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Made In England

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Made In England album cover
01
Believe
4:55
$1.29
02
Made In England
5:08
$0.99
03
House
4:27
$0.99
04
Cold
5:37
$0.99
05
Pain
3:51
$0.99
06
Belfast
6:31
$0.99
07
Latitude
3:36
$0.99
08
Please
3:53
$0.99
09
Man
5:16
$0.99
10
Lies
4:28
$0.99
11
Blessed
5:01
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 52:43

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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
A well timed, credibility-rebuilding Britpop statement
1995 | Label: Island Def Jam

In 1994, Elton released his ridiculously popular soundtrack to The Lion King, which, in the US, eventually outsold all but his first greatest hits album. That spectacular success affirmed the piano man’s status as the world’s most family-friendly gay celebrity.

Recorded in London at George Martin’s AIR Studios, this 1995 disc was his well timed, credibility-rebuilding Britpop statement. Elton’s dramatic ballads are now decidedly less forced: k.d. lang producer Greg Penny may be American, but he and returning string maestro Paul Buckmaster surround the singer in recognizably Anglo arrangements: Davey Johnstone’s Beatles-y guitars offer a welcome antidote for the treacle tones of John’s then-inescapable Disney smash “Can You Feel the Love Tonight.” The brash and refreshingly rockin’ title track is even more critical of its subject than Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the USA.”

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They Say All Music Guide

Made in England could as easily be the follow-up to Elton John’s self-titled 1970 album as his first recording since the success of his songs for the Lion King soundtrack. John has brought back some of his old associates, including percussionist Ray Cooper, guitarist Davey Johnstone, and, particularly, orchestrator Paul Buckmaster, who gave the Elton John album its distinctive sound 25 years ago and contributes four string charts here. John remains a musical jukebox: “Please” has a twangy guitar riff that sounds like the Searchers, circa 1965, while guest organist Paul Carrack brings a soulful Booker T.-like feel to “Man.” As usual, though, John’s main vocal influence remains John Lennon, especially on the album’s first single, “Believe,” the lyrics to which also echo the tone of several of Lennon’s solo ballads. Lyricist Bernie Taupin is unusually personal, writing mostly in short, simple, declarative sentences and giving his songs one-word titles (“House,” “Cold,” “Pain,” etc.). His overall theme posits a positive conclusion (“Blessed”) eventually triumphing over adversity (“Lies”). John never works up much feeling for this concept, though he does come off alternately angry and solemn as the lyrics seem to require, though without ever upsetting the melodic flow. It sounds, in other words, as if Taupin had a lot to get off his chest this time around, but his mouthpiece, as usual, was more interested in the sound of the words than in their meaning. Which, given the predictability of the message, seems to have been just as well. – William Ruhlmann

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