand new...

Tuesday 30 June 2020

"Caribou" by ELTON JOHN – June 1974 UK and US LP on DJM Records – featuring Dusty Springfield, Tower Of Tower, Carl Wilson and Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys, Toni Tennille of Captain & Tennille, Clydie King, Sherlie Matthews, Jessie Mae Smith (May 1995 UK This Record Co. Ltd/Mercury Expanded Edition CD Reissue – Part of The Classic Years CD Remasters Series – Gus Dudgeon Remasters) - A Review by Mark Barry...






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1974
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"...A Fragment Of Your Life..."

Super-hyped on EJ after the brilliance of "Don't Shoot Me I'm Only The Piano Player" in February and the twofer splurge of "Yellow Brick Road" in October 1973 (a single and double-album in one year) - I recall seeing the cover art for 1974's much-anticipated follow-up "Caribou" for the first time. What! My heart sank. What a dire sleeve - laugh-out-loud bad - especially after the tri-gatefold painting and photos cool of Yellow Brick Road. And the rear cover snap of Elton and Bernie Taupin sat on chairs in some toilet backdrop looking bored out of their cocaine-addled skulls didn't lift the hopes up much either.

Luckily though, the clearly strung-together album (named after the Studio in which it was recorded - another Honky Chateau moment) contained enough decency alongside the obvious filler to warrant a phew. And in 2020, the shifty little brute is still available on this huge-sounding Expanded Edition 'Classic Years' CD Remaster for under a fiver. Sneering, tarty, bitchy and cheap - the way I like my EJ. Let's get to the place where you don't want the sun to ever go down...

UK released May 1995 - "Caribou" by ELTON JOHN on This Record Co Ltd/Mercury 528 158-2 (Barcode 731452815828) is an Expanded Edition (Four Bonus Tracks) in 'The Classic Years' Remastered CD Series and plays out as follows (64:12 minutes)

1. The Bitch Is Back [Side 1]
2. Pinky
3. Grimsby
4. Dixie Lily
5. Solar Prestige A Gammon
6. You're So Static
7. I've Seen The Saucers [Side 2]
8. Stinker
9. Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me
10. Ticking
Tracks 1 to 10 are his tenth album "Caribou" - released June 1974 in the UK on DJM Records DJLPH 439 and June 1974 in the USA on MCA Records MCA 2116. Produced by GUS DUDGEON - it peaked at No. 1 in both countries.

BONUS TRACKS:
11. Pinball Wizard
(Recorded in 1974 for the March 1975 UK 2LP set "Tommy: Music From The Soundtrack Of The Film by Ken Russell" on Polydor Records 2657 014. Elton played the character 'The Pinball Wizard' in the movie. The single was eventually issued as a 45 in March 1976 on DJM Records DJS 652 with "Harmony" from the 2LP set "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" on its B-side)
12. Sick City
(24 May 1974 UK 45 on DJM Records DJS 302, non-album B-side of "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me")
13. Cold Highway
(30 August 1974 UK 45 on DJM Records 322, non-album B-side of "The Bitch Is Back")
14. Step Into Christmas
(December 1973 UK 45 on DJM Records DJS 290, non-album track. Its non-album B-side "Ho Ho Ho (Who'd Be A Turkey At Christmas?)" and is one of the Bonus Tracks on the 40th Anniversary 2014 Box Set of "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road")

The 20-page booklet is a pleasingly chunky affair with the album's inner lyric sleeve reproduced across the pages along with the colour photos of Elt's band and new highly informative liner notes from JOHN TOBLER. Interviews with key players include Producer Gus Dudgeon and lyricist Bernie Taupin - both clearly proud of the roll all in EJ's stratosphere were on in those halcyon years. It's easy to forget now in 2020 that EJ was just huge in 1973, 1974 and 1975. "Caribou" hit the No. 1 spot in the USA and UK and many other countries around the world and he would replace that with his first "Greatest Hits" in November 1974 - again numero uno in both countries. The GUS DUDGEON appendage to the Tobler liner notes explains of how the master tapes were all carefully prepared for this CD Remaster Series - "...much closer to the reproduction we had originally intended." This is a great remaster and although there have been variants since (like Japan last year) - I didn't take too much to those 'flat transfers' - so for a fiver - I'll stick with this wee thing.

The album was recorded in the States at the Caribou Ranch in the mountains of Colorado (his first proper studio outing there) with his regular band members in tow - Davey Johnstone (Guitars), Dee Murray (Bass), Ray Cooper (Percussion) and Nigel Olsson (Drums). Sessions were augmented with Keyboardist David Hentschel and the five-strong Tower Of Power Horns and Trumpets including soloist Lenny Pickett ("The Bitch Is Back", "You're So Static" and "Stinker"). In between are an array of cool backing singers from session darlings Clydie King, Shirlie Matthews and Jessica Smith to special guests Dusty Springfield (all four are on "The Bitch Is Back" with Tower Of Power) - while Carl Wilson and Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys lent their arrangement superpowers to "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me" (that song also features Billy Hinsche - associated with The Beach Boys - and Toni Tennille of Captain & Tennille). And unlike so many reissues I review, this one actually acknowledges the Four Bonus Tracks – and gives a good account of these non-album single-sides for the first time (the only downside is not reproducing the lyrics).

The album opens on a belter, the wicked guitar-groove sexiness of "The Bitch Is Back" - a tune so apt that Tina Turner opened sets with it and the audience ate it up (its said Elton returned the compliment by once turning up on an American stage dressed as the great lady). Pinky owes the world nothing (say the lyrics) - a typically lovely mid-tempo ballad from EJ - subtle ARP synth playing from guest David Hentschel while Davey Johnstone keeps it light with beautifully produced acoustic picking and clever backing vocals. I've always "Pinky" to be one of his lovelier moments. The grim trawler-boat English delights of "Grimsby" just about passes muster while the Country-Rock-fied twang-dangle of "Dixie Lily" gets a tasty Saxophone Solo from Tower Of Power's Lenny Pickett. The near three-minutes of "Solar Prestige A Gammon" has elicited as much ridicule as a cheesy Eurovision Song Contest entry and is the first time that the album is testing your patience.  "You're So Static" ends Side 1 with a neither here nor there franticness.

The Remaster for "I've Seen The Saucers" is superb - big and bold - even if the radar and something moving outside lyrics feel like both EJ and BT are reaching (the references to crazy wavelengths and other worldly alienation smacks of both men being lost in those heady days of drugs and touring). The low-down Seventies pimp-funk of "Stinker" is another one of the album's rare winners - a sexy crawling sleaze of a song aided hugely by Tower of Power's Chester Thompson on a Billy Preston-like Organ (so tasty). Then comes the biggy - 5:37 minutes of the ballad "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me" now forever linked with George Michael's cover. "I can't light no more of your darkness...I just took out a fragment of your life..." - the lyrics etched into our memories like those harmonics Davey Johnstone hits as he introduces the guitar. Carl Wilson and Bruce Johnson from The Beach Boys add those gorgeous and distinctive California vocals to a song that contains so much pain and yet remains beautiful in some kind of epic way.

"Caribou" comes to an end with the near eight-minutes of "Ticking" - EJ's piano playing coming out of your speakers with such wonderful clarity. A child is taking interest in the subjects he's taught, and yet the squad comes come screaming. A man goes on a gun rampage in a bar called The Kicking Mule leaving a trail of bodies - a priest in St. Patricks rationalising all the violence with the image of pain as as 'ticking' bomb (don't ride on the Devil's knee). This track alone feels like the magnificence of "Love Lies Bleeding"on GYBR.

Rather than feeling like filler, his cover of The Who's "Pinball Wizard" is fantastic and the Remaster huge. It's rare that a Townshend tune suits someone else so perfectly, but on this occasion it did. "Sick City" was the non-album B-side of "Don't Let The Sun..." - a greasy, cute and mean funk number that should have replaced some of the lesser crap on Side 1 of the album IMO. In pretty much the same vein, "Cold Highway" feels too good to be relegated to a flipside. Your 64 minutes and 12 seconds ends with the fun of "Step Into Christmas" – yo ho ho Prancer and Donner and thanks for the good year...

