Elton John’s Honky Château at 50 Remains a Classic

While I know a good number of Elton John songs from throughout his 50-plus-year recording career, I cannot make that claim when it comes to his 30 studio albums. So why pick Honky Château to highlight in a post? Well, to start with, it includes Rocket Man, one of my all-time favorite tunes by John. I’ve also always dug Honky Cat. But the main reason for writing about Honky Château again today is the album’s 50th anniversary, another 1972 classic to hit the big milestone.*

Released on May 19, 1972, and named after Château d’Hérouville, an 18th-century French castle where it was recorded, Elton John’s fifth studio album is a gem that definitely has more to offer than the above-noted tunes. Moreover, it’s a significant album in his recording career. Honky Château became John’s first of seven consecutive no. 1 records in the U.S. on the Billboard 200. It also performed very well elsewhere: No. 2 in the UK, no. 3 in Canada and no. 4 in Australia, to name a few countries where it charted. John truly ruled during the first half of the ’70s!

Honky Château also marked the first record to feature core members of John’s road band: David Johnstone (acoustic and electric guitars, steel guitar, mandolin, backing vocals), Dee Murray (bass) and Nigel Olsson (drums). Murray and Olsson had joined John’s touring band from The Spencer Davis Group. Johnstone, a session musician, had first played with John on predecessor Madman Across the Water from November 1971. He pretty much has been with John ever since. Johnstone, Murray and Olsson became instrumental in shaping Elton John’s sound during the ’70s.

Let’s get to some music, and what better way to start than with the opener  Honky Cat. Like all other songs on the record, the music was composed by John with lyrics from his long-time partner in crime Bernie Taupin. I always liked the tune’s New Orleans vibe. The brass section, which was arranged by producer Gus Dudgeon, featured Jacques Bolognesi  (trombone), Ivan Jullien (trumpet), as well as saxophonists Jean-Louis Chautemps and Alain HatotHonky Cat also appeared separately as the album’s second single in July 1972, backed by Slave.

I Think I’m Going to Kill Myself has some of Honky Cat’s New Orleans vibe as well. According to Songfacts, John said the song about a moody teenager’s suicide thoughts isn’t to be taken too seriously. I’m not sure a tune like this could be released today without causing controversy. Of course, the times they are a-changin’, and you could make the same observation for other ’70s tunes. The tap-dancing routine was performed by “Legs” Larry Smith, the former drummer of the comedy satirical rock group the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band. Smith was friends with George Harrison who would include a tribute song about him, His Name Is Legs (Ladies and Gentlemen), on his 1975 studio album Extra Texture (Read All About It).

Closing out Side 1 is the majestic Rocket Man (I Think It’s Going to Be a Long, Long Time), as it’s officially titled. Not surprisingly, the tale about a Mars-bound astronaut’s mixed feelings about leaving his family behind to carry out his mission became the album’s big hit. Separately released as the lead single in April 1972, backed by Susie (Dramas), it rose all the way to no. 2 in the UK and reached no. 6 in the U.S. Rocket Man also was a hit in various other countries, including Canada (no. 8), Germany (no. 18), Ireland (no. 6) and New Zealand (no. 11). It truly is a timeless classic!

Side 2 opens with Salvation. There isn’t much to say about this tune other than it’s the kind of ballad John excelled at in the ’70s, in my view.

Amy is another nice tune on Side 2. The song about young lust has a great groove. It features French jazz violinist and composer Jean-Luc Ponty on electric violin.

The last track I’d like to highlight is Honky Château’s closer Hercules. Initial plans to make Hercules the album’s third single did not materialize. While I haven’t read this anywhere, I’m wondering whether there may have been concerns it could have interfered with Crocodile Rock. One of John’s biggest hits, it was released in October 1972 as the lead single for his next studio album Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Piano Player.

Here’s a Spotify link to the entire album.

Honky Château was generally well received by music critics at the time and is regarded as one of Elton John’s best albums. In October 1995, the record was certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America  (RIAA), meaning it had reached certified sales of one million units.

In 2003, Honky Château was ranked at no. 357 on Rolling Stone’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, a position that remained nearly unchanged (no. 359) in the 2012 list. Interestingly, the album moved up by more than 100 spots to no. 251 in the list’s most recent revision from September 2020.

* This post was originally published on May 31, 2021. It has been slightly updated.

Sources: Wikipedia; Songfacts; YouTube; Spotify

19 thoughts on “Elton John’s Honky Château at 50 Remains a Classic”

  1. you and I think almost alike again… this album was on my list of possible topics for today. Thinking back, I never had the LP but I know most of the songs on it and had both the 7″ singles… Elton became my first favorite musician with this album (keep in mind I was about 5 years old). ‘Honky Cat’ is indeed excellent and one that seems largely forgotten. BTW, Elton put out ‘Captain Fantastic’ this day in ’75… must be a lucky day for him.

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    1. Elton truly ruled during the first half of the ’70s. “Captain” was his fifth no. 1 album in a row in the US, a string that started with “Honky Chateau” and lasted until “Rock of the Westies,” the follow on to “Captain”. I mean who scores six no. 1 albums in a row? It’s just remarkable!

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  2. This is my favourite Elton album – a bit more energetic than the earlier ones, but not as silly and camp as he’d become. There’s a fair bit of filler on most of those classic Elton albums IMO – he was making two albums a year – but this one is wall-to-wall solid. Susie is my favourite Elton deep cut.

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  3. Great review C – I love this album. Would be the first or second favourite for Elton for me. A lot of great early LPs (and some later ones). Rocket Man is truly a timeless classic any way you slice it, a song I never get sick of.. And I don’t often see him referred to as just ‘John’. Good one.

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      1. I like the others also…Honky Cat comes to mind also…but I agree with you…that song makes the album worth it.

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  4. Honky Cat and Rocket Man are both in my top 10 Elton John songs , and Rocket Man is actually my number one. Nothing else on the album is really one of my favorites, but you are certainly right that this is where he got his band together just in time for the two great albums coming up right after this one. I always preferred Don’t Shoot Me over this album, But a lot of people rate this one really high.

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    1. Don’t worry, I won’t shoot you!

      On a more serious note, “Don’t Shoot Me” includes two tunes I’ve always dug: “Daniel” and “Crocodile Rock.”

      I feel picking your top album largely depends the on degree of familiarity with an artist’s other albums. I can definitely say this for myself.

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      1. Actually, Goodbye Yellow Brick Road is his only album that I think even comes close to great, and even that one has about five songs that really suck. But there’s so many good ones on it that it doesn’t really matter. And to be honest, I think that Caribou is probably better than Don’t Shoot Me, believe it or not. At least it’s got more good ones on it than most of his other albums, which usually had no more than two or three songs that I like.

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