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The Captain and the Kid
The Captain and the Kid
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List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $0.01
You Save: $13.97 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(based on 154 reviews)
Sales Rank: 31855
Category: Music

Artist: Elton John
Publisher: Interscope Records
Studio: Interscope Records
Manufacturer: Interscope Records
Label: Interscope Records
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 000754502
UPC: 602517064225
EAN: 0602517064225
ASIN: B000H7JDVI

Release Date: September 19, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • Postcards From Richard Nixon
  • Just Like Noah's Ark
  • Wouldn't Have You Any Other Way (NYC)
  • Tinderbox
  • And The House Fell Down
  • Blues Never Fade Away
  • The Bridge
  • I Must Have Lost It On The Wind
  • Old '67
  • The Captain And The Kid

Similar Items:

  • Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy
  • Face The Promise
  • Under the Skin
  • Songs from the West Coast
  • Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player

Editorial Reviews:

Album Description
The Captain & The Kid, written with his long-time writing partner, Bernie Taupin. More than 30 years after the release of their landmark #1 multi-platinum album, Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, the duo returns with this sequel. The new album features 10 new songs reflecting the intimate lives and public times spanning the long-standing songwriting partnership of Elton John and lyricist Bernie Taupin. In fact, for the first time, both John and Taupin are featured on an Elton John album cover.

"The album is a celebration of our lives and our lifetimes, of our music and of the music we love. The Captain & The Kid continues our story. You can't look back, we're looking ahead," says John.

Created in the tradition of those fantastic records of the 60's and 70's, The Captain & The Kid is a celebration of when music was the most important voice of our culture and the album was its prime vehicle. Much like Elton's previous records Tumbleweed Connection, Madman Across The Water, and Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy, The Captain & The Kid is an album meant to transport you back to that place in time when music mattered most. 35 plus years-later, Elton really has become Captain Fantastic and Bernie is most definitely The Brown Dirt Cowboy and they are as passionate about their music as they have ever been.

"I find the whole album to be so touching and beautiful for me because I've lived it," Elton added. "I lived it with Bernie and we've come through it. We've gone over the bridge and here we are at the other side."

The first single from the album, 'The Bridge" is one of 10 tracks which picks up where Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy left off. The album tells the story of Elton and Bernie from when they arrived in Los Angeles 30 years ago, through the ups and downs of their lives, to present day.

Amazon.com
The degree to which you'll like The Captain & the Kid is going to depend on your personal history with Sir Elton John. If you're a resolute follower who was once reduced to a quivering mass of humility by "Someone Saved My Life Tonight" and then revived by the blast of pop liberation that was "Philadelphia Freedom" (a single that later appeared on the CD version of Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy, the album to which this disc is a sequel) you'll have enough invested to appreciate the concept. If, on the other hand, you're a late arrival to the Rocket Man's repertoire, you'll have to adjust your expectations. Kid, unlike more recent efforts, isn't aiming itself at the lite-FM listening masses. What it's asking instead is that you return yourself to your 1970s-era childhood bedroom, flop on the bed, and lock the door, or at least fasten an elastic band around your MTV-addled attention span. This is total-immersion music, and it's got 30 years worth of stories to tell.

The Captain and the Kid are John and Bernie Taupin, his longtime songwriting partner. The music, a choir-enhanced swerve through genres including pop, rock, blues, folk, and country with signature piano riffs thrown in nearly everywhere, chronicles their splintery relationship. Innocence and hope ("Postcards from Richard Nixon") give way to success and joy ("Just Like Noah's Ark"), which eventually leads to discontent ("Tinderbox") and disaster ("And the House Fell Down"). A shot at redemption ("The Bridge") later finds the Captain; reflection ("Old 67") and a joyous reunion (the title track) follow.

Theirs is ultimately a simple story, but John and Taupin suffuse it with hypnotic sentimentality--along with the narrative, echoes of past hits wander into several classic-sounding tracks. "Tiny Dancer" darts through the cracked-voice beauty of "Blues Never Fade Away" and "The Bridge," for example, while "Wouldn't HaveYou Any Other Way (NYC)" works in hints at both "Candle in the Wind" and "Where to Now St. Peter." Other songs shake loose less likely influences ("I Must Have Lost it on the Wind" sounds like something off a vintage Linda Ronstadt album), but all are compellingly steeped in context; if you don't get the late-disc reference to fine silk suits and six-inch heels, you'll wish you did. --Tammy La Gorce

Selected Favorites from Elton John


Tumbleweed Connection


Madman Across the Water


Goodbye Yellow Brick Road


Honky Chateau


Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy


Greatest Hits 1970-2002 (Box Set)




Customer Reviews:   Read 149 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars A Musicians review of the album   July 23, 2008
**This review is based on the music, lyrics, and production value of the album**


"The Captain and The Kid" is an album with very well written and inspired tracks that lacks from an overall 'production' point-of-view. The songs themselves are very good and could stand up to quite well to a lot of his artistic output over the years... But this albums achillies heal is the overall 'sound' that it produced.. Here's a quick rundown of the overall 'idea and sound' of this album:

Lyrically, Bernie's still on fire.. Since 2001's 'Songs from the west coast', Bernie Taupin has been displaying a newly invigorated and inspired sense to his lyrics that were sorely missing for the better of almost 2 decades.. NOT saying that his lyrics were bad in that time, I'm simply saying that his recent lyrics are showing signs of that character-based, metaphoricle paintings in peoples minds that he was so quickly churning out in the early 70's. I believe this has always been the key to whether or not Elton's albums/songs have been successful...

