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The Fox

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The Fox album cover
01
Breaking Down Barriers
4:41
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02
Heart In The Right Place
5:11
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03
Just Like Belgium
4:08
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04
Nobody Wins
3:37
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05
Fascist Faces
5:10
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06
(a) Carla/Etude (b) Fanfare (c) Chloe
10:52
07
Heels Of The Wind
3:32
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08
Elton's Song
3:01
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09
The Fox
5:11
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 45:23

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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, The Fox
2007 | Label: Geffen

There’s a simple reason why much of 1981′s dire Elton disc sounds just like 21 at 33, only worse: Half of it is that album’s outtakes. Hot from his work with the Pretenders, Chris Thomas brings a New Wave flavor that would’ve clashed with the older cuts overseen by Kiki Dee producer Clive Franks had the material been more distinctive. The buried gem here is “Elton’s Song.” With lyrics by rocker Tom Robinson, who broke ground in 1978 with his own “Glad to Be Gay,” it’s sung from the perspective of a schoolboy besotted with a male classmate. Compare the realness and delicacy of this with everything else; it’s from a different world completely, one in which the singer genuinely cares.

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They Say All Music Guide

The early ’80s were not a particularly focused time in Elton John’s career. The Fox (1981) is a reflection of the tentative regrouping that began on his previous effort, 21 at 33 (1979). In fact, a third of the material was left over from the same August 1979 sessions. This results in dithering musical styles and ultimately yields an uneven and at times somewhat dated sound. The reunion with Bernie Taupin (lyrics) that commenced on 21 at 33 is once again sparsely tapped. He contributes the tepid “Heels of the Wind” as well as “Just Like Belgium,” which foreshadows the pair’s future lightweight efforts such as “Nikita.” Slightly more promising, however, is the midtempo rocker “Fascist Faces” — which may well be a nod to David Bowie’s infamous “Britain could benefit from a fascist leader” statement. The album’s introspective title track instantly recalls the slightly bittersweet “Curtains” coda from Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboys (1975). Gary Osborne and Elton John’s collaborations were beginning to yield some impressive results, including “Heart in the Right Place” — which could easily have been a follow-up to the slinky Caribou (1974) track “Stinker.” The tender “Chloe” conclusion to the “Carla/Etude/Fanfare” medley became one of two tracks extracted as singles. The other, “Nobody Wins,” sports a Euro-beat flavor and was adapted from a French techno-pop hit by Osborne and Jean-Paul Dreau. According to John, the dark and noir “Elton’s Song” remains a favorite, and he very occasionally revives it for live performances. Although The Fox isn’t a grand slam, it isn’t exactly a bunt either. However, the incremental momentum would continue on the subsequent long-player, Jump Up! (1982), before culminating on his ’80s breakthrough, Too Low for Zero (1983). – Lindsay Planer

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