iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store. If iTunes doesn’t open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop. Progress Indicator
iTunes 9

iTunes is the world’s easiest way to organize and add to your digital music and video collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from The Captain & The Kid (Bonus Tracks) by Elton John, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes 9 for Mac + PC

The Captain & The Kid (Bonus Tracks)

Elton John

View More by this Artist

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Elton John

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Postcards from Richard Nixon Elton John 5:15 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Just Like Noah's Ark Elton John 5:33 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Wouldn't Have You Any Other Way (NYC) Elton John 4:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Tinderbox Elton John 4:25 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 And the House Fell Down Elton John 4:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Blues Never Fade Away Elton John 4:45 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 The Bridge Elton John 3:38 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 I Must Have Lost It On the Wind Elton John 3:53 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Old '67 Elton John 4:01 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 The Captain & The Kid Elton John 5:01 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Tell Me When the Whistle Blows (Live at Madison Square Garden) Elton John 4:46 Album Only View In iTunes
12 Meal Ticket (Live at Madison Square Garden) Elton John 4:10 Album Only View In iTunes
13 Better Off Dead (Live at Madison Square Garden) Elton John 3:03 Album Only View In iTunes
Booklet Interactive Booklet - The Captain & The Kid (Bonus Tracks) Elton John Album Only View In iTunes

Album Review

Ever since 2001's Songs from the West Coast, Elton John and his longtime collaborator, Bernie Taupin, have been deliberately and unapologetically chasing their glory days of the early '70s, but nowhere have they been as candid in evoking those memories as they are on 2006's The Captain & the Kid, the explicitly stated sequel to 1975's masterpiece Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy. That record was an autobiographical fantasia of John and Taupin's early years — the days when they were struggling to make their mark, right up till their glorious success — and the idea behind this album is to tell the story of those salad days, which not only isn't a bad idea at all — it's clever and well-suited for John, the most self-consciously unautobiographical of all major rock artists — but fits right into Elton's desire to make records like he used to; after all, if he's trying to sound like the way things used to be, he might as well sing about the way they used to be, too. And The Captain & the Kid is nothing if not a proudly nostalgic piece of work bearing no modern touches; even the synths that occasionally color this country-ish rock are old fashioned analog synths. It sounds like an dream project on paper, but like a lot of dream projects, The Captain & the Kid doesn't quite live up to its lofty ideals. Part of the problem is that John has patterned the music not after Captain Fantastic — which lived up to its glamorama title through intense flights of camp and glitz that helped give its narrative a theatrical flair, not to mention a hell of a lot of color — but after the stripped-down, country-tinged pop and rock of Tumbleweed Connection and Honky Chateau. That is the sound at the core of most of his best music of the early '70s, but it's not necessarily the best choice for this album, since it doesn't quite fit with the original Captain Fantastic or the gaudy story of their success; it's a tale that calls for bright neon colors, and everything about this album is muted and tasteful.

It might not quite seem like what a Fantastic sequel should be — in fact, it seems more like a sequel to its direct predecessor, 2004's Peachtree Road — but that's hardly a bad thing. Like that album and Songs from the West Coast before it, The Captain & the Kid is a sharp, professional piece of work by sharp professionals conscious of their past and no longer wishing to rest on their laurels, so they're consciously evoking their best work without quite recycling it. They might not hit their mark directly, but they get close enough — it may be a little self-conscious and the production is a shade too clean, but the performances are warm and intimate, so this music feels right even if it doesn't necessarily feel exactly like Elton's '70s heyday. And the more familiar this song cycle becomes, the easier it is to admire the craft behind it, particularly in individual moments like the slow build on "Wouldn't Have It Any Other Way (NYC)," or how "Tinderbox" hearkens back to "Somebody Saved My Life Tonight," or the lightness of "I Must Have Lost It on the Wind," or the lazy blues of "Old 67," or how "The Captain and the Kid" brings to mind not Tumbleweed Connection but Billy Joel's approximation of that album on Piano Man. So, no, The Captain & the Kid isn't quite the second coming of Captain Fantastic, but it's hardly a cash grab by an aging diva — in other words, it's no Basic Instinct 2. John's intentions are pure and even if he doesn't quite make an album as good as his '70s work, it does stand alongside that work nicely — it's clear that he and Taupin are really trying, and it's far better to have albums like this and Peachtree Road that fall short of the mark but nevertheless get close than to have an endless series of well-produced but empty records like The One and Made in England.

Recent Customer Reviews

Buy it for the live tracks
     
by ralevitt

FIRST AND FOREMOST: I'm a fan. I love his music (*their* songs). Seen him live numerous times, including in 1976 at Dodger Stadium. Captain Fantastic remains one of my all time favorite records.

THAT SAID: This is not Captain Fantastic. It's a tired, albeit skillful, and unfortunately unsuccessful attempt at recapturing something very special.

THE SONGS: I dunno. I felt embarrassed listening to them. I kept thinking, "Nice try, but big miss ..." Lyrics that should have been visually rich were instead irrelevant or obvious. BT is the master of metaphor, of acute social observation and highly personal yet broadly meaningful emotional songwriting. But it sounded like he phoned this one in. I felt like the music lacked vitality.

ON THE OTHER HAND: The live tracks are pretty much worth the cost of the record. Excellent, heated, committed, musical covers from CF. I've never heard him play those songs live and always wanted to hear them.

Best since "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road"
     
by californiarays

Great album. Great title track. My big complaint is song order. The best song on the album is "The Captain and the Kid," which is placed oddly at the end of the album, and next best songs, "Blues Never Fade Away" and "I Must Have Lost It On The Wind" are also towards the end. This album should have been better marketed, as it's Elton's best since "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road."

I love how the lyrics in the title track make reference to Elton's past albums. A lot of fun for fans. Thanks Elton and Bernie.

Best sequel I've ever heard
     
by The Entertainer19627

This album is very, very good. It holds great songs, even by Elton's very high standards. "Tinderbox" is one of Elton's best. "The Bridge" was the hit from here and is also very good. One song that really pops out at me is "Blues Never Fade Away." Other good songs are "Wouldn't Have You Any Other Way", "And the House Fell Down", and "Just Like Noah's Ark."

Biography

Born: March, 1947 in Pinner, Middlesex, England

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

In terms of sales and lasting popularity, Elton John was the biggest pop superstar of the early '70s. Initially marketed as a singer/songwriter, John soon revealed he could craft Beatlesque pop and pound out rockers with equal aplomb. He could dip into soul, disco, and country, as well as classic pop...
Full Bio