"Caribou" used to turn up in secondhand record collections being sold into us at Reckless Records with alarming regularity - like the punter selling it figured he'd get "The Bitch Is Back" and "Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me" on "Greatest Hits" and that'd be enough. 

But while its never going to win an Unsung Masterpiece of 1974 gong in Mojo or Record Collector magazines - I'd genuinely forgotten the other goodies contained within. And this CD bolstered up with those four cracking bonuses, great audio and a price tag that's less than a cod 'n' chips in 2020 - and I'll find it in my heart to forgive that cover art (what a guy, a song for guy, oh stop it)...

Wednesday 1 April 2020

"Blue Moves" by ELTON JOHN – Double-Album from October 1976 on Rocket Records featuring Ray Cooper, Davey Johnstone, James Newton-Howard, Kenny Passarelli, Roger Pope and Caleb Quaye - with Guests Randy and Michael Brecker, Barry Rogers and David Sanborn on Horns, Backing Vocals from Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys, Curt Becher (aka Curt Boettcher) of The Millennium, Toni Tennille of The Captain and Tennille, David Crosby and Graham Nash of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Hollies and The Cornerstone Institutional Baptist and Southern Californian Choir directed by Rev. James Cleveland with Orchestration from The London Symphony Orchestra and The Martyn Ford Orchestra (Paul Buckmaster conducting) (June 1996 UK Mercury 2CD Reissue - 'Gus Dudgeon' Remaster) - A Review by Mark Barry...


 








"...Out Of The Blue..."

When I worked as a Rock buyer at Reckless Records in Islington and then the ultra-busy Soho branch in Berwick Street (the shop that’s featured on the cover of the Oasis album "(What's The Story) Morning Glory?") - Elton John's October 1976 double-album splurge "Blue Moves" was a yawn record - the kind of unsellable dog that would sit in the racks alongside so many other copies of the same – us hoping against hope that we might get (maybe) three or four quid for it. In fact, as I recall, we were still turning down copies as non-shifters as late as the early Nineties.

Cut to April 2020 - closing in on 44 years after the album's autumn 1976 release and my how things have changed. Reappraisals take place all the time we know, but "Blue Moves" has been getting one these last four decades with lovelorn fans biting their chapped lips and declaring that its time to shoulder that pistol-whipping holster. We flogged in then Mr. Dwight but we want it back now. Sorry (does indeed) seem to be the hardest word when it comes to this Reg-fest. Some digital history first…

First issued on Rocket Records 822 818-2 in June 1988 as a single CD, that variant had dropped "Shoulder Holster" from Side 2 and "The Wide-Eyed And Laughing" from Side 3 in order to get the double-album to fit onto one CD. That truncated issue was replaced by this - June 1996's 2-Disc Remaster – transferred and worked beautifully by original album Producer GUS DUDGEON as part of The Elton John Remasters Series. There has been other issues since, especially in Japan, namely the 2 x SHM-CD reissue in Mini LP Repro packaging from last year (2019) with a new 'dry' remaster that has left many fans running back to this (sometimes the latest isn't always the best). Let's get to the Boogie Pilgrims...

UK released 3 June 1996 - "Blue Moves" by ELTON JOHN on Mercury 532 467-2 (Barcode 731453246720) is a 2CD Reissue and Remaster of the full 1976 double-album and plays out as follows:

CD1 (41:05 minutes):
1. Your Starter For... [Side 1]
2. Tonight
3. One Horse Town
4. Chameleon
5. Boogie Pilgrim [Side 2]
6. Cage The Songbird (For Edith Piaf)
7. Crazy Water
8. Shoulder Holster

CD2 (43:46 minutes):
1. Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word [Side 3]
2. Out Of The Blue
3. Between Seventeen And Twenty
4. The Wide-Eyed And Laughing
5. Someone's Final Song
6. Where's The Shoorah? [Side 4]
7. If There's A God In Heaven (What's He Waiting For?)
8. Idol
9. Theme For A Non-Existent TV Series
10. Bite Your Lip (Get Up And Dance!)
"Blue Moves" was released as a double-album 22 October 1976 in the UK on Rocket Records ROSP 1 and in the USA on MCA/The Rocket Record Company 2-11004. Produced by GUS DUDGEON - it peaked at No. 3 in the UK and also No. 3 in the USA.

The 20-page booklet reproduces the lyrics that came with the original inner sleeves (though not the photos) and new JOHN TOBLER liner notes illuminate the album's place in Elton's huge career. Rockets Records had been launched in 1973 with two albums for Kiki Dee – both with Elton John and Bernie Taupin contributions (some exclusive cuts too, I've reviewed both "Loving And Free" and "I've Got The Music In Me"). GUS DUDGEON puts in a note about the master-tapes and his 20-bit resolution transfers and there is no doubt about the Audio fidelity here – it's superb – real clean and ballsy. For sure "Crazy Water" still feels that tad under-produced in the oomph department - but I suspect it was originally recorded and mastered that way. avng said that, those almost Genesis-sounding acoustic guitars in "The Wide Eyed And Laughing", the Community Choir filling your speakers in the Gospel-tinged "Where's The Shoorah?" and the James Newton-Howard string arrangements in the beautiful but crushing "Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word" all sound hugely improved – every track now up for audio grabs.

The album produced three instrumentals - the Caleb Quaye filler that is "Your Starter For..." that opens Side 1 and the Side 4 ditty "Theme For A Non-Existent TV Series" - both clocking in at just under one minute and twenty seconds. I mention this because my poison has always been instrumental door number three - the fantastic band boogie of "Out Of The Blue". Between this and the Brecker Brothers/David Sanborn brass funk of "Boogie Pilgrim" – both have been the reasons why I loved the album. In fact when I made up 'Funky Funky' CD compilations for Shop Play shuffles in Reckless, I'd include both tracks and without fail punters would arrive at the counter while they played demanding to know who the instrumental was by - and then be duly stunned when told it was 'Elton John'. You'd get that look - "I didn't know Elton John was funky!" But alongside the sadder tunes on here like "Tonight" (recorded with The London Symphony Orchestra at Abbey Road) or "Between Seventeen And Twenty" - old feather-festooned Reg was definitely a serious funky chicken. The single "Crazy Water" had that Stevie Wonder clavinet boogie to it and the third and final 45 off the album, "Bite Your Lip (Get Up And Dance!)" was clearly aimed at the emerging dance floor Disco that was sweeping NYC and the world at the end of 1976 (it was also on a 12" as I recall for DJs).

Finding "Tonight" overdone and just a bit boring (Elton and an Orchestra), I must admit that I start the double with the upbeat "One Horse Town" which features The Martyn Ford Orchestra arranged and conducted by one of Rock's great background heroes – Paul Buckmaster. "Chameleon", "Crazy Water" and "Someone’s Final Song" are all supported by a host of top backing singers including Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys, Curt Becher (aka Curt Boettcher) of The Millennium, Toni Tennille of The Captain and Tennille and a few more into the bargain. The ultra-harmonising duo of David Crosby and Graham Nash (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Hollies) show up on two – the Edith Piaf tribute song "Cage The Songbird" and "The Wide Eyed And Laughing" - while Marvin Gaye and Aretha Franklin fans of 1971's "What's Going On" and 1972's "Amazing Grace" will know the name of Rev. James Cleveland who conducts and adds The California Community Choir to "Boogie Pilgrim", "Where's The Shoorah?" and the album's final bopper "Bite Your Lip (Get Up And Dance!)". 

For sure "Blue Moves" is not a masterpiece and you'd be hard-pressed I suspect to get any EJ fan to say it equals "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" from three years back in 1973. 

But I like a bruiser and the good moments on here are great. And old stock or not - this 1996 twofer Mercury CD Remaster is the one to get...

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