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Songs from the West Coast

Songs from the West Coast is the twenty-sixth studio album by English musician Elton John, released worldwide on 1 October 2001.

Songs from the West Coast

1 October 2001

18 September 2000 – 30 April 2001

54:06

Background[edit]

For this album, John once again collaborated with long-time lyricist Bernie Taupin, marking the first time the pair had written together in person. Patrick Leonard produced the album and played keyboards on several songs, as was the case for The Road to El Dorado soundtrack, released the year before.


Drummer Nigel Olsson returned to the Elton John Band full-time and Tata Vega makes an early appearance as a backup vocalist, joining the band later. Stevie Wonder, who previously worked with John on the songs "I Guess That's Why They Call It the Blues" and "That's What Friends Are For", played harmonica and clavinet on "Dark Diamond". Guy Babylon, Bob Birch and John Mahon, three of John's band members at the time, do not appear on this album.


It was the first non-soundtrack studio album from John to be released after PolyGram and Universal Music Group merged, consolidating distribution rights to his entire catalogue.


Rufus Wainwright sings backing vocals on the track "American Triangle", which is about Matthew Shepard, a gay college student who was brutally murdered in 1998.[1] The album was dedicated to Shepard and Oliver Johnstone, band member Davey Johnstone's late son.


John has said that the inspiration for many of the songs on this album came from when he listened to Heartbreaker by Ryan Adams.


In an interview with Jon Wiederhorn in 2001, John revealed that the album was recorded using analogue tape, as he believes "the voice and instruments sound warmer".


In 2002, the album was repackaged as a special edition containing a bonus disc with remixes, B-sides and non-album singles from the time of its release.

Album cover[edit]

The restaurant shown on the album's cover is Rae's Restaurant, which is frequently used as a location for many Los Angeles-based film shoots, including 1993's True Romance and 2005's Lords of Dogtown. John's partner David Furnish and his Director of Operations Bob Halley appear on the album cover: Furnish as a cowboy at the bar and Halley as the man getting handcuffed.

– lead vocals, acoustic piano, harmonium (6)

Elton John

Hammond B3 organ (2, 4), organ (3), keyboards (4, 5, 11), Mellotron (10)

Patrick Leonard

clavinet (2), harmonica (2)

Stevie Wonder

– Hammond B3 organ (7, 8, 10)

Billy Preston

– guitars (1, 2, 8), backing vocals (1-3, 7, 9-12), electric guitar (3, 7), acoustic guitar (9, 11), mandolin (9)

Davey Johnstone

David Channing – acoustic guitar (3), (6)

dobro

– electric guitar (4, 11), guitars (5, 6, 10), bouzouki (11)

Rusty Anderson

– acoustic guitar (4, 7)

Bruce Gaitsch

– bass (1-12), backing vocals (1-3, 7, 9-12)

Paul Bushnell

– drums (1, 3, 7-9), backing vocals (1-3, 7, 9-12)

Nigel Olsson

– drums (2, 4-6, 10-12), percussion (6)

Matt Chamberlain

– percussion (1, 3, 5, 7, 9)

Jay Bellerose

– horn arrangements and conductor (1), string arrangements and conductor (5, 9, 11, 12)

Paul Buckmaster

– harmony vocals (4)

Rufus Wainwright

Kudisan Kai – backing vocals (7, 8, 12)

– backing vocals (8)

Tata Vega

– backing vocals (12)

Gary Barlow

at Discogs (list of releases)

Songs from the West Coast