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Wonderful Crazy Night

Wonderful Crazy Night in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $19.99
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Size: CD
Elton John
gives away his game with not just the title of
Wonderful Crazy Night
but its artwork. Our hero stands against a garish, colorful backdrop, sporting a grin a mile wide, signaling that he's once again ready to have fun. The measured melancholy of
The Diving Board
aside,
Elton
hasn't precisely avoided fun since returning to making records for himself, not the charts, with 2001's
Songs from the West Coast
, but a certain sobriety crept into the proceedings, particularly when he joined forces with producer
T-Bone Burnett
for
The Union
, the 2010 duet album with
Leon Russell
.
Burnett
is back for
and so is
John
's touring band, making their first studio appearance since 2006's
The Captain & the Kid
. It's possible to feel the presence of all of
's collaborators: the band brings a bit of a kick to the proceedings and the ever-tasteful
reins things in, keeping things from being too crazy, while lyricist
Bernie Taupin
schemes with
to re-create the melodic craft of their mid-'70s peak. There's a fair amount of joy and swagger here, particularly on the ebullient opening pair of "Wonderful Crazy Night" and "In the Name of You," two songs perched between a canny, knowing nostalgia and casual craft. This is an album that sounds as comforting as a long candlelit bath -- it's handsome, stately, and well appointed, the work of old pros relying on what they know best. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
gives away his game with not just the title of
Wonderful Crazy Night
but its artwork. Our hero stands against a garish, colorful backdrop, sporting a grin a mile wide, signaling that he's once again ready to have fun. The measured melancholy of
The Diving Board
aside,
Elton
hasn't precisely avoided fun since returning to making records for himself, not the charts, with 2001's
Songs from the West Coast
, but a certain sobriety crept into the proceedings, particularly when he joined forces with producer
T-Bone Burnett
for
The Union
, the 2010 duet album with
Leon Russell
.
Burnett
is back for
and so is
John
's touring band, making their first studio appearance since 2006's
The Captain & the Kid
. It's possible to feel the presence of all of
's collaborators: the band brings a bit of a kick to the proceedings and the ever-tasteful
reins things in, keeping things from being too crazy, while lyricist
Bernie Taupin
schemes with
to re-create the melodic craft of their mid-'70s peak. There's a fair amount of joy and swagger here, particularly on the ebullient opening pair of "Wonderful Crazy Night" and "In the Name of You," two songs perched between a canny, knowing nostalgia and casual craft. This is an album that sounds as comforting as a long candlelit bath -- it's handsome, stately, and well appointed, the work of old pros relying on what they know best. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine