T
HOMAS WOLFE was right: you
can’t go home again. That’s the
sad-but-true wisdom at the heart of
“Home Again,” the first single
from Elton’s John’s latest album,
The Diving
Board
. Sir Elton has cultivated one of the
most cosmopolitan voices in popular music,
and, true to form, “Home Again” spans the
globe, from a “spooky little town” to the coast of Spain, where
the singer never tires of “hearing songs about going home again.”
Perhaps the lyric is a self-referential nod to 1973’s “Goodbye Yel-
low Brick Road” and its fond farewell to Dorothy’s Kansas.
Elton John’s voice is noticeably deeper than it was back then,
and
The Diving Board
, which is the team effort of John’s lifelong
collaborator Bernie Taupin and über-producer T-Bone Burnett, is
in every way the work of an older, wiser artist. “I hung out with
the old folks in the hope that I’d get wise,” he sings on “Oceans
Away,” while on the rousing “Mexican Vacation (Kids in the
Candlelight),” he’s a family man carrying his child to bed. Ap-
parently Saturday night’s all right for fight-
ing, but now it’s Monday night and the kids
have homework. On the heels of his bluesy
collaboration with Leon Russell on 2010’s
The Union
,
The Diving Board
is a milestone
in a major musical career. A Rock and Roll
Hall of Famer, John has recorded nearly
thirty consecutive Top 40 hits and sold more
than 250 million records worldwide.
Born Reginald Dwight, John has said that when he changed
his name from “Reg” to Elton John, he “became” Elton John.
(It’s a riff on the old Cary Grant line that
everyone
wants to be
Cary Grant, including Cary Grant.) The Grammy-Tony-Oscar
winner is now 66 years old and the father of two with partner
David Furnish.
The Diving Board
is John’s thirtieth solo album
and, like Dylan’s
Time Out of Mind
(also his thirtieth), it ponders
desire and mortality from the vantage point of old age. It’s Dy-
lanesque, after all, to number your dreams, as John does on
“Dream #1” through “Dream #3,” which are his best instrumen-
tals since “Song for Guy” (from 1978’s
A Single Man
). But
The
Diving Board
isn’t all sparse and somber balladry. “Can’t Stay
Alone Tonight” and “Take This Dirty Water” ride a gospel wave.
“My Quicksand,” which John says is one of the best in his cata-
logue, is too self-dramatizing to be taken seriously, but the abrupt
shift in tempo, including a bar from Grieg’s “In the Hall of the
Mountain King,” injects humor and the unpredictable into a song
more soppy than sandy.
If there is one theme that resurfaces again and again in Elton
John’s songwriting, it has to be the impermanence of fame, which
in turn is a metaphor for mortality itself. What interests him about
fame is how it vanishes, either abruptly (like a “Candle in the
Wind”) or by degrees (“burning out his fuse up here alone,” as
the legendary lyric from “Rocket Man” goes). Four decades later,
the image of “the diving board” again captures the idea of being
up in the air, like Dorothy in the hurricane, about to dive into an-
other state of being altogether. Co-writer Taupin says the title song
is meant to evoke “people like Judy Garland, the classic divas who
dabbled with their own demons—a metaphor of fame.”
Elton John talked about his superstardom, and candidly so,
in an interview last year with
Rolling Stone
’s Cameron Crowe
(the director of
Almost Famous
). He described the inspiration be-
hind his first gay love song (1981’s “Elton’s Song”), his battles
with bulimia, alcohol, and cocaine, and his unyielding love of
performing and of his husband David. But the most revealing
memory involved another man named John—John Lennon—as
the two were holed up in the Sherry-Netherland hotel in the 70s,
“stoned out of our minds on coke.” WhenAndy Warhol came by,
hoping to join the party, John and Lennon hid from him, afraid
that the father of pop art would photograph them at two in the
morning. Again it’s the paradox of celebrity, which may look to
outsiders like a paradise, but can be a prison to insiders. The dark
Elton Discovers Mortality
C
OLIN
C
ARMAN
The Diving Board
by Elton John
Capitol/Mercury Records
Colin Carman, PhD, teaches literature at Colorado Mesa University.
MUSIC
50
The Gay & Lesbian Review
/
WORLDWIDE
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