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 Elton John-Nick Drake Sessions-Ackles & Costello
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lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 26/01/2012 :  00:38:33  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Elton John has become such a cartoon character of his former self that I think so many now see him as fluff pop music icon, & maybe forget his roots.

....for a refreshing look at an early Elton performing songs by the likes of Nick Drake, John Martyn, Mike Heron....give this one a listen...




Elton John ''Nick Drake Session & DJM Demos'' 1968

Elton John's demo sessions at Dick James Music Studio in 1968. Here you can listen Elton John singing songs of Mike Heron, John Martyn, Nick Drake and Beverly Martin arranged by Drake's producer, Joe Boyd.

The sessions featured Elton John - vocals/piano, Linda Peters (later Thompson) - vocals, Jim Capaldi - drums, Simon Nicol - guitar, Pat Donaldson - bass.


1. Day Is Done (Nick Drake)
2. Saturday Sun (Nick Drake)
3. Sweet Honesty (Breverly Martin)
4. Way To Blue (Nick Drake)
5. Stormbringer (John Martyn)
6. You Get Brighter (Mike Heron, vo.Linda Peters)
7. I Don't Mind (Ed Carter, vo.Linda Peters)
8. Pied Pauper (Ed Carter, vo.Linda Peters)
9. Time Has Told Me (Nick Drake)
10. Go Out And Get It (Mike Heron)
11. The Tide Will Turn For Rebecca
12. When The First Tear Shows
13. Angel Tree
14. Turn To Me
15. I Can't Go On Living Without You
16. When I Was Tealby Abbey
17. A Dandelion Dies In The Wind
18. You'll Be Sorry To See Me Go
19. Where It's At
20. I Get A Little Bit Lonely
21. Hour Glass
22. Taking The Sun From My Eyes
23. And The Clock Goes Round

http://time-has-told-me.blogspot.com/2006/07/elton-john-nick-drake-session-djm.html
-by Lizardson

_____________________________________________________________________


Honestly, John (with Bernie) wrote some of the finest music to come 'round in the early 70's; and I am revisiting his early LPs today. WOW! What an artist. Our first exposure was of course, his self titled from 1970. Man did that blow me away!

My good Welsh buddy sent me a BBC special about The Troubadour in LA, and it seems Elton John was the impetus for the "world" changing at the time with "Take Me To The Pilot"...

Take Me To The Pilot....BBC live
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSEX2yrZDks

Here is the story of Elton's first appearance at The Troubadour--



Doug Weston paid Elton John's trio a meagre $500 for a week of gigs. "We'd flown to Los Angeles," explained Elton later, "thirteen hours over the pole in this jumbo jet, and we arrived to find this bloody great bus ..'Elton John has arrived!' and all that sort of thing...and it took another two hours to get to the hotel. Once we'd booked in, we were hustled out again and off to the Troubadour where the Dillards were appearing...they were incredible, just knocked me out completely."

Then, the night before the first show, Elton's manager Ray Williams found him "sulking-- and petrified." Convinced that he was too inexperienced to play for a sophisticated LA crowd, Elton was in a state of panic. "He said he wasn't going to play The Troubadour date," remembers Williams, "and was getting on the first plane home. I basically had to fight with him."

Luckily, Williams prevailed but Elton's anxiety wasn't reduced when he arrived at the Troubadour to find that "It was packed to the brim with people from the record industry, who expected me to come on with this 15-piece orchestra and reproduce the sound of the album, which had recently been released there." So, when a still-terrified Elton finally hit the little stage (introduced by Neil Diamond) that Tuesday night, he was seen by Beach Boy Mike Love, Bread leader David Gates and singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot, not to mention such luminaries as Quincy Jones, Elmer Bernstein and Henry Mancini.

Robert Hillburn of the Los Angeles Times remembers Elton's shaky opening. "He started going through his songs in a somewhat distant, businesslike manner. He looked scared, keeping his eyes on the piano." The ultra-cool Troubadour crowd virtually ignored the unknown Brit until, four numbers into the set, Elton snapped. Composer Don Black, also in the house that night, recalls that "He stood up, kicked away his piano stool and shouted 'Right! If you won't listen, perhaps you'll bloody well listen to this!' Then he started pounding the piano like Jerry Lee Lewis." By the end of the set, America was Elton's for the taking.

Rolling Stone magazine rated that night as one of the all-time greatest rock performances and, the following morning Elton received a telegram from Bill Graham, the country's most important promoter, offering him $5,000 to play at the Fillmore East in New York--the largest sum ever offered to a first time act.

In retrospect, Elton has said, "I think the start of all the success was the Troubadour thing. It was just amazing. It's an incredibly funky little place, the best club of its kind anywhere, and all it is is some wooden tables and chairs and good acoustics."




After this he was all everyone talked about in LA reviews!

