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Videos Album: Peachtree Road2004

Peachtree Road
Studio album by
Released9 November 2004
RecordedJanuary 2004
StudioTree Studios (Atlanta, Georgia)
The Record Plant (Los Angeles, California)
Silent Sound (Atlanta, Georgia)
GenrePop rock
Length52:01
Label
ProducerElton John
Elton John chronology
Remixed
(2003)
Peachtree Road
(2004)
The Captain & the Kid
(2006)
Singles from Peachtree Road
  1. "Answer in the Sky"
    Released: 2004 (only in North America)
  2. "All That I`m Allowed"
    Released: December 2004 (first single outside North America)
  3. "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave"
    Released: 2005
Singles from Peachtree Road [2005 CD reissue]
  1. "Electricity"
    Released: 2005

No videos available

Peachtree Road

  • Fecha Lanzamiento: 9 Noviembre 2004 · Fecha Grabación: Enero 2004 -
    Discográfica: Universal (US) Rocket (UK) · Estudio de grabación: Tree Studios (Atlanta, Georgia) The Record Plant (Los Angeles, California) Silent Sound (Atlanta, Georgia) · Productor: Elton John

    2004 studio album by Elton John

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic70/100[1]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[2]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[3]
    Entertainment Weekly(B-)[4]
    Los Angeles Times[5]
    The Guardian[6]

    Peachtree Road is the twenty-seventh studio album by English musician Elton John, released on 9 November 2004. The album was named after Peachtree Road, the northern part of Peachtree Street in Atlanta, where one of John`s four homes is located. This is the only album during his long career on which John has sole credit as producer, although on some previous projects he was listed as a co-producer, with Clive Franks (on A Single Man, 21 at 33 and parts of The Fox), or Greg Penny (on Duets and Made in England). It was recorded in January 2004.[7]

    Leer más

    Review

    2004 studio album by Elton John

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic70/100[1]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[2]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[3]
    Entertainment Weekly(B-)[4]
    Los Angeles Times[5]
    The Guardian[6]

    Peachtree Road is the twenty-seventh studio album by English musician Elton John, released on 9 November 2004. The album was named after Peachtree Road, the northern part of Peachtree Street in Atlanta, where one of John`s four homes is located. This is the only album during his long career on which John has sole credit as producer, although on some previous projects he was listed as a co-producer, with Clive Franks (on A Single Man, 21 at 33 and parts of The Fox), or Greg Penny (on Duets and Made in England). It was recorded in January 2004.[7]

    Leer más

    Despite its generally positive reviews, Peachtree Road was one of John`s lowest-selling contemporary efforts, reaching No. 17 on the US Billboard 200 upon its release, yet only managing No. 21 on the UK Albums Chart, making it one of his rare albums to miss the top ten in his homeland. In the US, it was certified gold in December 2004 by the RIAA. It debuted at No. 12 in Denmark in November 2004, its highest chart placing in that country and peaked at No. 11 in Switzerland.

    Background

    In addition to Nigel Olsson playing drums on all tracks, once again a permanent member of John`s touring and recording Elton John Band, the album features renowned gospel vocalist Adam McKnight, as well as members of Chicago Walter Parazaider, James Pankow and Lee Loughnane contributing horns and brass arrangements. Guy Babylon was credited with playing Hammond organ and Rhodes piano instead of keyboards, which was the case on earlier albums. John Jorgenson, a member of John`s band from 1995 to 2000, plays pedal steel guitar on "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave".

    The album was dedicated to the memory of Gus and Sheila Dudgeon, John`s original producer and his wife, who were killed in a car accident in 2002.[8] It was re-released in July 2005 with three bonus tracks from Billy Elliot the Musical, as well as a DVD featuring nine tracks from the album performed live in Atlanta. The song "Electricity" from the musical was also released as a single in June 2005. It rose to No. 4 on the UK singles chart.

