Billboard Interview
At the top of every hour the clock
in Elton John's dressing room at Caesars Palace breaks wind. And every hour,
the farting clock makes John laugh.
Elton has every reason to smile.
His Las Vegas run has been extended from 75 shows during a three-year period
to 225 shows during a five-year span ending in 2008. Every show of "The
Red Piano" has been a sellout. A U.K. tour this summer drew almost
400,000 people.
His latest musical, an adaptation
of the movie "Billy Elliot" written by Elton and Lee Hall, opened
to largely rave reviews in London's West End, and there's talk of bringing
it to Broadway.
Elton has wrapped "Lestat,"
the first musical he and longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin have written together.
The play, based on Anne Rice's Vampire Lestat series, will debut in December
at San Francisco's Curran Theater before heading to Broadway in spring 2006.
And there are plenty of other projects
in the works, including a development deal with Touchstone Television for
a sitcom about a rock star and his entourage and an exclusive November 9,
2005 Starbucks release of the CD "Elton's Christmas Party," with
part of the proceeds earmarked for the Elton John AIDS Foundation.
Q: Your last album, 2004's "Peachtree
Road" (Rocket/Universal) received some of the best reviews of your
career, and yet it sold only 300,000 copies in the United States, making
it one of your worst performers. How frustrating is that for you?
A: It is frustrating ... I'm not
storming around saying, "Why isn't my f***ing record doing better than
this?" I just had to look at it and say, "Was it a s**t record?"
And it wasn't, it was the best I could do. I'm 58 now, and my time in the
sun, as it were, is gone. I have to accept that. Was I disappointed? Yeah,
because I put my heart and soul into it. ... (Universal Records) tried to
persuade (me) to do a Motown album or a standards album, and I wouldn't
do it. I said (no) because I want to still write songs. I still feel as
if I've got something else to offer without going down that route.
Q: Were you insulted when they
asked you?
A: Yeah. I mean, it's like, "That's
what you think of me, is it?"
Q: You and Bernie Taupin are writing
a sequel to "Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy" called
"Captain Fantastic and the Kid." The first edition, released in
1975, covered your first 30 years; the second will cover the subsequent
30 years and will come out March 20, 2007, five days before your 60th birthday.
Are you and Bernie already working on it?
A: I'm starting writing and recording
it in Atlanta in January 2006. It was Merck's (Sanctuary Group CEO Merck
Mercuriadis, who tends to the creative side of Elton's career) idea, because
he said, "You're always saying how Bernie has become the Brown Dirt
Cowboy" -- he lives on a ranch in Santa Ynez (Calif.) -- and I'm this
guy who plays concert after concert, buying art, buying photographs, living
a very lavish lifestyle. I've become Captain Fantastic.
We would have been together then
about 40 years by the time it comes out. One of the things I'm most proud
of in my life is the relationship I've had with Bernie.
Q: Is it true you buy the new album
releases every week at Tower Records when you are home in Atlanta?
A: I go in there at 9:30 on Tuesday
morning, before it opens, before they put the f***ing things (out where)
I can't find them. They're all on the cart, and I can go through them, one
by one, because I know what I want. It's one of my things I look forward
to every week. Those guys open up and (have) a cup of coffee there now,
and it's just brilliant.
Q: Would you tour with Billy Joel
again?
A: Yeah, I would, because I love
him dearly. My greatest wish is for Billy Joel to have a No. 1 album and
get his confidence back. That would make me so happy. You know, we've never
been rivals, we've always been friends. Part of my Captain Fantastic's next
30 years include Billy Joel. And it would be great to do a duet.
Q: You have extended the Vegas
run for "The Red Piano" show by another two years. It obviously
agrees with you.
A: (Before Caesars) I'd never stayed
the night here. I don't go out (much, but) you do get stir crazy. So I'll
go see what's in the shops now. (Elton's operations manager) Bob Halley
and I got chased through the mall. We were laughing so hard. Bob said, "We're
being chased by 60-year-old women!" and I said, "Bob, we are 60!"
We have nothing but good things to say about here.
Q: You go out of your way to support
new artists. Why?
A: The first five years of my career
we played with people that were our stone cold idols, and everyone treated
us so well. That's why I try and give a hand out to young people, because
people did that to me. I remember phoning Fountains of Wayne when "Utopia
Parkway" came out. They thought it wasn't me on the phone, but it was.
I just wanted to say, "This is such a great album." It's important
to let people know that.
Q: Is writing easy for you?
A: Yeah. I wrote 60 songs in a
year (for "Peachtree Road," "Billy Elliot" and "Lestat").
One of the songs (for "Lestat") is called "Paris," a
conversational song in three parts. It's the longest song I ever took to
write -- three-and-a-half hours. I thought I was going to go nuts. I thought
I was going to have a mental breakdown.
Q: You have a sitcom in development.
What can you tell us about that?
A: It's called "Him and Us."
It's basically about the entourage around a star called Max Flash who have
to put up with this bastard. Max Flash is based on me, Mick, Bowie, Rod,
all these outrageously behaving rock stars.
Q: How do you find the time for
all these projects?
A: You know, I'm 15 years sober
today. That's changed my life. The energy that I used to spend doing drugs
and everything, I spend doing great things, like getting up in the morning,
going to Tower Records, trying to find new acts, trying to promote them.
I have the most fantastic life. I really love it so much.