Music Review: Elton John - Rocket Man: Number Ones
Published May 09, 2007
No matter what your musical taste prefers, chances are you’ve heard of Elton John. A multiple Grammy winner, humanitarian, and flamboyant superstar, Elton John has been a huge success on the music scene since 1970. His first release was Empty Sky in 1969 with his most recent being Rocket Man: Number Ones, a collection of 17 of his biggest hits. Wisely, the CD isn’t a compilation of only his Number One singles, but also includes several of his more well-known songs that didn’t quite make it to the number one spot ("Rocket Man" only made it to sixth on U.S. pop charts). Instead, Rocket Man adds those songs that most people have heard and think of when Elton John is mentioned; the CD just wouldn’t feel complete without them. And it certainly wouldn’t be fitting for the eccentric 60-year-old to leave his audience wanting. But of course, 17 songs fall short of being able to be truly comprehensive of Elton John’s great songs of the past 40 years.
Is it worth buying another album of greatest hits from Elton John? He has already released such collections on Greatest Hits (1974), Greatest Hits Vol. 2 (1986), The Very Best of Elton John (1990), One Night Only (2000), Greatest Hits 1970-2002 (2002), with many having a separate release in other countries and other compilation albums such as Love Songs and Duets. If you don’t own any of those, then the question is most assuredly you should purchase it. While Greatest Hits 1970-2002 is probably the most in depth greatest-hits release, sometimes having a single disc with music spanning his career really is better than two discs. In that instance, Rocket Man is also worth purchasing. Then, you could be like me and simply be obsessed with Elton John when there is no question in your mind on if you will buy it. It is also a great collection of songs for someone unsure of which Elton John to purchase.
I honestly only have two complaints about Rocket Man: Number Ones. The first is my favorite song, "I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues," isn’t included. The real complaint is the version of "Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me." It is a live recording, which is never my personal preference unless I am actually watching it live. Not only is it live, but George Michael sings most of it and not Elton John.
I do enjoy the cover art a great deal and it is truly representative of Elton’s career. Perhaps it is an homage to the Sgt Pepper cover, but it shows Elton John throughout the four decades of his musical career. The liner notes also give you information about the songs, which albums they were first a part of and when they reached their hit status.
Track Listing:
1.Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (3:14) - Cash Box Pop, 1973
2.Bennie & The Jets (5:23) - Billboard Pop, 1973
3.Daniel (3:54) - Billboard A/C*, 1973
4.Crocodile Rock (3:55) - Billboard Pop, 1973
5.Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds (5:56) - Billboard, 1974
6.Philadelphia Freedom (5:20) - Billboard Pop, 1975
7.Island Girl (3:43) - Billboard Pop, 1975
8.Don’t Go Breaking My Heart (w/Kiki Dee) (4:35) - Billboard Pop & A/C, 1976
9.Sorry Seems To Be The Hardest Word (3:50) - Billboard A/C, 1976
10.Sacrifice (5:06) - U.K. Pop, 1990
11.Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me (w/George Michael) (5:38) - Billboard Pop & A/C, 1992
12.Can You Feel The Love Tonight (4:01) - Billboard, 1994
13.Your Song (4:05)
14.Tiny Dancer (6:18)
15.Rocket Man (4:41)
16.Candle In the Wind (3:50)
17.Saturday Night’s Alright For Fighting (4:54)
*A/C is the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart.
- Music Review: Elton John - Rocket Man: Number Ones
- Published: May 09, 2007
- Type: Review
- Section: Music
- Filed Under: Music: Pop, Music: Rock
- Writer: Cara de Pescado
- Cara de Pescado's BC Writer page
- Cara de Pescado's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
Comments
Honestly, if you have a big Elton John collection and can stick it on a computer, you can burn your own single disc of the songs you really want instead of the songs the record label wants you to want. But a good disc of his music is a good disc. There is a limited edition that comes with a second one that is a DVD with some of his Vegas show and a few other videos on it.
Don't get me wrong, it's a good CD. Obviously I have it but I also named my dog after him (Sir Elton John the Rocket Dog).
Elton John has performed at the grammys with rapper Eminem but Elton sung Didos part in the chior instead of rapping i
knew i could trust Elton on that
it turns out Elton John will not meet Hilary Duff ah who cares Elton John is real music not Hilary Duff
anyway i got his new cd Rocket Man Number Ones
Elton John should perform at the Nickelodeon Kids Choice Awards in the uk
im gonna try to vote for Elton John at the Nickelodeon Kids Choice Awards
i finaly did my music nominees for the Nickelodeon Kids Choice Awards are Elton John the Carpenters Neil Diamond Billy Joel Barry Manilow and Rod Stewart and my movie nominee is the Secret of Nimh
Happy Valaintines Day Elton John fans
Elton John is better then Hilary Duff the great kind of music to listen to is Elton John
i am obsessed with Elton John but im not a fan thats gonna attack him
im usauly obsessed with Elton Johns early life
i have got to get an Elton John bobblehead
im not obsessed with Elton John im fascinated with him and there is only one sport that i do like and thats soccer
fascinated is kind of like obsessed but more healthier fascinated means to focus on all the time a little bit but to keep to yourself instead blabbing about it all the time
and i got an Elton John paper doll i printed him off the internet and cut him out of the paper


In real life she's Erin McMaster, but Cara de Pescado is one of the fortunate ones to be considered a ![Rocket Man: Number Ones [CD/DVD Package] Rocket Man: Number Ones [CD/DVD Package]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51S%2BQuYp5pL._SY90_.jpg)


I appreciate a review written by a fan who knows that Elton John is a LOT more than the handful of songs that everyone thinks of. I haven't bought this one because it is just too redundant for me, I literally have everything, but your argument for having things on a single disc is a compelling one and something I hadn't thought of before (I do consider the 1970-2002 collection to be superior, but like you said, who wants to carry around two discs?)
Thanks for your review.