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Jump Up!

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Jump Up! album cover
01
Dear John
3:32
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02
Spiteful Child
4:16
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03
Ball & Chain
3:28
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04
Legal Boys
3:07
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05
I Am Your Robot
4:44
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06
Blue Eyes
3:25
$1.29
07
Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny)
5:11
$1.29
08
Princess
4:56
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09
Where Have All The Good Times Gone?
4:01
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10
All Quiet On The Western Front
6:01
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 42:41

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eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

09.24.12
Elton John, Jump Up!
2007 | Label: Geffen

Now producing a full Elton album, producer Chris Thomas manages to extract some passion from the singer with a sound not unlike Thomas’s recent work with Pete Townshend, who guests on the particularly strum-my “Ball and Chain.” Drawing from New Wave and trad-rock alike, 1982′s Jump Up! sometimes foregrounds guitar and drums, yet the piano man manages to get a few good licks in on the should’ve-been single “Spiteful Child,” his catchiest cut in years. Debuting the lower end of his vocal register and then dramatically crooning up the scale, “Blue Eyes” may be forgettable like much of the rest, but it’s flattering in a Sinatra-eque way. The bigger hit, “Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny),” evokes Barry Manilow more than it does its subject, the late John Lennon.

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Wildly uneven

martuccij

Some beautiful stuff on this disc...but stay far far away from "robot" "Dear John" and spiteful...

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They Say All Music Guide

Jump Up! (1982) was Elton John’s first full LP to have been recorded in the 1980s, and is best remembered for including “Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny),” John and lyricist Bernie Taupin’s tribute to the their slain friend John Lennon. While the pair had been writing together again, albeit infrequently, since the late ’70s, John continued to include material written with his primary non-Taupin collaborator, Gary Osborne. The latter team had previously scored big with “Little Jeannie” on John’s 21 at 33 (1980), and to a lesser degree with the noir ballad “Chloe” from The Fox (1981). However, on Jump Up!, the quality of material ranges from the absurd and inane “I Am Your Robot” and the insipid breakup opener “Dear John” to the sublime beauty of “Blue Eyes” and the cathartic value of the aforementioned “Empty Garden (Hey Hey Johnny).” The dramatic “Legal Boys” is an understated masterpiece, marking the first public effort between John and Sir Tim Rice. The pair would garner Tony and Grammy awards 12 years later for their work on the original motion picture soundtrack to the animated feature film The Lion King (1994). John’s backing band includes many of the same musicians who contributed to his most recent recordings. Representing the “classic” personnel are Dee Murray (bass) and post-Captain Fantastic (1975) recruit James Newton-Howard (keyboards). Fleshing out the core combo are studio guitarist extraordinaire Richie Zito and Toto drummer (and another highly regarded session heavy) Jeff Porcaro. Steve Holly, who worked with Wings as well as John circa A Single Man (1978), guests on the tracks “I Am Your Robot” and “Ball & Chain,” the latter also featuring guest guitarist Pete Townshend. While far from a total washout, Jump Up! would remain tethered in the wake of the follow-up, Too Low for Zero (1983), marking a reunion between John and both his “classic” 1970s combo and Taupin. – Lindsay Planer

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