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The 50 Best Elton John Songs

Sugar-rush pop, legit country soul, profound poetic storytelling, over-the-top rock & roll jams: Has any artist from the Sixties-Seventies golden era of singer-songwriters ever mastered all of these arts with the regal flamboyance of Sir Elton Hercules John? The competition’s slim at best. His piano playing and melodic sense blended European classical technique with jazz licks and the country-fried rock & roll styles of Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard, with an outrageous sense of style and delivery that took plenty from the latter.  

You can hear the backstory of the artist born Reginald Kenneth Dwight in his music — studying Chopin, Bach, and Beethoven as a precocious preteen at the Royal Academy of Music; falling hard for American R&B and soul; starting an electric blues band, Bluesology, in 1962, the year he turned 15; playing clubs where the Beatles and Rolling Stones hung out; idolizing them alongside the Beach Boys, Bob Dylan, the Band, and Leon Russell as rock music exploded in the late Sixties. He decided to go solo. He changed his name. And soon, plenty of his heroes recognized him as a peer. 

Early on, playing to his strengths as performer and composer, he teamed up with lyricist Bernie Taupin to form one of the great songwriting partnerships of the 20th century — in the tradition of Rodgers and Hammerstein, Leiber and Stoller, Bacharach and David, and the Gershwins, ranking alongside Lennon-McCartney, Jagger-Richards, Garcia-Hunter, any you could name. Taupin wrote the words, under the spell of Dylan and classic country recordings (by Marty Robbins, Johnny Horton, Lefty Frizzell, and the Louvin Brothers in particular). Elton composed bespoke music with killer hooks and elegant plumage, crafting songs that fit him to a T, delivering them with falsetto flourishes and barrelhouse piano runs. On top of it all, Elton was one of the greatest stage performers in pop history, with a fashion sense that rivaled David Bowie, Cher, and George Clinton at their most bonkers, in turn inspiring younger artists from Lady Gaga to Lil Nas X.

Elton’s been a hitmaker nearly from the start. His 1970 gem “Your Song,” from his self-titled second LP, reached the upper tier of international charts that year. Eighteen months later, “Rocket Man” began his run in the Top 10, scoring his first Number Ones soon after with “Crocodile Rock” and “Bennie and the Jets.” But as this list shows, his deep-catalog cuts are equally potent. Singles and album tracks are only part of his success story. Since his 1971 soundtrack for the movie Friends, he’s composed for film and stage: See Elton John and Tim Rice’s Aida, Billy Elliot: The Musical, and most famously, The Lion King, written with stage lyricist Sir Tim Rice (Jesus Christ Superstar). The film sold millions and clocked multiple Oscar, Grammy, and Golden Globe awards — and that’s before it was flipped into the highest grossing theatrical production in the history of Broadway and another film version, with two more soundtracks, including one helmed by Beyoncé. 

Equally remarkable, for a somewhat geeky kid from the London suburb of Pinner, is how legit his music proved for American soul artists, including many he idolized. Aretha Franklin took co-ownership of his “Border Song (Holy Moses)” on her 1972 landmark Young, Gifted and Black; soul balladeer Walter Jackson turned up the heat on “Someone Saved My Life Tonight” for his 1976 LP, Feeling Good; and Philly-soul gurus MFSB covered and co-signed Elton’s tribute to the Philly sound, “Philadelphia Freedom,” even naming an album after it. More recently, Yola recorded a beautifully earthy version of “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road.” 

Alongside Elton’s Duets LP, multiple tribute albums tell the impact of John-Taupin compositions on generations of artists in multiple genres and on various continents. On Revamp: Reimagining the Songs of Elton John & Bernie Taupin (2018), Florence Welch lays into “Tiny Dancer” with orchestra, choir, and a Queen Anne lustiness, while Ed Sheeran turned “Candle in the Wind” into a charming Irish campfire singalong. Kate Bush took her turn on the latter on Two Rooms: Celebrating the Songs of Elton John and Bernie Taupin (1991), and on the country-leaning Restoration: Reimagining the Songs of Elton John and Bernie Taupin (2018), Miranda Lambert — who’s dad was a cop before becoming a private investigator — sang maybe the most convincing version of Dylan fave “My Father’s Gun” ever. 

Elton’s also been an activist and a philanthropist, with a focus on issues in the LGBTQ+ community. The Elton John AIDS Foundation, which he started in 1992, was among the first and most high-profile organizations raising consciousness around the disease and money to combat it. His approach to promoting tolerance hasn’t pleased everyone — particularly the time he played right-wing broadcast giant Rush Limbaugh’s wedding to an audience including Clarence Thomas. “I’m probably the most famous homosex­ual in the world, and I love that. With that, I have a responsibility, and I sometimes annoy other homosexuals,” he reasoned to Austin Skaggs in these pages in 2011. “But I try and do what I believe is right.”

Now that Elton has completed his Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour, after 300-plus nights, he’s settling into his rainbow éminence grise status, conducting elder-statesman duties with a special devotion to younger artists, born of a career blessed with plenty of mentors and boosters: from Leon Russell (who took on Elton’s greenhorn band as an opening act in 1970) and Long John Baldry (the “Sugar Bear” of “Someone Saved My Life Tonight,” a fellow musician who helped Elton reckon with his identity as a gay man) to Ray Charles, Aretha, and others, whose acceptance encouraged him and Taupin in their early days. While Elton’s had his feuds, most famously with the Stones (his nickname “the Bitch,” immortalized in “The Bitch is Back,” ain’t for nothin’), he’s generally as beloved by fellow musicians as he is by fans. Billie Eilish and Rina Sawayama consider him a dear friend and supporter. He’s shouted out Lorde and the indie band Real Estate, recorded with Dua Lipa, Eminem, Miley Cyrus, Ed Sheeran, and Brandi Carlile, who calls him “my greatest hero of all time.”

At last check, Elton’s recorded 30-some studio albums, but add collaborations, compilations, soundtracks, EPs, and holiday collections, and you’ve got roughly 75 releases, not counting singles — plenty are great, plenty aren’t (as he’ll admit), but he can still deliver; see 2021’s tag team of The Lockdown Sessions and Regimental Sgt. Zippo, his previously unreleased Sgt. Pepper manque LP circa 1967-68. And while he may have bid farewell to the stage, there may well be more songs to come. Here are 50 reasons we’ll never stop listening.

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