Elton John – Captain Fantastic & The Brown Dirt Cowboy
(Super Audio Compact Disc)
PCM 2.0: B DSD
2.0: B+ DSD 5.1: B+ Music: A-
Long before SoundScan and UPC bar codes existed, Elton
John’s Captain Fantastic & The Brown Dirt Cowboy (1975) became the
first-ever album to debut at number one on the American Album charts. It went on to become the biggest album of
the year, the third year in a row he achieved that feat and marked a change in
direction of sorts. The album came
after his first Greatest Hits set sold like crazy, then his 1969 solo
debut album Empty Sky from England was reissued earlier in 1975 and made
the top ten.
Inspired in part by The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely
Hearts Club Band (1967), it was more of a concept album than Goodbye
Yellow Brick Road (his 1973 smash hit double set, reviewed elsewhere on
this site in SACD form) was. The songs
blend into each other and the production is looser as a result. That is not necessarily a bad thing. The tracks are:
1)
Captain Fantastic & The Brown Dirt Cowboy –
Instead of just conjuring the West or Westerns, John gets subversive about the
genre and possible hints about his sexuality start to surface.
2)
Tower Of Babel – This track begins what
is a very writerly stretch on the album of John and Taupin reflecting on their
past career, referring here to their star experiences.
3)
Bitter Fingers – This writerly song is
about writing songs and it works, starting slowly, then delivering a great
refrain, which shows that John and Taupin were becoming tighter in their
collaborations.
4)
Tell Me When The Whistle Blows – The
Country Blues singer in Elton is addressed here as a loner drifting and it
works very well.
5)
Someone Saved My Life Tonight – This
is the big hit and most famous track from the album. A huge epic about near-self-destruction in part about a
near-suicide by John, the song far transcends that as John did the
experience. The lyrics about being
trapped, commoditized and miserable actually finishes something The Beatles did
not on Sgt. Pepper’s. This is an
ever-amazing work near the top of the John/Taupin cannon of excellence.
6)
(Gotta Get A) Meal Ticket – The
living on the edge and surviving song recalls their pre-success days, adding to
songs that recall freedom before success.
7)
Better Off Dead – Sounding like
something Queen would have done at the time, this is a surprise cut and works
as well as that band’s best.
8)
Writing - This personal song is about
how John and Taupin collaborate, creating the elements away from each other,
then synthesizing them. It works too.
9)
We All Fall In Love Sometimes – The
other hit, though not as big and with a sound similar to Someone Saved My
Life Tonight, it stands on its own as a beautiful, self-reflective gem.
10)
Curtains – This
follows the previous track without a break and often does not accompany it on
radio broadcasts, but completes it very cleverly. It also ends the original album.
BONUS TRACKS:
11)
Lucy In The
Sky With Diamonds (with Dr. Winston O’Boogie & His Reggae
Guitars (aka John Lennon)) – Most Beatles remakes are just bad covers, but
John’s version is great because it does not try to exactly follow the
original. The original is a brilliant
classic for many reasons, but John brings it to life as if it were more plausible
since it drops the explicitly psychedelic sounds and substitutes reggae! Lennon is a great plus here.
12)
One Day (At A
Time) – A Lennon composition that John does a decent cover on.
13)
Philadelphia Freedom – One of John’s most triumphant
moments, he claims he does not know what the song is about and extends that to
many of his hits. He and Taupin wrote
it for Billie Jean King’s tennis team, but the actual record is a piece of pure
Philadelphia Soul of its era that hits the bull’s-eye on Civil Rights and
freedom in ways John may be avoiding. For
starters, it is about living your life your way, no matter what and is a
tribute to those who get denied that human right. After all, items about peace of mind and shining a light through
the eyes of the ones left behind are genius.
That light is either for those to be able to wake up and free
themselves, or to those who died trying as if they could somehow see they are
not gone in vein. That’s real
patriotism about struggling for the better country America promises and does
not always deliver, which is why it is one of the greatest records John and
Taupin will ever cut.
The sound quality for the main album has always been odd,
softer than usual since I was hearing it on vinyl in the 1970s. This SACD brings it to life in a way it has
not been presented before, but it sounds like it is a generation down or that
the master might be slightly brittle or even that it was recorded with slightly
older analog equipment than previous studio efforts. Though he is not credited directly for working on the album,
James William Guercio for help with the album.
Guercio, the director of the controversial Electra Glide In Blue
(reviewed elsewhere on this site) was the producer for Blood, Sweat &
Tears, then with the signature sound of Chicago in their early hit years. Some of that fell is here somewhat and that
might be a conscious choice. With that
said, the DSD 5.1 is still the best, especially on Someone Saved My Life
Tonight.
If you are not convinced and do not have any of the other
amazing classic Elton John SACD albums, then just hear the bonus tracks, which
all have better fidelity. In that
respect, Philadelphia Freedom is the best cut sonically on the disc, but
I still believe this will give Captain Fantastic a new accessibility it
otherwise would lose to time. I hope to
learn more about the situation of its restoration and mixing for this SACD, but
it is as vital as any of the other John SACDs and is strongly recommended.
- Nicholas Sheffo