Rock Bands & Pop Stars
Elton John Pictures
Artist:
Elton John
Origin:
United Kingdom, Middlesex - London - EnglandUnited Kingdom
Born date:
March 25, 1947
Elton John Album: «Tumbleweed Connection (Mlps)»
Elton John Album: «Tumbleweed Connection (Mlps)» (Front side)
    Album information
  • Customers rating: (4.9 of 5)
  • Title:Tumbleweed Connection (Mlps)
  • Release date:
  • Type:Audio CD
  • Label:
  • UPC:
Customers rating
Track listing
Review - Product Description
Japanese Limited Version featuring an LP Style Slipcase Cover. Also Includes Two Bonus Tracks.
Customer review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
- A solid early Elton John album with nary a hit on it

"Tumbleweed Connection" has the dubious distinction of being the only Elton John album from the Seventies that did not offer up a certified "hit" (neither did "Madman Across the Water" if you want to get picky, but "Levon" was always a highly requested song on FM radio). However, the lack of acknowledge hits just speaks in favor of this album, because anybody who listens to Elton John's albums knows full well that his best songs are rarely (if ever) the Top 40 hits. Even without the benefit of a hit single, this 1971 album still made it to #5 on the Billboard charts.

Half the songs on "Tumbleweed Connection" are 4:59 or longer in life, which means the odds were long that they would ever be played on the radio. Yet theses songs, such as "Country Comfort" and "Burn Down the Mission," stand out as some of the best work by John and lyricist Bernie Taupin during this period. The latter track remains a prime choice for the big finish at an Elton John concert to this day. There is something of a "country/western" flair to the album, at least as interpreted by two Englishmen, represented by not only those two songs but "Ballad of a Well Known Gun," "My Father's Gun," and "Talking Old Soldiers." I think those who were listening to Elton John before he became a star (operationally defined as anything before "Honkey Chateau," always had a preference for these early albums, especially those where Paul Buckmaster was doing the arranging and conducting. Ironically, on many of these songs, such as "Come Down in Time," it is John's voice and not his piano playing that stands out (note: Dusty Springfield is one of the backing vocalists on the album). There is also "Love Song," which was written not by John & Taupin but Lesley Duncan, who plays acoustic guitar and sings the duet.

Elton John was certainly prolific during this early period and had the great advantage of those Buckmaster string arrangements. The self-titled "Elton John" album was released in the summer of 1970, with "Tumbleweed Conection" following in February 1971. That same year saw the live "11-17-70" and the "Friends" soundtrack released as well, with "Madman Across the Water" coming out at the end of the year. In 1972 with "Honkey Chateau," Elton John would become a star. But all of this is before the dazzling costumes and bizarre collection of eyeglasses, which made Elton John the Liberace of pop rock. This is way back almost to the beginning, when it was all about the music. By the time "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" came out, those days were clearly over. This CD version of the album offers up a couple of bonus tracks from John and Taupin, with "Into the Old Man's Shoes" and the original version of "Madman Across the Water," which clocks in at 8:52.

Customer review
- COUNTRY-INSPIRED MUSIC FROM ELTON JOHN

This album was and is very different from the rest of Elton's music catalog, it

stands in a category by itself. Truly great music, lyrics, and production. My

personal favorite track is "Love Song", which was not written by Elton John and

Bernie Taupin but by Lesley Duncan. If you are a Elton John fan, and you have not

listened to this album, get it and see what you have been missing. A true classic!

Customer review
- What more can I say.....but great!

Elton John....he has always been one of my favorites but the was one album/CD that I did not have. I listen to it all the time. It's just classic!

Customer review
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- The old west UK style

Originally released in the U.S. and Canada (I have this one's LP) by UNI/MCA, and DJM rest of the free world, through Toshiba-EMi in Japan, and later Nippon Phonogram. Reissued 1995. On the same token as Americans like you and me being Anglophiles, Elton and Bernie went for a Western theme this time, as many of their songs then were more about American things to the chagrin of critics in the UK. However, there were no hits from this one, "Your Song" from the prior LP topping the charts at the same time, since it was normal back then for some stars to have more than one LP every calendar year, Elton being no exception, already building up a track record.