No Shoestrings on Louise
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6tWmrNUcqw

and of course "Your Song" is still a "gives me chills" song.
1970 BBC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgbQkMtnPBM&feature=related

Tumbleweed COnnection blew me away too! Of course, it took a couple of closer looks to see that the cover photo was NOT an old American Western storefront, but rather a very British one.




Then came Madman Across The Water....so good.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vvRN09HZ_4


Finally for me was "Honky Chateau"...widely considered his BEST...




Critically Honky Château is regarded as John's finest record. Jon Landau of Rolling Stone approved the original LP as "a rich, warm, satisfying album that stands head and shoulders above the morass of current releases".[4] Other reviews were likewise mostly positive. In a retrospective review, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic has written that "it plays as the most focused and accomplished set of songs Elton John and Bernie Taupin ever wrote".[5]

Honky Chateau became the first of a string of albums by Elton John to hit number 1 in the Billboard Charts in the United States. In Canada, the album peaked at number 3 on the RPM 100 Top Albums Chart, reaching this position on July 29, 1972, dropping two places to number 5, then returning to number 3 for a further twelve consecutive weeks before falling to number 9 on November 4 of the same year.


Mona Lisas & Mad Hatters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bLMotU8Tu9E


__________________________________________________________________

I really had forgotten Elton for quite a few decades as his fame & infamy became bigger than his music.

But I see why so many of my favorite artists (Carol King..for one) cite Elton as a true inspiration...so go back to the beginning, and don't shoot the piano player! He had something to say.






________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973

Edited by - lemonade kid on 31/01/2012 20:38:10

lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 26/01/2012 :  00:53:18  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
TUMBLEWEED CONNECTION....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnSV8FjAtjY



________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973
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lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 26/01/2012 :  02:35:06  Show Profile  Reply with Quote




Mick Ronson's guitar shreds on the rare master of "Madman Across The Water"...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHq625bJiGs



________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973

Edited by - lemonade kid on 26/01/2012 02:37:57
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Joe Morris
Old Love

3491 Posts

Posted - 27/01/2012 :  22:37:20  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Jim Capaldi (Traffic) plays drums on those Drake/Elton sessions
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lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 28/01/2012 :  21:24:27  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
1971 Elton John Madman Across The Water 1/2 ...15 minutes of improve and genius.

Madman Across The Water pt 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgFPeTJk5Nk

pt 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cxiPqH1D88&feature=related

________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973
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Joe Morris
Old Love

3491 Posts

Posted - 28/01/2012 :  23:18:36  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
don't know if those Nick covers by Elton came out officially in his lifetime - think the only cover of a Nick song was by Millie
and his "Mayfair" and thats only cos (Nicks arranger) Robert Kirby was producing it!

too bad nothing ever came of Nick meeting with Francoise Hardy; she liked Five Leaves Left, apparently, but Nick was starting to close himself by then and would often not talk so much
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Joe Morris
Old Love

3491 Posts

Posted - 28/01/2012 :  23:21:37  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LodNb-8FzjE

(1970 release by Millie?)


rather different to the versions by Nick that later turned up on (official releases:)
Time of no reply, Made to love magic

(and unofficially:)
Tanworth in arden II, Time has told me, Saturday Sun
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lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 31/01/2012 :  19:14:41  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
God Bless the Brits...you have seen talent, where the USA often hasn't a clue....

DAVID ACKLES is a prime example. I've loved his work since 1975 and I know there are some American friends here who love Ackles too. But generally, he is unknown..then & now.


Elton John and David Ackles connection...

American Gothic, released in 1972, was produced by Elton John's lyricist Bernie Taupin. Taupin and Ackles became acquainted when Ackles was selected to be the opening act for Elton John's 1970 American debut at the Troubadour in Los Angeles. Taupin said of Ackles's style, "There was nothing quite like it. It's been said so many times, but his stuff was sort of [like] Brecht and Weill, and theatrical. It was very different than what the other singer-songwriters of the time were doing. There was also a darkness to it, which I really, really loved, because that was the kind of material that I was drawn to."[9]




Waiting for The Moving Van...just beutiful
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tgj4lVQQoy8&feature=related

________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973
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lemonade kid
Old Love

USA
9873 Posts

Posted - 31/01/2012 :  19:17:41  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Elton & Costello performing Ackles' "Down River"

Down River....Elton & Elvis' favorite artist
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNwr7QsCb5M

________________________________________________

We are raised to honor all the wrong explorers & discoverers-
-thieves planting flags, murderers carrying crosses.
Let us at last praise the colonizers of dreams.

-Peter S. Beagle 1973

Edited by - lemonade kid on 31/01/2012 20:39:09
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markk
Old Love

USA
803 Posts

Posted - 03/02/2012 :  01:21:36  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Oh those shoes were unforgettable

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZCwiNJ4wgo
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