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Did he say he'd come to call on me
For things are getting desperate in our home
Living in the parish of the restless folks I know
Everybody now bring your family down to the riverside
Look to the east to see where the fat stock hide
Behind four walls of stone the rich man sleeps
It's time we put the flame torch to their keep
Burn down the mission
If we're gonna stay alive
Watch the black smoke fly to heaven
See the red flame light the sky
Burn down the mission
Burn it down to stay alive
It's our only chance of living
Take all you need to live inside
Deep in the woods the squirrels are out today
My wife cried when they came to take me away
But what more could I do just to keep her warm
Than burn burn burn burn down the mission walls
Now everybody bring your family down to the riverside
Look to the east to see where the fat stock hide
Behind four walls of stone the rich man sleeps
It's time we put the flame torch to their keep
Burn down the mission
If we're gonna stay alive
Watch the black smoke fly to heaven
See the red flame light the sky
Burn down the mission
Burn it down to stay alive
It's our only chance of living
Take all you need to live inside
I used to think Elton John was a genius arranger as well as a great composer. The truth is that he recorded the piano and the vocal, handed the song off to Gus Dudgeon (1942-2002) and left the building (https://mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_gus_dudgeon/). According to an interview I read with Gus somewhere, Elton approved of every finished track but one. Here's to Gus, wherever he is. And here's to Bernie, who wrote some of the most poetic and evocative lyrics of his career on this album.
I mean, that's like saying Butch Vig is responsible for the success of Nirvana, because he produced Nevermind.
One man's trash...
...is my treasure. LLRP
Rubbish.
One man's trash...
I used to think Elton John was a genius arranger as well as a great composer. The truth is that he recorded the piano and the vocal, handed the song off to Gus Dudgeon (1942-2002) and left the building (https://mixonline.com/recording/interviews/audio_gus_dudgeon/). According to an interview I read with Gus somewhere, Elton approved of every finished track but one. Here's to Gus, wherever he is. And here's to Bernie, who wrote some of the most poetic and evocative lyrics of his career on this album.
Wait!!... you mean he let a producer do the production?!? I was wondering what they did.
Theme song for western Canada in the summer of 2021?
More like the northern forests throughout the world.
It's safe to say his(their) later work didn't (couldn't) compare. A lot of it was made after he'd become not just a person but an entire enterprise. The movie portrays it well - warts and all.
As executive producer he could have glossed over a lot - but didn't. Pretty classy for a guy who's been through so much.
c.
Indeed. Don't forget Paul Buckmaster. He and Gus were both very responsible for that early "Elton John" sound. Witness the orchestrations and esp. the horns on this track. Yum.
That's the name I was just trying to remember. Knew it wasn't just Elton. this whole album is great, still have my original copy
Bernie!! The great Bernie..
Update: I was able to find this album in very good condition complete with picture booklet insert at a small botique in Flagler Beach, Fl a while ago and get this, it was only $4.00! I am stoked to have found it!
His first two albums-this and Elton John are the pinnacle of his work in my mind. They both spoke to a certain place in time more so than his other brilliant works. Nice to learn here that there was a lot of genius from a lot of geniuses.
This is like saying The Beatles just recorded their parts and that the great George Martin really composed the songs, which is pretty disingenuous.
Every (or at least the vast majority) artist needs a good producer but, I think Elton (and Bernie) did a little more than record the piano and lyrics. They wrote them, constructed the song, and Elton played. That's composition. THEN they allowed an excellent producer to put it all together. This is the recording process.
Per Elton:
“When I first started working with Bernie it was exactly the same as it
is now; I would get a lyric, I would go away and write the melody and
play it to him. That’s never changed. It’s the same thing now and it’s
as exciting now as it was then. So if I write a song on this album and
I’ve finished it I go and bring him in and say, ‘Listen, this is the
song,’ and then the band come in and learn it and we put it down."
Indeed. Don't forget Paul Buckmaster. He and Gus were both very responsible for that early "Elton John" sound. Witness the orchestrations and esp. the horns on this track. Yum.
You thinketh , tis more betta than G.B.Y.B.R ???
Update: I was able to find this album in very good condition complete with picture booklet insert at a small botique in Flagler Beach, Fl a while ago and get this, it was only $4.00! I am stoked to have found it!
PSD FTW
My sentiments exactly. I loved the lyrical themes Taupin took on...not just generic love/loss, but really storytelling. And Elton's wildman piano (at times reminding me of Moon's drumming for The Who)...great combo.