    Some editions of the album included as a bonus two videos for the two first singles ("Answer in the Sky" and "All That I`m Allowed"). Songs from the album debuted at the Tabernacle in Atlanta in early November. John also performed at the November 2005 Country Music Association Awards, televised live from Madison Square Garden, duetting with Dolly Parton on "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave" and a cover of John Lennon`s "Imagine".

    Album cover

    The album art on the front cover is a photograph of a railroad crossing in Pinehurst, Georgia[9] taken by London photographer Sam Taylor-Wood.Taken in by the American South and given complete artistic freedom, she shot thousands of photos during her week-long trip. The trip included other towns like Unadilla and Forsyth in Georgia. While she also visited Peachtree Road in the Buckhead area of Atlanta, she thought it was too busy for the album`s more mellow nature. She picked several photos to present to him, and John made the final selection. Other photos from the shoot appear on the back of the album cover and in the included CD and SACD booklet.

    Singles

    • "Answer in the Sky" was picked as the first single from the album and was only released in North America, reaching No. 7 on the Adult Contemporary chart. The song ended John`s streak of hitting the Top 10 on that chart as a solo performer. John still charted there, however after this song his singles only reached the Top 20. This song became John`s most recent single on the AC chart to reach the Top 10 in 17 years until 2021`s "Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)" featuring Dua Lipa,[10][11] which peaked at No. 1 (originally No. 5). The music video of the song, directed by David LaChapelle, features professional dancers dancing in different places built on the studio.[12]
    • "All That I`m Allowed", the first single released outside North America. It reached No. 20 in the UK singles chart[13][14] and No. 24 on the US Adult Contemporary Chart. The music video features different people in their respective states, emphasizing the message and meaning of this song.[15]
    • "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave" was the last single released from the album, it reached No. 32 in the UK singles chart.[16] The music video, directed by Sam Taylor-Wood, was shot outside Los Angeles and features Thomas Jane and Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher with John as a piano player in the background, performing this song.[17]

    Track listing

    All tracks are written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, except where noted

    No.TitleLength
    1."Weight of the World"3:58
    2."Porch Swing in Tupelo"4:38
    3."Answer in the Sky"4:03
    4."Turn the Lights Out When You Leave"5:02
    5."My Elusive Drug"4:12
    6."They Call Her the Cat"4:27
    7."Freaks in Love"4:32
    8."All That I`m Allowed"4:52
    9."I Stop and I Breathe"3:39
    10."Too Many Tears"4:14
    11."It`s Getting Dark in Here"3:50
    12."I Can`t Keep This from You"4:34
    Total length:52:01

    Bonus tracks (2005 CD reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    13."The Letter" (Lyrics: Lee Hall)2:33
    14."Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher" (Lyrics: Hall)3:38
    15."Electricity" (Lyrics: Hall)3:29
    Total length:61:41

    Bonus DVD (2005 reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Weight of the World"
    2."Porch Swing in Tupelo"
    3."Answer in the Sky"
    4."Turn the Lights Out When You Leave"
    5."My Elusive Drug"
    6."They Call Her the Cat"
    7."Freaks in Love"
    8."All That I`m Allowed"
    9."I Can`t Keep This from You"

    Notes

    • Track 8 was titled "All That I`m Allowed" on the original 2004 release of the album but was titled "All That I`m Allowed (I`m Thankful)" on the 2005 expanded edition.
    • All tracks on the DVD recorded live at The Tabernacle, Atlanta (November 2004).

    Personnel

    Musicians

    • Elton John – lead vocals, acoustic piano, backing vocals (1, 3, 4, 6–8, 10, 12), Rhodes piano (10)
    • Guy Babylon – programming, orchestral arrangements (1–5, 7–12), Hammond organ (2–9, 11, 12), Rhodes piano (6–9, 11)
    • Davey Johnstone – electric guitar, acoustic guitar (1–4, 7–9, 11, 12), dobro (1, 2, 6, 10), backing vocals (1, 5, 10), baritone guitar (3, 6), slide guitar (3, 5, 10), Leslie guitar (5), sitar (8), mandolin (10)
    • John Jorgenson – pedal steel guitar (4)
    • Bob Birch – bass, backing vocals (1, 5, 10)
    • Nigel Olsson – drums, backing vocals (1, 5, 10, 11)
    • John Mahon – percussion, backing vocals (1, 5, 10), programming (9, 11)
    • Larry Klimas – baritone saxophone (6)
    • Walter Parazaider – tenor saxophone (6)
    • James Pankow – trombone (6), horn arrangements (6)
    • Lee Loughnane – trumpet (6)
    • Martin Tillman – electric cello (10)

