Captain Fantastic
Elton John's Stellar Trip Through the '70s
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The true story of Elton John’s meteoric rise from obscurity to worldwide celebrity in the weird, wild 1970s, based on rare one-on-one interviews with the Rocket Man himself—now the subject of a major motion picture.
In August 1970, Elton John achieved overnight fame with a rousing performance at the Troubadour in Los Angeles. Over the next five years, the artist formerly known as Reginald Dwight went from unheard of to unstoppable, scoring seven consecutive #1 albums and sixteen Top Ten singles in America. By the middle of the decade, he was solely responsible for 2 percent of global record sales. One in fifty albums sold in the world bore his name. Elton John’s live shows became raucous theatrical extravaganzas, attended by all the glitterati of the era.
But beneath the spangled bodysuits and oversized eyeglasses, Elton was a desperately shy man, conflicted about his success, his sexuality, and his narcotic indulgences. In 1975, at the height of his fame, he attempted suicide. After coming out as bisexual in a controversial Rolling Stone interview that nearly wrecked his career, and announcing his retirement from live performance in 1977 at the age of thirty, he gradually found his way back to the thing he cared about most: the music.
Captain Fantastic gives readers a behind-the-scenes look at the rise, fall, and return to glory of one of the world’s most mercurial performers. Rock journalist Tom Doyle’s insider account of the Rocket Man’s turbulent ascent is based on a series of one-on-one interviews in which Elton laid bare many previously unrevealed details of his early career. Here is an intimate exploration of Elton’s working relationship with songwriting partner Bernie Taupin, whose lyrics often chronicled the ups and downs of their life together in the spotlight. Through these pages pass a parade of legends whose paths crossed with Elton’s during the decade—including John Lennon, Bob Dylan, Groucho Marx, Katharine Hepburn, Princess Margaret, Elvis Presley, and an acid-damaged Brian Wilson.
A fascinating portrait of the artist at the apex of his celebrity, Captain Fantastic takes us on a rollicking fame-and-drug-fueled ride aboard Elton John’s rocket ship to superstardom.
Praise for Captain Fantastic
“Veteran rock journalist [Tom] Doyle continues his foray into the 1970s music scene with a compelling profile of an unlikely rock star. . . . In chronicling Elton John’s stratospheric rise to fame, replete with platinum records, increasingly outlandish stage shows, and mountains of cash, the author deftly manages to keep his subject in sharp focus. Based on hours of one-on-one interviews with Captain Fantastic himself, this breezy yet comprehensive biography demonstrates what it was like for the talented musician to churn out an impossible string of hit records. . . . A great way to better understand the man behind the garish glasses and platform boots.”—Kirkus Reviews
“In this adoring and candid set of fan’s notes, music journalist Doyle (Man on the Run) draws on interviews with John and his colleagues, especially his writing partner, Bernie Taupin, to capture the meteoric rise and fall of the man who released at least one album every year of the 1970s. . . . This energetic book . . . makes a convincing case that John reached his peak and made his best music in the ’70s.”—Publishers Weekly
“A breezy and surprisingly poignant romp through a decade, and a career, that effectively invented modern celebrity culture.”—Peter Doggett, author of You Never Give Me Your Money: The Beatles After the Breakup
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
One of the rare rock bios that will satisfy both hardcore devotees and casual fans, Captain Fantastic draws upon Tom Doyle’s one-on-one interviews with Elton John during the 1970s, the decade that the glittery star helped define. There’s plenty of decadent, glamorous excess featured throughout, but Doyle also shines a spotlight on the real Elton behind the costumed persona: a shy, sensitive young man who collected old rock ’n’ roll 45s and a string of broken relationships. Captain Fantastic is a fascinating and illuminating portrait of a complicated pop genius.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the 1970s, Elton John was the Rocket Man, flying high over the rock world with one hit after another that brought him international fame. In this adoring and candid set of fan s notes, music journalist Doyle (Man on the Run) draws on interviews with John and his colleagues, especially his writing partner, Bernie Taupin, to capture the meteoric rise and fall of the man who released at least one album every year of the 1970s. Doyle traces the arc of John s journey from his childhood days as Reg Dwight, when he hung around the local record store so he could grab the newest albums by the bands he adored as soon as they arrived, to his early days in the Corvettes and Bluesology, his band that eventually backed the great British rocker Long John Baldry. John s subsequent rise to stardom began with his first album of the 1970s, Elton John. Doyle follows John s musical evolution chronologically, devoting each chapter to one year in the decade, and offering canny takes on John s musical output. 1972 s Honky Chateau, for example, exhibited Elton s knack for musical genre hopping, but the following year s Don t Shoot Me I m Only the Piano Player was a creative muddle, though a resounding commercial success. Doyle points out that by the end of the decade, John was extraordinarily famous but also not sure who he was or where he was going. This energetic book unintentionally makes a convincing case that John reached his peak and made his best music in the 70s.