"Bennie and the Jets" (also titled "Benny & the Jets") is a song written by English musician Elton John and songwriter Bernie Taupin, and performed by John.[3] The song first appeared on the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album in 1973. "Bennie and the Jets" has been one of John`s most popular songs and was performed during his appearance at Live Aid.
The track was a massive hit in the United States and Canada, released in 1974 as an A-side using the spelling "Bennie". In most territories the track was released as the B-side to "Candle in the Wind", using the spelling "Benny". Album artwork (back-cover track listing and center-panel design) consistently lists the song as "Bennie" while either "Bennie" or "Benny" appears on the vinyl album depending on territory. The track was released as an A-side in the UK in 1976, as "Benny and the Jets".
Leer más
1
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Bennie and the Jets
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1974 /02 /04
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0:00 |
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2
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Harmony
Elton John •
w: Bernie Taupin •
1974 /02 /04
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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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"Bennie and the Jets" | ||||
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Single by Elton John | ||||
from the album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road | ||||
B-side | "Harmony" | |||
Released | 4 February 1974 | |||
Recorded | 1973 | |||
Studio | Château d`Hérouville, France | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 5:23 | |||
Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Gus Dudgeon | |||
Elton John singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Bennie and the Jets" on YouTube |
"Bennie and the Jets" (also titled "Benny & the Jets") is a song written by English musician Elton John and songwriter Bernie Taupin, and performed by John.[3] The song first appeared on the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album in 1973. "Bennie and the Jets" has been one of John`s most popular songs and was performed during his appearance at Live Aid.
The track was a massive hit in the United States and Canada, released in 1974 as an A-side using the spelling "Bennie". In most territories the track was released as the B-side to "Candle in the Wind", using the spelling "Benny". Album artwork (back-cover track listing and center-panel design) consistently lists the song as "Bennie" while either "Bennie" or "Benny" appears on the vinyl album depending on territory. The track was released as an A-side in the UK in 1976, as "Benny and the Jets".
Leer másIt is ranked number 371 on Rolling Stone`s list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[4]
The song tells of "Bennie and the Jets", a fictional band of whom the song`s narrator is a fan. In a 2014 Rolling Stone interview, Taupin said "I saw Bennie and the Jets as a sort of proto-sci-fi punk band, fronted by an androgynous woman, who looks like something out of a Helmut Newton photograph."[5]
Produced by Gus Dudgeon, the song was recorded during the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road sessions in France at Château d`Hérouville`s Strawberry Studios,[6] where John and Taupin had recorded their previous two albums Honky Château and Don`t Shoot Me I`m Only the Piano Player.
When performing the song live, John rarely plays the studio arrangement, and often makes subtle or even drastic changes, sometimes including phrases from Glenn Miller`s "In the Mood" and closing with the five-note combination from John Williams` score for Close Encounters of the Third Kind.[7][better source needed] During his live performances, the piano solo has been played in all sorts of variations, from very close to the original to wildly improvised and extended versions, such as the elaborate version during his Central Park concert in 1980, the version from his 30 June 1984, Wembley Stadium performance and another take on it during the "Elton and his band" part of the show recorded in Sydney, Australia, on 14 December 1986, his last show before his throat surgery in January 1987.[8]
Despite sounding like a live recording, the song was recorded in studio with live sound effects added later. Producer Gus Dudgeon explained:[9]
For some weird reason, Elton happened to have hit the opening piano chord of the song exactly one bar before the song actually started. So I was doing the mix and this chord kept coming on which you normally wouldn`t expect to hear. I turned to engineer [David Hentschel] and I said, `What does that remind you of? … It`s the sort of thing that people do on stage just before they`re going to start a song.` Just to kind of get everybody, `Okay, here we go, ready?` For some reason that chord being there made me think, `Maybe we should fake-live this.`
Dudgeon mixed in sounds from a 1972 performance by John at the Royal Festival Hall and a 1970 Jimi Hendrix concert on the Isle of Wight.[10] He included a series of whistles from a live concert in Vancouver, and added hand claps and various shouts.[11]
The song was the closing track on side one of the double album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, and John was set against releasing it as a single, believing it would fail. CKLW in Windsor, Ontario, began heavy airplay of the song and it became the No. 1 song in the Detroit market.[12] This attention caused other American and Canadian Top 40 stations to add it to their playlists as well. As a result, the song peaked at No. 1 on the US singles chart in 1974. In the US, it was certified Gold on 8 April 1974 and Platinum on 13 September 1995 by the RIAA,[13] and had sold 2.8 million copies by August 1976.[14]
Cash Box said that "the song is a strong one and worth every second of its 5:10."[15] Record World said that "With Elton showcasing his remarkable voice range, it can`t miss grabbing the top spot."[16]
"Bennie and the Jets" was John`s first Top 40 hit on what at the time was called the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart, where it peaked at No. 15, the highest position out of the three of his singles which reached that chart.[17] The acceptance of "Bennie" on R&B radio helped land John, a huge soul music fan, a guest appearance on 17 May 1975 edition of Soul Train, where he played "Bennie and the Jets" and "Philadelphia Freedom". In Canada, it held the No. 1 spot on the RPM national singles chart for two weeks (13–20 April), becoming his first No. 1 single of 1974 and his fourth overall.[18][19]
In May 2017, the music video for "Bennie and the Jets" premiered at the Cannes Film Festival as a winner of Elton John: The Cut, a competition organised in partnership with AKQA, Pulse Films, and YouTube in honour of the fiftieth anniversary of his songwriting relationship with Bernie Taupin. The competition called upon independent filmmakers to submit treatments for music videos for one of three Elton John songs from the 1970s, with each song falling within a specific concept category. "Bennie and the Jets" was designated for the choreography category, and was directed by Jack Whiteley and Laura Brownhill. The video was influenced by early cinema and the work of Busby Berkeley, portraying characters as participants on a talent show auditioning for Bennie.[20][21]
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
All-time charts
Certifications
|
The song contains the line "She`s got electric boots, a mohair suit", which is often misheard as "She`s got electric boobs, and mohair shoes".[44] A scene in the film 27 Dresses shows that this is but one of many mondegreens that listeners have invented for this song.[45]
"Bennie and the Jets" (also titled "Benny & the Jets") is a song written by English musician Elton John and songwriter Bernie Taupin, and performed by John.[3] The song first appeared on the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album in 1973. "Bennie and the Jets" has been one of John`s most popular songs and was performed during his appearance at Live Aid.
