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Honky Château

Honky Château is the fifth studio album by English musician Elton John. It was released on 19 May 1972, and was titled after the 18th century French chateau where it was recorded, Château d'Hérouville. The album reached number one on the US Billboard 200, the first of John's seven consecutive US number one albums.[1]

"Mellow (song)" redirects here. For "Mellow Song" by Blur, see 13 (Blur album).

Honky Château

19 May 1972 (1972-05-19)

15–23 January 1972

45:12

Uni (US) · DJM (UK)

Two singles were released worldwide from Honky Château, "Rocket Man" and "Honky Cat". A third single, "Hercules", was prepared for release, but this never materialised.[2] This was the final Elton John album on the Uni label in the US and Canada before MCA consolidated all of its various labels under the MCA brand. This and John's earlier Uni albums were later reissued on MCA Records.


In 2003, the album was ranked number 357 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". It was revised to number 359 in 2012, and raised to number 251 in a 2020 list.[3] It was certified gold in July 1972 and platinum in October 1995 by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).

Music[edit]

Honky Château was the first in Elton John's streak of chart-topping albums in the US, which culminated with 1975's Rock of the Westies. It was also the first studio album to feature John's road band of Dee Murray on bass and Nigel Olsson on drums, along with new member Davey Johnstone on electric and acoustic guitars and other fretted instruments, as the core group of musicians. Previously, the record label insisted that John use them for only one track each on Tumbleweed Connection and Madman Across the Water; the rest of the songs on those two albums were performed by session players. Johnstone had played acoustic guitar, mandolin and sitar on Madman Across the Water, but on Honky Chateau, he would be invited to join permanently as a full-band member and he extended his contributions to electric guitar, banjo, slide guitar and backing vocals.


The opening track, "Honky Cat", is a New Orleans funk track reminiscent of Dr. John and Allen Toussaint, and features a four-piece horn section arranged by producer Gus Dudgeon. Also of note is the on-record debut of the backing vocal combination of Johnstone, Murray and Olsson, who first added what would soon become their "trademark" sound to "Rocket Man".[4] The trio's unique approach to arranging their backing vocal tracks would be a fixture on John's singles and albums for the next several years.


In 1995, Dudgeon remastered the album, adding only an uptempo, piano-based, rock and roll version of "Slave", that was originally sidelined in favour of the slower, guitar-based version on the original LP. This alternate version was originally due to be released as the B-side to the ultimately unreleased "Hercules" single.[2] It did not get an official release until it appeared on the compilation Rare Masters in 1992.


In February 2023, John announced the album would be reissued in a 50th-anniversary edition on LP (two versions: double-LP set and single LP on gold vinyl) and 2 CDs. The double LP and 2-CD configurations include outtakes from the original session tapes. The 2-CD format additionally contains eight live recordings from the Royal Festival Hall show in 1972. It was released on 24 March 2023.[5]

The album, including the bonus track, was also released in 2004 as a "Hybrid SACD" remixed in 5.1.

Elton John – vocals, acoustic piano (1–6, 8–10), (1), Hammond organ (2, 4), harmonium (6)

Fender Rhodes

ARP synthesizer (5, 10) (credited as "David Henschel" on sleeve)

David Hentschel

banjo (1, 7); electric, acoustic and slide guitars (2–10); backing vocals (3, 5, 6, 8, 10), steel guitar (7), mandolin (9)

Davey Johnstone

– bass guitar, backing vocals (3, 5, 6, 8, 10)

Dee Murray

– drums (1–8, 10), tambourine (2, 4), backing vocals (3, 5, 6, 8, 10), congas (7)

Nigel Olsson

– congas (8)

Ray Cooper

– saxophone (1)

Jean-Louis Chautemps

Alain Hatot – saxophone (1)

Jacques Bolognesi – (1)

trombone

– trumpet (1)

Ivan Jullien

electric violin (2, 8)

Jean-Luc Ponty

tap dance (3)

"Legs" Larry Smith

– brass arrangements (1), additional backing vocals (10), whistle (10)

Gus Dudgeon

– backing vocals (6)

Madeline Bell

– backing vocals (6), additional backing vocals (10)

Tony Hazzard

Liza Strike – backing vocals (6)

Larry Steel – backing vocals (6)

Track numbers refer to CD and digital releases of the album.

Producer – 

Gus Dudgeon

Engineer –

Ken Scott

Remastering – Tony Cousins

Cover photo – 

Ed Caraeff

Liner notes – John Tobler

SACD authoring – Gus Skinas

Digital transfers – Ricky Graham

Surround mix – Greg Penny

at Discogs (list of releases)

Honky Château