Musically, here Elton is writing very simple yet diverse styles of music and melodies to accompany the lyrics.. Centered mostly around slow tempoed pop arrangements, each of the tracks have enough catchy melody and hooks to keep each one of the tracks interesting. One might say that the slower tempos of the songs could get a bit much and the listener wants the album to pick up a bit, but what I like is how the dirtiness or 'energy' of the songs themselves compensate for the lack of upbeat tempos. A lot of the melodies are standouts and Elton's piano playing and voice is definitely in the forefront of each track, which is how it should be.. :o)

Now my only gripe about the album is completely from the production standpoint. The tracks are well written, Obviously they are well performed.. I just really do not like the mixing and production value this album ended up with. Personally to me the album sounds like an unfinished demo.. Elton really should have had some help in having a professional mixer and masterer put their hands on it and give the album a bit more sparkle and shine to make the songs more 'accessible'. Mastering gives the album more intensity and energy.. Though I completely respect that he was probably going for that 'in the room as we recorded it' feel, the final product ended up sounding uneventful and middle of the road. A good production can be a huge key to whether or not someone without much musical knowledge will like an 'album' or not.. This to me is the difference between "Songs from the west coast" and "The captain".. Songs was produced to a fine 'T', and this album's feel suffers because of that.

Again, I'm not saying this album is bad.. The songs themselves are great, the performances are great.. Just as an average listener when you purchase this important piece of the Elton John Puzzle, please look past the 'demo' sound and really listen to those brilliant lyrics and exceptional melodies..

All The Best,
-Andy Anderson-



5 out of 5 stars Captain Fantastic Rides Again!   February 18, 2008
  2 out of 2 found this review helpful

If you are reading this review,first let me direct you to the Deluxe edition of this album Captain & the Kid that comes with a bonus DVD doco and a web-link on the CD to download exclusive tracks online that are not on the album but one of which appears in the lyric book.I highly recommend the Deluxe edition to the standard edition for those two reasons.One of the download tracks "Across The River Thames" is awesome,and part of the Captain and the Kid Story!

Elton toured Australia in late 2006 on the back of this album and had a good deal to say about it getting no airplay or promotion.Indeed he performed a block of the album's songs(5 or 6 of them if my memory serves me),right in the middle of the show preceded by "Someone Saved My Life Tonight" from the original Captain Fantastic.He spoke of the fondness he and Bernie share for that album(as do a lot of his fans)and the reasons for doing a follow up to that autobiographical masterpiece.If you buy the Deluxe edition of the album,it's all explained on the bonus DVD interview.

After the show I could hear a number of disgruntled patrons complaining about too much new music and the volume of all things(and I thought I was getting old!).But as Elton said in his monologue before the "Captain and the Kid" block of songs,and I quote,"If we don't play them,how else are you gonna hear them."So he must have known there would be a few out there who only want to hear Candle..,Your Song and Crocodile Rock etc.Indeed!

But,I digress,just to point out that I think this album really did go over every-one's heads or slipped under their radar.And for the life of me,I don't know why.It is probably the best thing he's done for quite some time.It leaves Peach-tree Road and Songs From The West Coast for dead.

I dare anyone to listen to some of these tracks("The Bridge,"Blues Never Fade Away") and once you know the story behind the song,be genuinely moved!The lines in "Blues..." that refer to Gianni Versace had me in tears!And the obvious reference in "The Bridge" to the demons in all our lives is some of the best words Taupin has EVER written!

If you are an Elton fan and have not bought this album(shame on you,add it to your cart this instant)you won't be disappointed.



5 out of 5 stars captian and the kid   January 25, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Elton John is a great artist.This album is fantastic.Keep making great albums like you did years ago.thank you.


4 out of 5 stars A good CD   January 18, 2008
This CD gets back to his roots and features a lot of good songs. I am a fan of his older songs and I love a lot of the newer music. Peachtree Road and Songs From the West Coast are great and I highly recommend them. As with most music, some take a bit to get used to, but the songs are good.


5 out of 5 stars Nice album...   January 2, 2008
What can I say except, 'I LOVE this album.' It's one of those albums that grows on you over time. Each song harkens back to circa 1975 Elton John / Bernie Taupin writing and composition. Very nicely crafted songs each with their own theme and message. I'm sorry it didn't shoot to the top as well as Songs from the West Coast, but it still was worth the buy. Besides, who doesn't love Elton John or at least one of his many albums.

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