    Orchestra (tracks 1–5, 7–12)

    • Steve Erodody and Martin Tillman – cello
    • Brian Dembrow, Vicki Miskolczy, Simon Oswell and Jimbo Ross – viola
    • Charlie Bisharat, Joel Derouin, Bruce Dukow, Endre Granat, Eric Hosler, Dimitrie Leiviachi, Phillip Levy, Robin Olson, Sid Page, Mark Robinson, Anatoly Rosinsky and Lisa Sutton – violin

    Choir vocals

    • Charles Bullock (2, 7–9, 11, 12)
    • Terrence Davis (2, 6–9, 11, 12)
    • Todd Honeycutt (2, 6)
    • Adam McKnight (2, 6–9, 11, 12)
    • Rosalind McKnight (2, 3, 6)
    • L`Tanya Shields (2, 3, 6)
    • M. Denise Sims (2, 3, 6)
    • Alecia Terry (2, 3, 6)
    • Mark Ford (6–9, 11, 12)

    Production

    • Produced by Elton John
    • Engineered and mixed by Matt Still
    • Assistant engineers – Jason Carson, John Holmes, Josh McDonnell, Josh "Frodo" Monroy, Rob Skipworth and Tom Tapley
    • Mixed at Right Track Recording (New York, NY)
    • Mastered by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering (Portland, ME)
    • Keyboard technicians – Tony Smith and Dale Sticha
    • Guitar technician – Rick Salazar
    • Drum technician – Chris Sobchack
    • Photography – Sam Taylor-Wood
    • Design – Intro

    Charts

    Chart performance for Peachtree Road

    Chart (2004–2005)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (ARIA)[18]

    44

    Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[19]

    27

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[20]

    84

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[21]

    74

    Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[22]

    12

    Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[23]

    97

    French Albums (SNEP)[24]

    63

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[25]

    31

    Italian Albums (FIMI)[26]

    25

    New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[27]

    34

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[28]

    16

    Scottish Albums (OCC)[29]

    28

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[30]

    38

    Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[31]

    11

    UK Albums (OCC)[32]

    21

    US Billboard 200[33]

    17

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[34]

    Gold

    20,000^

    Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[35]

    Gold

    20,000^

    United Kingdom (BPI)[36]

    Gold

    100,000^

    United States (RIAA)[37]

    Gold

    500,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    2004 studio album by Elton John

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic70/100[1]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[2]
    The Encyclopedia of Popular Music[3]
    Entertainment Weekly(B-)[4]
    Los Angeles Times[5]
    The Guardian[6]

    Peachtree Road is the twenty-seventh studio album by English musician Elton John, released on 9 November 2004. The album was named after Peachtree Road, the northern part of Peachtree Street in Atlanta, where one of John`s four homes is located. This is the only album during his long career on which John has sole credit as producer, although on some previous projects he was listed as a co-producer, with Clive Franks (on A Single Man, 21 at 33 and parts of The Fox), or Greg Penny (on Duets and Made in England). It was recorded in January 2004.[7]

    Despite its generally positive reviews, Peachtree Road was one of John`s lowest-selling contemporary efforts, reaching No. 17 on the US Billboard 200 upon its release, yet only managing No. 21 on the UK Albums Chart, making it one of his rare albums to miss the top ten in his homeland. In the US, it was certified gold in December 2004 by the RIAA. It debuted at No. 12 in Denmark in November 2004, its highest chart placing in that country and peaked at No. 11 in Switzerland.

