"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" (sometimes written "Saturday Night`s Alright (For Fighting)") is a song originally recorded by English musician Elton John. John composed it with his long-time songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. It was released on John`s best-selling album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973) and as the first single. It has been covered by many artists and featured on motion picture, video game, and television soundtracks.
Billboard found the song to be a cross between John`s earlier single "Crocodile Rock" and the Rolling Stones` single "Street Fighting Man", suggesting that it may be a parody of the Rolling Stones but regardless is a "great fun record."[5]
Leer más
1
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Saturday Nights Alright for Fighting
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Elton John and Bernie Taupin •
1973 /06 /29
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4:55 |
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2
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Jack Rabbit
Elton John •
w: B-side of Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting •
1973 /06 /29
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0:00 |
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3
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Whenever Youre Ready (Well Go Steady Again)
Elton John •
w: We`ll Go Steady Again) (B-side of Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting •
1973 /06 /29
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0:00 |
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1
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Funeral for a Friend/Love Lies Bleeding
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side one
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11:09 |
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2
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Candle in the Wind
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side one
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0:00 |
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3
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Bennie and the Jets
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side one
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0:00 |
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1
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Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side two
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0:00 |
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2
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This Song Has No Title
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side two
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2:23 |
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3
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Grey Seal
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side two
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0:00 |
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4
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Jamaica Jerk-Off
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side two
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3:39 |
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5
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I`ve Seen That Movie Too
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side two
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5:59 |
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1
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Sweet Painted Lady
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side three
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0:00 |
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2
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The Ballad of Danny Bailey (1909–34)
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side three
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4:23 |
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3
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Dirty Little Girl
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side three
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5:00 |
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4
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All the Girls Love Alice
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side three
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0:00 |
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1
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Your Sister Can`t Twist (but She Can Rock `n Roll)
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side four
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0:00 |
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2
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Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Elton John and Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side four
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4:55 |
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3
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Roy Rogers
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side four
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4:07 |
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4
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Social Disease
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side four
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3:42 |
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5
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Harmony
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Side four
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0:00 |
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1
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Whenever You`re Ready
Elton John •
w: We`ll Go Steady Again) (B-side of Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting •
1973 /10 /05 30th anniversary deluxe editio
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0:00 |
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2
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Jack Rabbit
Elton John •
w: B-side of Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting •
1973 /10 /05 30th anniversary deluxe editio
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0:00 |
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3
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Screw You
Elton John •
w: Young Man`s Blues) (B-side of Goodbye Yellow Brick Road •
1973 /10 /05 30th anniversary deluxe editio
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0:00 |
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4
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Candle in the Wind
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 30th anniversary deluxe editio
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0:00 |
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1
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Candle In The Wind
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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2
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Bennie and the Jets
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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3
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Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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4
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Grey Seal
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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5
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Sweet Painted Lady
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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6
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All The Girls Love Alice
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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7
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Your Sister Can`t Twist
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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8
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Saturday Night`s Alright For Fighting
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Elton John and Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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4:55 |
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9
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Harmony
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 40th Anniversary Celebration /
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0:00 |
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1
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Candle In The Wind
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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0:00 |
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2
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Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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0:00 |
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3
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All The Girls Love Alice
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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0:00 |
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4
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Bennie And The Jets
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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0:00 |
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5
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Rocket Man
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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4:43 |
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6
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Daniel
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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3:54 |
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7
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Honky Cat
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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5:14 |
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8
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Crocodile Rock
Elton John •
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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3:56 |
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9
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Your Song
Elton John •
w: with Alessandro Safina •
1973 /10 /05 Highlights From Live at Hammer
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0:00 |
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"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" | ||||
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Single by Elton John | ||||
from the album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road | ||||
B-side |
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Released | June 29, 1973[1] | |||
Recorded | May 1973 | |||
Studio | Château d`Hérouville, France | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
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Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Gus Dudgeon | |||
Elton John singles chronology | ||||
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"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" (sometimes written "Saturday Night`s Alright (For Fighting)") is a song originally recorded by English musician Elton John. John composed it with his long-time songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. It was released on John`s best-selling album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973) and as the first single. It has been covered by many artists and featured on motion picture, video game, and television soundtracks.