Cool ! I had my Stones Let It Bleed LP stolen, too. thank god I still have the cover
mrbox wrote:
What a dichotomy! I could not disagree more with the first part of the sentence and agree more with the second part!
mrbox wrote:
I agree wholeheartedly!
You mean Elton right?
Care to chime in, Vancouverites?
Not everyone is as old as you.
A bit of irony in that, eh? I guess it's good nobody burned down the mission before Christmas. ;-)
I think Blue Moves is a pretty good record, even if there are a few songs i can't stand on it... there are also some great songs on it.
you may the only other person who's ever heard of 'Blue Moves'. Some great songs on it. Some, uh, not-so-great ones too.
"Madman Across the Water" is my favorite Elton John album. But I'd say everything he did was good, up to and including "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road." After that, forget it.
I think Blue Moves is a pretty good record, even if there are a few songs i can't stand on it... there are also some great songs on it.
Like Beethoven? and i'm really serious about this....it's kinda hard to think beyond ourselves, but 100-200 years from now will they be talking about the genuis of Elton John, Hendrix, Clapton, Beatles?.....i'm thinking yes!
I agree with you. The music from that era is already forty years old, and it's still going strong.
I believe that there are many modern artists who are just as talented as Beethoven, but we don't notice, because the musical genres are different, and because modern musical instruments, recording technologies, and distribution methods, allow more of those musicians to come to the fore, rather than just a few standing out.
I also believe that there are just as many talented artists making music today, as there were forty years ago. Unfortunately, you have to search to find them. Radio Paradise is a good place to look, of course. For my favorite genres, Progressive Rock and Jazz Fusion, there are some other good sources, all on the Internet. You'll also find some good music on various movie and television soundtracks.
What do all those sources (and sixties and seventies radio) have in common? The selection was/is being done by people who love music! Contrast that with today's radio, and television music stations. There, the musical selection is firmly controlled by corporate committees. Thus, these days, very little real art reaches the mainstream. Can you think of more than a handful of hits from the last five years that might be considered memorable? I know I can't.
Darn it. You got me going on one of my hot buttons, and it got heavy. So back to the celebration, and your point...
Great music from the sixties and seventies — Yay!!! Great modern artists — Yay!!! Their music will last for 200 years!!!
Like Beethoven? and i'm really serious about this....it's kinda hard to think beyond ourselves, but 100-200 years from now will they be talking about the genuis of Elton John, Hendrix, Clapton, Beatles?.....i'm thinking yes!
And not long afterward he produced "Madman Across the Water," another classic that has been all-but-forgotten in the glare of the disco and smooth rock he later took to commercial success.
"Madman Across the Water" is my favorite Elton John album. But I'd say everything he did was good, up to and including "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road." After that, forget it.
Yeah, we're about the same age and I too bought this album on a whim. I was more into Cream and Hendrix at the time and it was a departure. And not long afterward he produced "Madman Across the Water," another classic that has been all-but-forgotten in the glare of the disco and smooth rock he later took to commercial success.
Well, I don't begrudge the man his money or fame. But it's too bad it ruined his composing abilities somehow.
Pure Musical Genius!! This man has been making wonderful music, for a generation. I've seen him from central park, the garden, the horsehoe (ohio state), to vegas!!! the music just pours out of him. He is like the genre of singer-songwriters (along w/ bernie taupin) who transformed a musical generation. Stevie Wonder, Duke Ellington, Stevie Winwood, Chuck Berry, Carol King, these folks impacted our lives!
Pure Musical Genius!! This man has been making wonderful music, for a generation. I've seen him from central park, the garden, the horsehoe (ohio state), to vegas!!! the music just pours out of him. He is like the genre of singer-songwriters (along w/ bernie taupin) who transformed a musical generation. Stevie Wonder, Duke Ellington, Stevie Winwood, Chuck Berry, Carol King, these folks impacted our lives!
Got to hear Elton play this song live in Dodger stadium, Nov. 2022, at the end of his latest farewell tour. My daughter got me tix as a birthday present. I fully expected to hear mostly his later stuff, but dang if he didn't play mostly vintage songs (arguably his better stuff). I was so hoping for Burn Down the Mission but kept expectations low because I hate disappointment. But there it was. Heavenly night.
By the way, the poor old guy did great, considering his age and limitations. 45 years ago he would jump and bounce all over the piano and stage, but now he can only walk around and wave his arms in a sincere effort to get people up and moving. And he can't hit the same high notes anymore. Not unexpected, and this is not a complaint, just an observation. God bless him for keeping it up as well as he does.
Also, some of his original bandmates are still with him and played that night!
Best gift my daughter ever gave me.