    Background

    In addition to Nigel Olsson playing drums on all tracks, once again a permanent member of John`s touring and recording Elton John Band, the album features renowned gospel vocalist Adam McKnight, as well as members of Chicago Walter Parazaider, James Pankow and Lee Loughnane contributing horns and brass arrangements. Guy Babylon was credited with playing Hammond organ and Rhodes piano instead of keyboards, which was the case on earlier albums. John Jorgenson, a member of John`s band from 1995 to 2000, plays pedal steel guitar on "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave".

    The album was dedicated to the memory of Gus and Sheila Dudgeon, John`s original producer and his wife, who were killed in a car accident in 2002.[8] It was re-released in July 2005 with three bonus tracks from Billy Elliot the Musical, as well as a DVD featuring nine tracks from the album performed live in Atlanta. The song "Electricity" from the musical was also released as a single in June 2005. It rose to No. 4 on the UK singles chart.

    Some editions of the album included as a bonus two videos for the two first singles ("Answer in the Sky" and "All That I`m Allowed"). Songs from the album debuted at the Tabernacle in Atlanta in early November. John also performed at the November 2005 Country Music Association Awards, televised live from Madison Square Garden, duetting with Dolly Parton on "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave" and a cover of John Lennon`s "Imagine".

    Album cover

    The album art on the front cover is a photograph of a railroad crossing in Pinehurst, Georgia[9] taken by London photographer Sam Taylor-Wood.Taken in by the American South and given complete artistic freedom, she shot thousands of photos during her week-long trip. The trip included other towns like Unadilla and Forsyth in Georgia. While she also visited Peachtree Road in the Buckhead area of Atlanta, she thought it was too busy for the album`s more mellow nature. She picked several photos to present to him, and John made the final selection. Other photos from the shoot appear on the back of the album cover and in the included CD and SACD booklet.

    Singles

    • "Answer in the Sky" was picked as the first single from the album and was only released in North America, reaching No. 7 on the Adult Contemporary chart. The song ended John`s streak of hitting the Top 10 on that chart as a solo performer. John still charted there, however after this song his singles only reached the Top 20. This song became John`s most recent single on the AC chart to reach the Top 10 in 17 years until 2021`s "Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)" featuring Dua Lipa,[10][11] which peaked at No. 1 (originally No. 5). The music video of the song, directed by David LaChapelle, features professional dancers dancing in different places built on the studio.[12]
    • "All That I`m Allowed", the first single released outside North America. It reached No. 20 in the UK singles chart[13][14] and No. 24 on the US Adult Contemporary Chart. The music video features different people in their respective states, emphasizing the message and meaning of this song.[15]
    • "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave" was the last single released from the album, it reached No. 32 in the UK singles chart.[16] The music video, directed by Sam Taylor-Wood, was shot outside Los Angeles and features Thomas Jane and Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher with John as a piano player in the background, performing this song.[17]

    Track listing

    All tracks are written by Elton John and Bernie Taupin, except where noted

    No.TitleLength
    1."Weight of the World"3:58
    2."Porch Swing in Tupelo"4:38
    3."Answer in the Sky"4:03
    4."Turn the Lights Out When You Leave"5:02
    5."My Elusive Drug"4:12
    6."They Call Her the Cat"4:27
    7."Freaks in Love"4:32
    8."All That I`m Allowed"4:52
    9."I Stop and I Breathe"3:39
    10."Too Many Tears"4:14
    11."It`s Getting Dark in Here"3:50
    12."I Can`t Keep This from You"4:34
    Total length:52:01

    Bonus tracks (2005 CD reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    13."The Letter" (Lyrics: Lee Hall)2:33
    14."Merry Christmas Maggie Thatcher" (Lyrics: Hall)3:38
    15."Electricity" (Lyrics: Hall)3:29
    Total length:61:41

    Bonus DVD (2005 reissue)
    No.TitleLength
    1."Weight of the World"
    2."Porch Swing in Tupelo"
    3."Answer in the Sky"
    4."Turn the Lights Out When You Leave"
    5."My Elusive Drug"
    6."They Call Her the Cat"
    7."Freaks in Love"
    8."All That I`m Allowed"
    9."I Can`t Keep This from You"

    Notes

    • Track 8 was titled "All That I`m Allowed" on the original 2004 release of the album but was titled "All That I`m Allowed (I`m Thankful)" on the 2005 expanded edition.
    • All tracks on the DVD recorded live at The Tabernacle, Atlanta (November 2004).

