Leather Jackets (album) explained

Leather Jackets
Type:studio
Artist:Elton John
Cover:Leather jackets.JPG
Released:27 October 1986[1]
Recorded:January 1985, January – February, May – September 1986
Studio:Wisseloord (Hilversum)
CTS (London)
The SOL (Cookham)
Genre:Pop rock
Length:45:11
Label:Geffen (US), Rocket (UK)
Producer:Gus Dudgeon
Prev Title:Ice on Fire
Prev Year:1985
Next Title:Live in Australia with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Next Year:1987

Leather Jackets is the twentieth studio album by English musician Elton John. Recorded at Sol Studios in England and Wisseloord Studios in the Netherlands, it was released in 1986 and was his first album not to have any top 40 singles in either the US or the UK since 1970's Tumbleweed Connection, which had no singles released from it. It is also one of his lowest charting studio albums in the United States, peaking at number 91 on the Billboard 200 chart.

This was John's last studio release to be produced by Gus Dudgeon. After his throat surgery in 1987, Chris Thomas would be rehired as producer.

Background

In 2001, John regarded the track "Heartache All Over the World" from the album as the worst song he had ever recorded, calling it "pretty insubstantial";[2] in 2006, he would declare Jackets his least favourite of all his albums, saying "Gus Dudgeon did his best but you can't work with a loony."[3] [4] He would also call its biker-inspired cover "very butch but a total disaster. I was not a well budgie, I was married and it was just one bag of coke after another."[5] In spite of this, lyricist Bernie Taupin believes 1997's The Big Picture deserves the honour of John's worst album.

In 2000, Gus Dudgeon said: "There was a chance he could polish himself off. He'd go out and do some coke and it'd be all over his mouth, his nose would be running and I'd go: 'Oh God, this is just awful'."[6] John has also stated in his 2019 autobiography Me that "it was about as close to an unmitigated disaster than anything I've ever released" and "overall, Leather Jackets had four legs, a tail, and barked if a postman came to the door".

"Heartache All Over the World" was the only single from the album to achieve chart success in the US, though it failed to crack the top 50. "Slow Rivers" is a collaboration with Cliff Richard that was released as a single in the UK. Cher collaborated with "Lady Choc Ice" (actually John himself) to write "Don't Trust That Woman". Roger Taylor and John Deacon of Queen play drums and bass guitar respectively on the track "Angeline"; songwriting credit is shared with backing singer Alan Carvell, who composed the "oh-oh-oh's" that can be heard at the beginning and end of the track.

John played "Paris" during his 1986 US tour. He included "Heartache All Over the World" and "Slow Rivers" on his 1986 Australian tour with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, which would eventually yield John's 1987 live album Live in Australia with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra. "Heartache" was included in the band portion of the show (John opted not to play piano for that number) while "Slow Rivers" was played during the second half of the show with the orchestra. Due to contractual constraints, "Slow Rivers" was not included on Live in Australia, despite the fact that it was from the orchestral portion of the show, which was the basis for the album.

"Paris" became a minor FM hit for some jazz radio stations that programmed the track and it reached the Belgium charts, peaking at number 37.[7]

To date, Leather Jackets is John's only studio album from the pre-1993 period that has yet to be reissued in remastered form; it last appeared on compact disc in the early 1990s. However, in 2008, it became available for digital download. Two songs from the album, "Hoop of Fire" and "I Fall Apart" were both issued on the compilation in 2020. As of 2023, Leather Jackets has been remastered on vinyl and is sold on the Elton John website.

Critical reception

The album received negative reviews. Matt Springer placed the album at number 31 in his ranking of all of John's studio albums, criticizing it as "the worst of the '80s – awful songs with equally awful production."[8]

In a retrospective review for AllMusic, Lindsay Planer found the material "half-hearted", performances "less than inspired" and John's voice to be "beginning to show signs of extreme fatigue and strain." They did however find "bright moments" on the album including "Heartache All Over the World" and John's collaborations with Cliff Richard and Cher.[9]

Recording

The majority of the tracks from the album were recorded during the Ice on Fire sessions in 1985. It was John's last album in which he played a grand piano before switching to the Roland RD-1000 digital piano for his next two studio albums.

For the first time in John's career, no songs on this album are longer than five minutes.

Track listing

Notes

Personnel

Track numbering refers to CD and digital releases of the album.

Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Music Week. 52.
  2. Uncut, September 2001 "Elton – The Magnificent Showman", page 46
  3. Web site: The Lion King. Box Office Mojo. 4 October 2011.
  4. [Mojo Magazine]
  5. Elton John – "Sound Your Funky Horn" by Cliff Jones – Mojo Magazine, October 1997.
  6. Gus Dudgeon interview on "Elton John – Behind the Music", VH1 19 March 2000.
  7. Web site: Elton John - Paris - ultratop.be . 2022-05-04 . www.ultratop.be.
  8. Web site: Elton John Albums Ranked Worst to Best. Ultimate Classic Rock. 15 July 2015 . 25 August 2020.
  9. Web site: Leather Jackets - Elton John | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic. .
  10. http://www.discogs.com/Elton-John-Leather-Jackets/release/2270476 Elton John- Leather Jackets original US vinyl release @Discogs.com
  11. http://www.discogs.com/Elton-John-Leather-Jackets/release/451904 Elton John- Leather Jackets US CD reissue @Discogs.com
  12. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6.