Elton John - Tumbleweed Connection (Deluxe Edition) reviews

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   Rollingstones
Elton John - Tumbleweed Connection (Deluxe Edition) reviewElton John was a lot of things — sideman, session man and flop, with a long tail of failed solo releases, including the 1969 LP Empty Sky — before 1970's Elton John made him an overnight star. He wasn't afraid to admit it. John packed a bonus scrapbook in the original lavish packaging of 1975's Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy with bad-hair photos, comic music-press ads ("You've been warned! Elton John is 1968's great new talent") and other ample proof of his time, with lifelong lyricist Bernie Taupin, in Sixties-pop boot camp. That book is miniaturized for this reissue. Everything else here has ballooned; each album now has a second CD of demos, stray singles and, in the case of Captain Fantastic, a complete 1975 live premiere of the record. On Elton John, the extras actually trump the baroque strings and hippie-gospel chorales that crowded "Sixty Years On" and "Take Me to the Pilot." Stripped-bare demos of nearly every song on the record highlight the '68 Beatles and '58 Jerry Lee Lewis in John's voice and piano. With its flinty guitars and the natural gunslinger's gait of "Country Comfort" and "Burn Down the Mission," 1971's Tumbleweed Connection needs no improvement; it is one of the best country-rock albums ever written by London cowboys. But an early epic take of "Madman Across the Water," cut at the sessions with glam-blues guitar by Mick Ronson, is reason enough to buy this edition. An instant Number One hit, Captain Fantastic was, ironically, a great concept — a look back at John and Taupin's pre-fame labors — short on songs as great as the ones that made them famous, except for the opulent ballad "Someone Saved My Life Tonight." The concert version is the same flawed album but with muted applause — until the encores....full text

   Superseventies
Right off the bat this is an improvement over the first one because Tumbleweed is rock music, so all of those Hollywood strings and arrangements that made the first one just a bit trying after 1000 listens is gone. Which is not to say that Tumbleweed is perfect. As could be expected no chances are taken and the sound is still a bit too lush, and the songs just a bit too smooth. But this is really focusing too much. EJ has a good thing going for him and it sounds like it's gonna last awhile. The Taupin-John compositions here are even more infectious and artful than on the last album -- and the change between the two is just enough to satisfy even the most uncompromising fan. Somewhere deeper than the clever words and groovy tunes and soulful crescendos there's still a hint of something synthetic. But that's what they said about Creedence Clearwater, too....full text

   Rocksbackpages
IT IS ALL too easy to go overboard with praise about Elton John. I am guilty of doing it – frequently. But then, when faced with an album like this one it really is impossible to do anything else. Anyway, why should one be perverse when overtaken with an album that is so splendidly overwhelming?...full text

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ELTON JOHN - The Captain And The Kid (2006) review
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Elton John - Tumbleweed Connection (Deluxe Edition) (2008) review
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Elton John - Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy (2008) review

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