    Personnel

    Musicians

    • Elton John – lead vocals, acoustic piano, backing vocals (1, 3, 4, 6–8, 10, 12), Rhodes piano (10)
    • Guy Babylon – programming, orchestral arrangements (1–5, 7–12), Hammond organ (2–9, 11, 12), Rhodes piano (6–9, 11)
    • Davey Johnstone – electric guitar, acoustic guitar (1–4, 7–9, 11, 12), dobro (1, 2, 6, 10), backing vocals (1, 5, 10), baritone guitar (3, 6), slide guitar (3, 5, 10), Leslie guitar (5), sitar (8), mandolin (10)
    • John Jorgenson – pedal steel guitar (4)
    • Bob Birch – bass, backing vocals (1, 5, 10)
    • Nigel Olsson – drums, backing vocals (1, 5, 10, 11)
    • John Mahon – percussion, backing vocals (1, 5, 10), programming (9, 11)
    • Larry Klimas – baritone saxophone (6)
    • Walter Parazaider – tenor saxophone (6)
    • James Pankow – trombone (6), horn arrangements (6)
    • Lee Loughnane – trumpet (6)
    • Martin Tillman – electric cello (10)

    Orchestra (tracks 1–5, 7–12)

    • Steve Erodody and Martin Tillman – cello
    • Brian Dembrow, Vicki Miskolczy, Simon Oswell and Jimbo Ross – viola
    • Charlie Bisharat, Joel Derouin, Bruce Dukow, Endre Granat, Eric Hosler, Dimitrie Leiviachi, Phillip Levy, Robin Olson, Sid Page, Mark Robinson, Anatoly Rosinsky and Lisa Sutton – violin

    Choir vocals

    • Charles Bullock (2, 7–9, 11, 12)
    • Terrence Davis (2, 6–9, 11, 12)
    • Todd Honeycutt (2, 6)
    • Adam McKnight (2, 6–9, 11, 12)
    • Rosalind McKnight (2, 3, 6)
    • L`Tanya Shields (2, 3, 6)
    • M. Denise Sims (2, 3, 6)
    • Alecia Terry (2, 3, 6)
    • Mark Ford (6–9, 11, 12)

    Production

    • Produced by Elton John
    • Engineered and mixed by Matt Still
    • Assistant engineers – Jason Carson, John Holmes, Josh McDonnell, Josh "Frodo" Monroy, Rob Skipworth and Tom Tapley
    • Mixed at Right Track Recording (New York, NY)
    • Mastered by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering (Portland, ME)
    • Keyboard technicians – Tony Smith and Dale Sticha
    • Guitar technician – Rick Salazar
    • Drum technician – Chris Sobchack
    • Photography – Sam Taylor-Wood
    • Design – Intro

    Charts

    Chart performance for Peachtree Road

    Chart (2004–2005)

    Peak
    position

    Australian Albums (ARIA)[18]

    44

    Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[19]

    27

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[20]

    84

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[21]

    74

    Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[22]

    12

    Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[23]

    97

    French Albums (SNEP)[24]

    63

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[25]

    31

    Italian Albums (FIMI)[26]

    25

    New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[27]

    34

    Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[28]

    16

    Scottish Albums (OCC)[29]

    28

    Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[30]

    38

    Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[31]

    11

    UK Albums (OCC)[32]

    21

    US Billboard 200[33]

    17

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[34]

    Gold

    20,000^

    Switzerland (IFPI Switzerland)[35]

    Gold

    20,000^

    United Kingdom (BPI)[36]

    Gold

    100,000^

    United States (RIAA)[37]

    Gold

    500,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    Albums