I cringe when I hear that someone like Elton John is putting out yet another new album. He’s a member of an elite and brilliant group of artists that should’ve known when to retire, but didn’t and don’t (yeah, I’m looking at you, Stevie Wonder, David Bowie, Mick Jagger...). It’s like watching a former MVP quarterback who keeps playing way past his prime -- you wince every time you see them take a strong hit from a linebacker. I’m happy to report that Peachtree Road isn’t a total fumble, but it doesn't add much to John's career stats.
Complete with slide guitar and references to porch swings and tupelo, Elton John’s 43rd album takes a stab at the American South. It seems his admiration and time spent with Ryan Adams has paid off a bit. On “Weight of the World” and “Porch Swing in Tupelo,” he pulls off the Americana (albeit with classic Elton John stylings) sound with effortless grace. Unfortunately, the album quickly slips back into the indiscernible, run-of-the-mill schlock that has dominated the past twenty years of John's career. For a few brief moments on this album, I heard signs of something to get excited about. I quickly realized it was just the rehashing of the great bass lines and pop hooks from “Your Song,” “Goodbye Yellowbrick Road,” and “Somebody Saved My Life Tonight.”
No one can deny the talent and the importance of Elton John. But nothing off of this release will be included in his next greatest hits collection. - Doug Kamin
Peachtree Road
11/09/2004 | Umvd Labels
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CD
$12.99PEACHTREE ROAD
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SACD
$17.99PEACHTREE ROAD (HYBRID) (HYBR)
Review
All Music Guide Review
Elton John returned to the sound and aesthetic of his classic early-'70s work with 2001's Songs From the West Coast, finding critical acclaim, if not much commercial success. Not that the lack of sales greatly bothered Elton -- in many interviews, including one with Entertainment Weekly the week before Peachtree Road was released in November 2004, he claimed he was "disappointed" that it just barely went gold, but he was tired of making "uneven" records. John wasn't merely doing publicity: Peachtree Road proves that he's back to making good, solid records focused on songs, not hits, the way he did at the outset of his career. Since this is an album by a veteran, not an artist on the rise, it doesn't have the sense of discovery, or the hunger, that the early records still retain, and the production -- the first self-production by John with no collaborators -- is a little cleaner and crisper than the rich, warm sound of the late Gus Dudgeon (to whom this record is dedicated), who helmed such masterworks as Tumbleweed Connection. This means Peachtree Road is about craft, both in the writing and recording, which also means that it's a grower, with each song sounding stronger, better with each spin. While the sound of the record is bright and polished, this album makes few concessions to radio: this is certainly adult pop, but it never panders to adult contemporary radio, and the music is a little too rugged and sturdy to fit alongside the stubbornly sweet sounds of 21st century MOR. Which is precisely the point, of course: Elton has consciously returned to the reflective singer/songwriter template of the early '70s, both in his writing and production. Not that this is as lush as Elton John or country-tinged as Tumbleweed Connection -- "Answer in the Sky" recalls the high-flying disco of "Philadelphia Freedom" quite deliberately, and "They Call Her the Cat" finds a halfway point between "Honkey Cat" and "The Bitch Is Back" -- but it fits alongside those albums quite nicely because the focus is on songs, not trying to have hits. These songs may not rival his standards, but they're in the same tradition, and there's not a bad song in the bunch, resulting in a sturdy, satisfying record that proves that the comeback on Songs From the West Coast was no fluke and, hopefully, this latter-day renaissance for Elton will not be short-lived either. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track Listing
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Credits
- John Mahon
- Percussion, Programming, Vocals (Background)
- Victoria Miskolszy
- Viola
- Nigel Olsson
- Drums, Vocals (Background)
- Robin Olson
- Violin
- Simon Oswell
- Viola
- Walter Parazaider
- Sax (Tenor)
- Anatoly Rosinsky
- Violin
- Martin Tillman
- Cello, Electric Cello
- Terrance Davis
- Choir, Chorus
- James V. Ross
- Viola
- Sandy DeCrescent
- Orchestra Manager
- Matt Still
- Engineer, Mixing
- Timothy Landauer
- Cello
- Adrian Collee
- Studio Coordinator
- Phillipe Levy
- Violin
- Jason Carson
- Assistant Engineer
- Ricardo Salazar
- Guitar Technician
- Mark Robertson
- Violin
- John Holmes
- Assistant Engineer
- Sam Taylor Wood
- Photography
- Rob Skipworth
- Assistant Engineer
- Tony Smith
- Keyboard Technician
- Tom Tapley
- Assistant Engineer
- Jimmy Pankow
- Trombone, Horn Arrangements
- Josh McDonnell
- Assistant Engineer
- Adam
- Choir, Chorus, Choir Master
- Charles Bullock
- Choir, Chorus
- Davey Johnstone
- Guitar (Acoustic), Dobro, Mandolin, Guitar (Baritone), Guitar (Leslie), Musical Director, Slide Guitar, Vocals (Background), Sitar, Guitar (Electric)
- Sid Page
- Violin
- Intro
- Design
- Guy Babylon
- Organ (Hammond), Orchestration, Programming, Fender Rhodes, Orchestral Arrangements
- Bob Birch
- Bass, Vocals (Background)
- Charlie Bisharat
- Violin
- Brian Dembow
- Viola
- Joel Derouin
- Violin
- Stephen Erdody
- Cello
- Endre Granat
- Violin
- Larry Klimas
- Sax (Baritone)
- Lee Loughnane
- Trumpet
- Bob Ludwig
- Mastering
- Elton John
- Piano, Vocals, Vocals (Background), Fender Rhodes, Producer
- John Jorgenson
- Pedal Steel



















