|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Peachtree Road

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (4 ratings)
Peachtree Road album cover
01
Weight Of The World
3:58
$0.99
02
Porch Swing In Tupelo
4:39
$0.99
03
Answer In The Sky
4:04
$0.99
04
Turn The Lights Out When You Leave
5:02
$0.99
05
My Elusive Drug
4:12
$0.99
06
They Call Her The Cat
4:27
$0.99
07
Freaks In Love
4:31
$0.99
08
All That I'm Allowed (I'm Thankful)
4:52
$0.99
09
I Stop And I Breathe
3:39
$0.99
10
Too Many Tears
4:15
$0.99
11
It's Getting Dark In Here
3:50
$0.99
12
I Can't Keep This From You
4:35
$0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 52:04

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
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
No classics here, but there's plenty of low-key pleasure
2007 | Label: Geffen

The only Elton album that’s solely self-produced, 2004′s Peachtree Road is strikingly casual. Named after the street on which the singer owns an Atlanta home, it’s considerably less heavy than its predecessor, 2001′s Songs from the West Coast. Instead, it offers a breezy country feeling that suggests 1970′s Tumbleweed Connection, but with lighter orchestrations and less wordplay.

Now that he’s finally holding the reigns, Elton lets them slack: “Weight of the World” alludes to the fact that he’s far happier now that the pressure of maintaining his three-decade radio-dominating streak is finally over. Even his vocals are far less fussy; in most cases, he seems to go with unpolished first takes, particularly on the brassy transsexual ode “They Call Her the Cat.” Where there was once a control-crazed superstar, there’s now a humble musician intent on simply satisfying himself and maybe his longtime fans. No classics here, but there’s plenty of low-key pleasure.

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

very solid...very mature

martuccij

This is a superb example of EJ and BT's songwriting talent...it is also very well performed.

user avatar

Thank You!

Eli62

Reflective, thoughtful and insightful. What a wonderful writer Mr. Taupin is and perfectly matched with a great composer in Sir Elton John x

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

4

eMusic Icon: Elton John

By Barry Walters, eMusic Contributor

Hitting the charts in the wake of the Beatles' 1970 split, right when both Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix died of overdoses and Jim Morrison wasn't far behind, Elton John could only have launched his career at a time when pop stars could be virtuosos. From "Your Song" onward, he's rendered his keyboards with a sophistication that eclipses all but the greatest classical pianists. His compositional gifts are nearly on the level of Burt Bacharach's,… more »

0

Will Oldham and the Wisdom of Palace

By Douglas Wolk, eMusic Contributor

There are some received ideas about Will Oldham, aka Palace/Palace Music/Palace Brothers/Palace Songs, aka Bonnie "Prince" Billy, that just won't seem to die: that he's a "folk" artist, that he's all about "Appalachian" music, that he's an innocent, Bible-thumping soul who somehow stumbled upon the indie-rock world - that he is, in short, some kind of hick or hayseed. He doesn't exactly discourage them with his image (the crack in his voice, his burning stare,… more »

They Say All Music Guide

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

more »