Billboard found the song to be a cross between John`s earlier single "Crocodile Rock" and the Rolling Stones` single "Street Fighting Man", suggesting that it may be a parody of the Rolling Stones but regardless is a "great fun record."[5]
Leer más"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" is a lively throwback to early rock and roll with a glam edge. The lyrics discuss a night out in town in which the narrator plans to "get about as oiled as a diesel train". Taupin has said that the song was meant to be an American rock and roll song set in Britain. It was inspired by his raucous teenage days and in particular, the fistfights in his local pub, the Aston Arms in Market Rasen.[6]
The song, which showcases the guitar playing of Davey Johnstone, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin and music by John, is written in the key of G mixolydian alternating with C mixolydian on the chorus. It is one of John`s harder-rocking songs (similar to "Grow Some Funk of Your Own" and "The Bitch Is Back"), with a sound echoing bands such as the Who and the Rolling Stones.
It was the only song recorded during Elton and the band`s time in Jamaica, where they had initially planned to record the album, but was never used due to the poor quality of the recording equipment. John described it as sounding like "it had been recorded on the worst transistor radio." The experience prompted the band to return to France to finish the album.
"Saturday" is one of the most aggressive and lively rock inspired tracks ever recorded by John. It features energetic, rapid-fire piano playing reminiscent of Jerry Lee Lewis. The song was one of the few John-Taupin songs that Elton said was not a "typical piano number". According to John`s recollection in Elizabeth Rosenthal`s His Song: The Musical Journey of Elton John, it may have been written on the piano at first, but the song ended up being recorded somewhat in reverse to the normal way he records, with the band putting their tracks down, and Elton overdubbing his piano afterward. (John`s typical process was to either record the piano first or play along with the band.) Elton called the song "hard to record".
Apart from his lyrical contributions, in the Eagle Vision documentary, Classic Albums: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Taupin said that a lot of the power of the song comes from the chords, adding it also features what he called one of the greatest "strident, blistering guitar chords ever created" in rock and roll.
The song was released in 1973 as the album`s first single. Cash Box called the song an "infectious rocker that carries `Crocodile Rock` just one step further".[7] Record World called it a "rip-snortin` rocker that is reminiscent of the Stones and Bowie" with "lotsa high-powered energy".[8]
In the UK, the song entered the Music Week Top 50 the week of 7 July 1973, rose to No. 7, and stayed in the charts for 9 weeks and is one of John`s most critically and commercially successful singles in that country.
In the US, the song entered the Billboard Top 40 the week of 11 August 1973, rose to No. 12, and stayed in the Top 40 for nine weeks. It was the only single by Elton John that failed to make the Top 10 in the three-year, 13-hit period between May 1972 ("Rocket Man") and October 1975 ("Island Girl"). It was the only Elton John single that failed to go gold or platinum in the three-year, 11-hit period between December 1972 ("Crocodile Rock") and October 1975 ("Island Girl").[9]
Despite only being a modest success compared to his other hits, it remains one of his best-known songs as the song has been a staple of John`s live performances for many years,[10] being played more than 1,800 times live (making it one of John`s top ten most performed tracks in his entire discography) as of December 2015.[11]
"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" has been covered by W.A.S.P.,[12] Flotsam and Jetsam, Nickelback (with Kid Rock and Dimebag Darrell), Queen, the Who,[13] and Fall Out Boy.[14] It has also been sampled in the hit "Gloria" by Umberto Tozzi in 1979.[15]
A live performance featuring American recording artist Anastacia was released in 2000 as part of Elton`s live album One Night Only.
All songs written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin
Both B-sides were included later on Rare Masters and issued as bonus tracks on the remastered edition of Don`t Shoot Me I`m Only the Piano Player.
Chart (1973) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[17] | 12 |
Spanish Singles Chart[18] | 21 |
UK Singles Chart[19] | 7 |
US Billboard Hot 100[9] | 12 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
New Zealand (RMNZ)[20] | Platinum | 30,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[21] | Gold | 400,000‡ |
United States (RIAA)[22] | Platinum | 1,000,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" (sometimes written "Saturday Night`s Alright (For Fighting)") is a song originally recorded by English musician Elton John. John composed it with his long-time songwriting partner Bernie Taupin. It was released on John`s best-selling album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (1973) and as the first single. It has been covered by many artists and featured on motion picture, video game, and television soundtracks.