The track was a massive hit in the United States and Canada, released in 1974 as an A-side using the spelling "Bennie". In most territories the track was released as the B-side to "Candle in the Wind", using the spelling "Benny". Album artwork (back-cover track listing and center-panel design) consistently lists the song as "Bennie" while either "Bennie" or "Benny" appears on the vinyl album depending on territory. The track was released as an A-side in the UK in 1976, as "Benny and the Jets".
It is ranked number 371 on Rolling Stone`s list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[4]
The song tells of "Bennie and the Jets", a fictional band of whom the song`s narrator is a fan. In a 2014 Rolling Stone interview, Taupin said "I saw Bennie and the Jets as a sort of proto-sci-fi punk band, fronted by an androgynous woman, who looks like something out of a Helmut Newton photograph."[5]
Produced by Gus Dudgeon, the song was recorded during the Goodbye Yellow Brick Road sessions in France at Château d`Hérouville`s Strawberry Studios,[6] where John and Taupin had recorded their previous two albums Honky Château and Don`t Shoot Me I`m Only the Piano Player.
When performing the song live, John rarely plays the studio arrangement, and often makes subtle or even drastic changes, sometimes including phrases from Glenn Miller`s "In the Mood" and closing with the five-note combination from John Williams` score for Close Encounters of the Third Kind.[7][better source needed] During his live performances, the piano solo has been played in all sorts of variations, from very close to the original to wildly improvised and extended versions, such as the elaborate version during his Central Park concert in 1980, the version from his 30 June 1984, Wembley Stadium performance and another take on it during the "Elton and his band" part of the show recorded in Sydney, Australia, on 14 December 1986, his last show before his throat surgery in January 1987.[8]
Despite sounding like a live recording, the song was recorded in studio with live sound effects added later. Producer Gus Dudgeon explained:[9]
For some weird reason, Elton happened to have hit the opening piano chord of the song exactly one bar before the song actually started. So I was doing the mix and this chord kept coming on which you normally wouldn`t expect to hear. I turned to engineer [David Hentschel] and I said, `What does that remind you of? … It`s the sort of thing that people do on stage just before they`re going to start a song.` Just to kind of get everybody, `Okay, here we go, ready?` For some reason that chord being there made me think, `Maybe we should fake-live this.`
Dudgeon mixed in sounds from a 1972 performance by John at the Royal Festival Hall and a 1970 Jimi Hendrix concert on the Isle of Wight.[10] He included a series of whistles from a live concert in Vancouver, and added hand claps and various shouts.[11]
The song was the closing track on side one of the double album Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, and John was set against releasing it as a single, believing it would fail. CKLW in Windsor, Ontario, began heavy airplay of the song and it became the No. 1 song in the Detroit market.[12] This attention caused other American and Canadian Top 40 stations to add it to their playlists as well. As a result, the song peaked at No. 1 on the US singles chart in 1974. In the US, it was certified Gold on 8 April 1974 and Platinum on 13 September 1995 by the RIAA,[13] and had sold 2.8 million copies by August 1976.[14]
Cash Box said that "the song is a strong one and worth every second of its 5:10."[15] Record World said that "With Elton showcasing his remarkable voice range, it can`t miss grabbing the top spot."[16]
"Bennie and the Jets" was John`s first Top 40 hit on what at the time was called the Billboard Hot Soul Singles chart, where it peaked at No. 15, the highest position out of the three of his singles which reached that chart.[17] The acceptance of "Bennie" on R&B radio helped land John, a huge soul music fan, a guest appearance on 17 May 1975 edition of Soul Train, where he played "Bennie and the Jets" and "Philadelphia Freedom". In Canada, it held the No. 1 spot on the RPM national singles chart for two weeks (13–20 April), becoming his first No. 1 single of 1974 and his fourth overall.[18][19]
In May 2017, the music video for "Bennie and the Jets" premiered at the Cannes Film Festival as a winner of Elton John: The Cut, a competition organised in partnership with AKQA, Pulse Films, and YouTube in honour of the fiftieth anniversary of his songwriting relationship with Bernie Taupin. The competition called upon independent filmmakers to submit treatments for music videos for one of three Elton John songs from the 1970s, with each song falling within a specific concept category. "Bennie and the Jets" was designated for the choreography category, and was directed by Jack Whiteley and Laura Brownhill. The video was influenced by early cinema and the work of Busby Berkeley, portraying characters as participants on a talent show auditioning for Bennie.[20][21]
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
All-time charts
Certifications
|
The song contains the line "She`s got electric boots, a mohair suit", which is often misheard as "She`s got electric boobs, and mohair shoes".[44] A scene in the film 27 Dresses shows that this is but one of many mondegreens that listeners have invented for this song.[45]