Billboard found the song to be a cross between John`s earlier single "Crocodile Rock" and the Rolling Stones` single "Street Fighting Man", suggesting that it may be a parody of the Rolling Stones but regardless is a "great fun record."[5]
"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" is a lively throwback to early rock and roll with a glam edge. The lyrics discuss a night out in town in which the narrator plans to "get about as oiled as a diesel train". Taupin has said that the song was meant to be an American rock and roll song set in Britain. It was inspired by his raucous teenage days and in particular, the fistfights in his local pub, the Aston Arms in Market Rasen.[6]
The song, which showcases the guitar playing of Davey Johnstone, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin and music by John, is written in the key of G mixolydian alternating with C mixolydian on the chorus. It is one of John`s harder-rocking songs (similar to "Grow Some Funk of Your Own" and "The Bitch Is Back"), with a sound echoing bands such as the Who and the Rolling Stones.
It was the only song recorded during Elton and the band`s time in Jamaica, where they had initially planned to record the album, but was never used due to the poor quality of the recording equipment. John described it as sounding like "it had been recorded on the worst transistor radio." The experience prompted the band to return to France to finish the album.
"Saturday" is one of the most aggressive and lively rock inspired tracks ever recorded by John. It features energetic, rapid-fire piano playing reminiscent of Jerry Lee Lewis. The song was one of the few John-Taupin songs that Elton said was not a "typical piano number". According to John`s recollection in Elizabeth Rosenthal`s His Song: The Musical Journey of Elton John, it may have been written on the piano at first, but the song ended up being recorded somewhat in reverse to the normal way he records, with the band putting their tracks down, and Elton overdubbing his piano afterward. (John`s typical process was to either record the piano first or play along with the band.) Elton called the song "hard to record".
Apart from his lyrical contributions, in the Eagle Vision documentary, Classic Albums: Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Taupin said that a lot of the power of the song comes from the chords, adding it also features what he called one of the greatest "strident, blistering guitar chords ever created" in rock and roll.
The song was released in 1973 as the album`s first single. Cash Box called the song an "infectious rocker that carries `Crocodile Rock` just one step further".[7] Record World called it a "rip-snortin` rocker that is reminiscent of the Stones and Bowie" with "lotsa high-powered energy".[8]
In the UK, the song entered the Music Week Top 50 the week of 7 July 1973, rose to No. 7, and stayed in the charts for 9 weeks and is one of John`s most critically and commercially successful singles in that country.
In the US, the song entered the Billboard Top 40 the week of 11 August 1973, rose to No. 12, and stayed in the Top 40 for nine weeks. It was the only single by Elton John that failed to make the Top 10 in the three-year, 13-hit period between May 1972 ("Rocket Man") and October 1975 ("Island Girl"). It was the only Elton John single that failed to go gold or platinum in the three-year, 11-hit period between December 1972 ("Crocodile Rock") and October 1975 ("Island Girl").[9]
Despite only being a modest success compared to his other hits, it remains one of his best-known songs as the song has been a staple of John`s live performances for many years,[10] being played more than 1,800 times live (making it one of John`s top ten most performed tracks in his entire discography) as of December 2015.[11]
"Saturday Night`s Alright for Fighting" has been covered by W.A.S.P.,[12] Flotsam and Jetsam, Nickelback (with Kid Rock and Dimebag Darrell), Queen, the Who,[13] and Fall Out Boy.[14] It has also been sampled in the hit "Gloria" by Umberto Tozzi in 1979.[15]
A live performance featuring American recording artist Anastacia was released in 2000 as part of Elton`s live album One Night Only.
All songs written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin
Both B-sides were included later on Rare Masters and issued as bonus tracks on the remastered edition of Don`t Shoot Me I`m Only the Piano Player.
Chart (1973) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[17] | 12 |
Spanish Singles Chart[18] | 21 |
UK Singles Chart[19] | 7 |
US Billboard Hot 100[9] | 12 |
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
New Zealand (RMNZ)[20] | Platinum | 30,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[21] | Gold | 400,000‡ |
United States (RIAA)[22] | Platinum | 1,000,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |