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The Diving Board Deluxe w/ Exclusive Vintage Troubadour Poster

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 859 ratings

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Editorial Reviews

Deluxe CD with 19 tracks, Amazon Exclusive 11x17 fold in poster An homage to Eltons first US tour in 1970,
3 bonus new live tracks from Eltons performance at the Capitol Studios in Hollywood CA, 1 bonus studio track from The Diving Board sessions

Elton Johns The Diving Board, is his first studio album in seven years Produced by T Bone Burnett, the album features 12 new songs written by Elton and his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin, as well as three piano interludes composed by the artist.

The Diving Board returns Elton John to the piano, bass and drums lineup that marked the artists introduction to worldwide audiences more than 40 years ago. As Elton explains, In many ways, I feel like Im starting again, making records. Several years ago when beginning to work with T Bone and being in the studio with Leon Russell for The Union, I had to ask myself, What kind of music do I really want to make?, and I realized that I had to go back to go forward again. I needed to strip away the excesses and get back to the core of what I do as an artist. That s what The Diving Board represents. The Diving Board is the album Ive been waiting to make for decades. According to producer T Bone Burnett, The Diving Board is an album of music by a master at the peak of his artistic powers.

Deluxe CD with 19 tracks
3 bonus new live tracks from Eltons performance at the Capitol Studios in Hollywood CA
1 bonus studio track from The Diving Board sessions
Amazon Exclusive 11x17 fold in poster An homage to Eltons first US tour in 1970

Product details

  • Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4 x 3.4 x 1 inches; 3.53 ounces
  • Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Capitol Records (Universal)
  • Item model number ‏ : ‎ B00DJZR4A2
  • Date First Available ‏ : ‎ June 23, 2013
  • Label ‏ : ‎ Capitol Records (Universal)
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00DJZR4A2
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 859 ratings

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4.4 out of 5 stars
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2013
    The Diving Board is not Elton John's "first record" since The Captain and the Kid in 2006. He released a CD called The Union with Leon Russell - produced by T Bone Burnett - just three years ago. Although it was not a "solo" Elton John effort, it was as much an Elton John album as anything else he's released in his career, even if he shared top billing with his hero and mentor of 40-plus years ago. EJ co-wrote and played piano on almost all of the songs, and sang lead or backing vocals on all but one track.

    As for The Diving Board, it was controversial before anyone had heard a note. Some fans were apoplectic that Elton's excellent and versatile touring band, headed by longtime EJ guitarist Davey Johnstone, was left off the new work. Fans furiously pointed fingers at T Bone Burnett, the producer on this, his second project with the Rocket Man. "Burnett is a musical tyrant!" protested some Elton John devotees on social media sites. "He is a bad, bad man who doesn't understand Elton's music!" I'm paraphrasing, but you get the idea.

    The truth is that T Bone Burnett deserves a medal for drawing out the real Elton John on this recording. Burnett told Elton before they started that he'd like to see the Pinner native go back to basics. Not just back to basic rock, or back to organic music without synths and click-tracks, but a piano-bass-drums set-up, like Elton's touring band of 1970-71, which featured Nigel Olsson on drums and Dee Murray on bass. Burnett attended one of Elton's historic Troubadour concerts in Los Angeles the week of August 25, 1970, the series of shows which made EJ a star, as they say, overnight. As Elton enthusiasts know, his trio floored jaded, music industry heavies. Elton, with his voice and piano in the forefront, amazed his audience without special effects or gimmicks. He didn't even dress up (much) for this gig. With Nigel and Dee, he simply brought his songs to life through ingenious musicianship, and the sort of breast-beating vigor he still summons today, at age 66.

    So T Bone Burnett now gives us the real Elton, the unadorned Elton, the barely accompanied Elton, the Elton who has not an unmusical cell in his body. His lyricist of 46 years, Bernie Taupin (who now prefers to be known as a "storyteller"), once remarked, "Elton is the most musical person I've ever met. It vibrates from him." And those vibrations sent tremors that shook the recording studio; T Bone welcomed them, nurtured them, captured them - in analog - and now it is our privilege to let them settle into our generally unmusical lives, bringing us joy, tears and plenty of tingly moments.

    Elton has played piano on all of his albums, with the exception of the Complete Thom Bell Sessions (released in 1989 but dating from 1977) and the unfortunate 1979 disco release, Victim of Love. He has titillated us, made us laugh, got us dancing, or made us mourn with that piano. But compared to The Diving Board, Elton's other albums seem almost devoid of piano, seem like aural adaptations of the "Where's Waldo" game:

    "Where's Elton?"

    Past producers, including, occasionally, Elton himself, have more often than not treated his piano as just part of the band. An electric guitar or saxophone solo was perhaps likelier than a piano interlude in the middle of any given recording. Sometimes, even when you knew the piano was there, it was barely audible.

    Elton chose noted bass guitarist Raphael Saadiq for the Diving Board sessions. Jay Bellerose on drums, who played on The Union, completes the trio. Other instruments enter the recording unobtrusively, like a garnish or brush of color. Luka Sulic and Stjepan Hauser, the two members of 2Cellos, who have toured with Elton as well as on their own, make their strings purr in spots. For a couple of songs, the twang of a pedal steel hovers shyly in the air. Horns slide in warmly a few times. Backing vocalists join here and there. Otherwise, it's just Elton and the keys.

    It's evident on The Diving Board that T Bone pushed or encouraged Elton to be, in the recording studio, what he is onstage - a master of keyboard improvisation, a vocal powerhouse. Burnett gives us the Elton of the deep, lower register, that sexy lower register heard only sparingly on latter-day recordings. On The Diving Board, it dominates, especially on "Oscar Wilde Gets Out," "My Quicksand," "Home Again" and the title track, "The Diving Board."

    Taupin has come through with possibly the most exciting set of lyrics - or stories - he's handed Elton in many years, if not ever. There is a knowingness in Taupin's words, from having actually lived life, that is missing from much of his most famous word-paintings, since, as a young man, he was largely writing not from life, but from books and his mind's eye. With his increased insight come lines and imagery of special elegance.

    Peeling away the layers that have hidden Elton's genius in varying degrees for far too long, T Bone gives us the complete music man, as close to unvarnished as possible, as Captain Fantastic animates Taupin's words in an Elton John album like no other, the least commercial of his career, and the most daring.

    Now we turn to the songs.

    Oceans Away: This track, a gorgeously elegiac album-opener, featuring just piano and voice, is a vastly superior update of Tumbleweed Connection's "Talking Old Soldiers" (1971). In "Oceans Away," Taupin seems to have spent real time with nonagenarian World War Two vets reminiscing about "those that flew, those that fell, the ones that had to stay, beneath a little wooden cross, oceans away."

    Oscar Wilde Gets Out: The noted 19th century Irish writer - his most familiar work being The Picture of Dorian Grey - who was imprisoned in England for being gay and, just a few years after his release, died in Paris, young (only 46), miserable and destitute, comes alive in this dramatic track. Elton's music takes several gut-wrenching turns, leaving the listener emotionally spent by the end. On this and several other tracks, Funk Brother Jack Ashford's percussion block, most famously heard in Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On," comes through, as lonely and haunting as the echoing clank of a prisoner's ball and chain.

    A Town Called Jubilee: What is this song about? A farm family made homeless by foreclosure, moving to a better place, a new town serving as their "jubilee"? Or have they passed to the Great Beyond? It's hard to say. But the rustic setting, a junk-filled yard, auctioneers playing cards, and an old black dog are gently swept along in Elton's pleasing tide of jazzy, gospel chord progressions, with a bit of bluegrass guitar politely asserting itself in the background.

    The Ballad of Blind Tom: This tells the true story of Blind Tom Wiggins, a sightless, autistic African-American, first a slave and then barely free, who brought fame to himself and fortune to his one-time owner as a piano-playing wizard, entertaining VIPs across America and Europe. "I may be an idiot/I may be a savant/I didn't choose this life for me/But it's somethin' that I want." Elton's driving, classically-tinged playing suggests a performance by Blind Tom himself.

    Dream # 1: The first of three brief, piano instrumentals, which Elton improvised in one take, this serves, wittingly or not, as the perfect outro to "Blind Tom," with its clever integration of antebellum melodicism and Jim Crow-era ragtime.

    My Quicksand: An unlucky person laments getting sucked into a life-draining relationship. "My quicksand/Welcome to my final stand/I went to Paris once/I thought I had a plan/I woke up with an accent/I wound up in quicksand." Elton sings theatrically, but in a 1950s torch song sort of way. He is wry, regretful, a nearly-willing victim. A smoky, jazz piano break, caressed by Jay Bellerose's intimate drum brush, is the romantic slow dance. But descending chords emulate the fatal scene in which the protagonist is swallowed whole.

    Can't Stay Alone Tonight: This is the best country song the John/Taupin songwriting team has ever composed. In its witty sophistication and friendly, down-home imagery, it outdoes `em all: "Country Comfort," "Texan Love Song," "Dixie Lily," "Turn the Lights Out When You Leave." They are all plebeian efforts next to this one. Toby Keith, George Strait, take note. You could learn a thing or two. "Can't Stay Alone Tonight" makes you want to get out your cowboy boots and ten-gallon hat, even if you don't have any, and find the nearest country dance hall, even if you don't live near one. "Things have to change/And they might," Elton sings brightly over his rollicking country piano licks. And you believe it.

    Voyeur: This is the cream of a very abundant crop, the song worth the CD purchase price all by itself. You wouldn't think that a mid-tempo ballad about voyeurism would literally grab you by the collar, shake you up and leave you sprawling in a strangely seductive back alley, but that's what this song does. Is it about a pervert who gets his jollies sneaking glimpses of embracing lovers through a keyhole or from behind a curtain? Is it about government spying? Either way, you'll love every minute of it, every titillating melodic turn. Have a warm compress handy if you need calming afterward.

    Home Again: The moving first radio single from the album, it is a mini-epic, a five-minute cinematic, anguished longing for home, for the past, for whatever it is that makes one feel that need to return to one's roots. It's sad - thus, bluesy - and Elton's sweeping piano chords wash the song in symphonic tones. "We all dream of leaving/But wind up in the end/Spending all our time trying to get back home again."

    Take This Dirty Water: The simplest song of the bunch, it's an infectious, straight-up African-American gospel ditty with cheerful, staccato expressions on the blacks-and-whites, a churchy, muscle-flexing lead vocal and a mischievous back-up chorus of oo-hoos, all of which put a broad smile on your face well before the end.

    Dream # 2: Elton's second instrumental, slightly longer than the first, full of classical introspection, forms the perfect introduction to the next song.

    The New Fever Waltz: Some may notice a faint resemblance here to "Grandma's Song" in Elton's West End theatrical smash, Billy Elliot: The Musical, but it's really a gripping update of "Where To Now, St. Peter?" the fan favorite from Tumbleweed Connection. Instead of taking a "blue canoe" to the world beyond this mortal coil, as do the U.S. Civil War dead in "St. Peter," we join a World War One cavalry soldier, dying from the flu or some other untreatable infection in that pre-penicillin age ("I was shaking with a fever/When the last good horse went down"). He glides from this life in graceful waltz steps ("Shaking with a fever/Before the white flag flew/And the ballroom opened up to us and the dancers danced on through"). It's impossible not to tear up.

    Mexican Vacation (Kids in the Candlelight): After the consummated tragedy of "The New Fever Waltz," one gladly joins Elton on a fierce, blues-inflected boogie-woogie kick through a pending societal shift. Whether referring to young, would-be beneficiaries of the DREAM Act (the U.S. immigration bill languishing in Congress), or Occupy Wall Street activists, or a procession of Wide-Awakes during the 1860 presidential campaign, "Mexican Vacation" gives EJ a chance to showcase some of the rockingest chops and bluesiest growling ever to reverberate off the walls of a recording studio.

    Dream # 3: This is the longest of the three instrumentals, and the most illuminating, as EJ veers into Keith Jarrett territory. Elton isn't known for playing abstract jazz, but listen to this and you'll think that's what he's been doing all of his life. Drummer Jay Bellerose taps a clever counterpoint to EJ's spontaneous musings.

    The Diving Board: This is some song, this title track, bursting with feeling, a misty mix-up of jazz, blues and country, and somewhat of a "prequel" to the 1976 John/Taupin jazz ballad, "Idol," from Blue Moves. In interviews, Elton has said that "The Diving Board" is about young stars - like Justin Bieber and Lindsay Lohan - who struggle with newfound, mind-boggling fame. "Sink or swim/I can't recall who said that to me/When I was 16 and full of the world and its noise." Elton's powerful vocal, a bit Tony Bennett, a bit Frank Sinatra, tops anything else he's ever recorded in his very long, very accomplished career.

    So there you have it. I would give this album more than five stars if I could!
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2013
    I have been a fan of melodic music for all of my life, but I have only gotten around to listen to Elton John music a bit more than a year ago (28 years old, so didn't grow up in his peak era). Up till that point, I have known very basic and general info on Elton, but not much about his music. Boy, wish I did earlier in my life, because listening to this man's compositions has made me rediscover why I fell in love with melodic music all over again. I am now familiar with all of his works, and a hardcore fan for who I consider my all-time favorite musician. I consider myself not completely biased to his 70s material like some of the long-time fans, as I don't hold any specific attachment to it, all of his music is new to me (though a lot of my favorite albums from him are from the 70s, but I also love his work since Songs from the West Coast in 2001, and portions of his 80s and 90s).

    I had the pleasure to anticipate an Elton album release for the first time of my life, and it was very exciting. The Diving Board deserved every bit of anticipation I had, and did not disappoint. It is definitely up there with his best work, and the surprising element in it that really got me off guard is that it is unique, and has an identity of its own unlike some of his similar sounding albums. For a man at this age, I have to be really impressed with the effort and craftsmanship that is displayed in the Diving Board, an album that may very well be among my top 10 Elton albums; not an easy feat considering the amount of great albums Elton has made over the decades.

    I would briefly talk about how I felt about each song:

    1. Oceans Away (8/10): Really soothing introduction to the album, and reminds me of Elton's talent in creating such moving ballads. It also works in dictating the general vibe of the album (moody and weighty)

    2. Oscar Wilde Gets Out (9/10): Up there with the best of Elton's up tempo songs. The beat and melody are very recognizable, and this one I fell immediately in love with unlike some of the other tracks that require repeated listens. This is the track I would use to get people interested in this album, as it is quite easy to listen to and appreciate

    3. A Town Called Jubilee (7/10): Probably my least favorite track on the album, yet it still gets a 7 as it's a pleasant listen, though not very memorable or unique. In some of Elton's weaker albums, this would be one of the best tracks, which indicates the overall quality of this album

    4. The Ballad of Blind Tom (8/10): This one is a grower, didn't impress me much on the first listen but now I really enjoy its haunting melody. I always loved Elton's more dramatic melodies, the cellos in the song definitely add to its eerie mood and flow into the lyrics very smoothly

    5. Dream 1 -> My Quicksand (9/10): I would treat each dream piece as a part or intro of the song that follows it, because I believe their placement makes more sense that way. I have seriously debated to give this song a 10, as it is an absolute standout for me, and could potentially be my favorite track over the long run. This is unlike any of Elton's work, has a killer piano solo part that is THE best part of the album. Piano has always been my favorite instrument, and this track drives home the point of Elton's mastership of this instrument. It could very well be a 10 after a few days; the only reason for a 9 is that I find the song hard to get into without some headphones. In the right mood, this is simply unforgettable.

    6. Can't Stay Alone Tonight (9/10): This is classic Elton material, probably the catchiest melody in the album. It's very memorable, has a very nice hook, and just plain fun to listen to and sing along with. This is the song for those who enjoy Elton's pop and radio hits.

    7. Voyeur (8/10): Started out as a very mediocre track in the beginning, this song has grown on me the most, every time I listen to it I find more to like and gets more interesting. It seems like a mix of Elton's classic tunes, along with some of his recent work, combined with Elton's deep voice that really gives it a character of its own

    8. Home Again (8/10): Lyrics are the main attraction to me in this one in particular (great job Bernie). The words are so honest, direct, and carry such strong emotions and make me remember my life and my past, and almost get me to tear up. Elton's delivery is top notch, with some really great piano work. The melody is great, but it lacks the unique aspect that I got from many of the other songs in this album

    9. Take This Dirty Water (7/10): Pleasant song and surprisingly memorable. Elton needs to do more in this style in general as it adds diversity to his catalogue and demonstrates his versatility as an artist. Makes me groove!

    10. Dream 2 -> The New Fever Waltz (9/10): What a song. Almost teared up from the very first listen, and almost wanted to rewind it before going to the next song. Such an emotional and beautiful song that reminds me a lot of tracks from his self-titled album (i.e. I Need you to Turn to, Greatest Discovery, First Episode to Hienton), but Elton's deep voice takes it to another level, and the lyrics are beautiful. This and My Quicksand are my contenders of favorite track in the album.

    11. Mexican Vacation (8/10): Another grower with more interesting facets appearing after each listen. It appears very simplistic at first, but that's what makes it so different, and Elton's spreads his signature style on it in small bits that makes it a unique mix of Elton and bar blues music.

    12. Dream 3 -> The Diving Board (9/10): A standout title and embodies the unique aspect of this album. Never knew Elton was capable of composing such a song as he only showed some hints of such compositions in Blue Moves, and here he achieves greater success as it feels much more complete with a stronger structure than his Blue Moves experiments. Dream 3 works so well as an introduction to it, and puts the spotlight on Elton's unparalleled skill on the piano, taking your mind adrift just like a true dream.

    Overall, this is by far one of the most consistent Elton albums; there isn't any song that I would skip. It merges and integrates a lot of what Elton has done in the past, with traces from Blue Moves, Songs from the West Coast, Tumbleweed Connection, and even Too Low For Zero. The icing on that delicious mixture is songs like the title track, Dream 3, and My Quicksand, which represent the live performer side, as well as an almost new side of Elton that I haven't seen. As a result, The Diving Board forges an identity of its own that is refreshing, intriguing, and yet remains at its core that melodic beautiful sound of Elton.
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  • Rohit
    4.0 out of 5 stars Good Cd
    Reviewed in India on October 27, 2021
    This is an ok cd with some great songs. Made in India quality not as good as imported ones. But price wise much better. Well packed and great service by seller. Music4All thank you 🙏🏼
  • BC
    5.0 out of 5 stars The Diving Board
    Reviewed in Canada on November 22, 2016
    A lot of people are critical of Elton John's 2013 release, "The Diving Board," calling it such things as boring and depressing. I have listened to it multiple times since purchasing it now and can honestly say that I find the record to be perfect for low times in my life, not necessarily for the lyrics of the songs, per se, but for the overall atmosphere the record creates.
    So, will this be considered a classic and put on a shelf beside Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player or Captain Fantastic? Probably not, but that doesn't mean that it's still not a terrific album. Elton John's absolute worst work is better than many other artists' best stuff.
  • tqm
    5.0 out of 5 stars altro che baronetto
    Reviewed in Italy on November 23, 2013
    Giusto poche sere fa, in un botta e risposta con gli studenti di musica della USC University di Los Angeles, Elton John diceva che adesso che non è più trasmesso dalle radio con i suoi nuovi pezzi, può fare ciò che vuole. Ha 66 anni e i nuovi brani sono quelli di un uomo della sua età. C’ha messo parecchio, il buon Elton, per arrivare a questa saggezza olimpica. Ascoltando i suoi dischi non mi sono mai dimenticato che il “ragazzo” è un competitivo giocatore di tennis. Gente che non molla facilmente.
    Nel 1977, dopo un decennio di duro lavoro e almeno cinque vissuti da superstar, era dato per finito. Il punk lo aveva “fatto sentire in pensione”, come disse in un’intervista. Così ha giocato d’astuzia (c’è persino un album intitolato “the fox” del 1981) e con singoli azzeccati ha mantenuto la sua posizione di unica rockstar inglese degli anni ‘70 insieme a David Bowie a restare a quei livelli. Gli altri o si sono defilati o sono Rod Steward.
    Così , dopo una serie di dischi “anni ‘80”, ben suonati e digeribili, negli anni ’90 ha dato l’assalto all’impero di Hollywood, prima con le canzoni per la Disney e poi creando una compagnia di produzione. Intanto, disco dopo disco, tour dopo tour, seguiva la stessa strategia degli Stones. Pubblico un disco nuovo per fare i concerti e nei concerti eseguo i classici. Ed Elton ha due tipi di classici, quelli “veri” , che i fans vorrebbero sempre sentire, dai dischi dal 1970 al 1973 e poi la serie innumerevole di hit che è riuscito a piazzare, compresa “Don’t let the sun go down on me”, che per enfasi rivaleggia con i Queen. A ben vedere, Elton ha piazzato un singolo nelle top ten inglese e americana ogni anno della propria carriera, a parte forse negli anni terribili 1979 (Victim of love)e 1986 (leather jackets). Sì, una cosa del genere potrebbe far felice Madonna, ma la musica che c’entra?
    Così, dopo avere toppato tre dischi di fila alla fine degli anni ’90, l’iperprodotto “The big picture”, il musical “Aida” e il live inutile “One night only”, nel 2001 ricomincia a fare musica sul serio con “Songs from the wast coast”. Un primo passo verso la riabilitazione di un musicista che ormai sta diventando più famoso per la sua omosessualità, per le feste e Lady Diana che per il talento immenso nello scrivere canzoni. La prima scossa la dà il suo partner Bernie Taupin, che ricomincia a scrivere testi che richiamano le origini. Poi le canzoni finalmente non inseguono la classifica e la voce non insiste sul baritono tipico dall’operazione del 1987. Nel 2004 l’ottimo e volutamente dimesso “Peachtree road”, che non vende un accidente ma che contiene delle belle canzoni – finalmente- poco prodotte (per la prima volta da lui stesso). Terza mossa nel 2006 “The captain and the kid”, secondo disco autobiografico del dinamico duo dopo “Captain fantastic” del 1975. Anche qui vendite scarse ma critica e veri fans contenti come pasque.
    Non contento nel 2010 pubblica un album con uno dei suoi maestri, Leon Russel, il magnifico “The Union”, che sbanca il botteghino finendo in terza posizione negli Stati Uniti. Un disco di quelli di una volta, serio e suonato da due maestri, prodotto da T Bone Burnett e graziato dalla voce di Neil Young nella immortale “Gone to Shiloh, talmente bella che sembra uscita da “Madman across the water”.
    Così, dopo la cura Burnett e Russel, il Sir multimiliardario dalla leggendaria stravaganza si ricorda finalmente chi è: uno dei più grandi autori di canzoni e il maestro riconosciuto del pianoforte rock. Nessuno è riuscito a far suonare così il piano. Il rocknrollo di jerry Lee, il Bakersfields sound nato nei localacci della california, il blues, inserti di tecnica “colta”. Tutti gli stili sono messi a disposizione di due mani più da agricoltore, piccole e tozze, che da pianista. Potete pensare quello che volete, ma c’è solo da imparare da uno così. Posso prenderlo in giro per ore a causa delle pacchianate vestito da Luigi 14 ma quando si siede sullo sgabello sto zitto e ascolto come si deve suonare.

    Nel 2013, tra ripensamenti e rielaborazioni, eccoci a “The diving board”, trentesimo album in solitaria, considerando che il precedente “the union” è in team con il biancocrinuto Russel.
    Nel comprarlo mi sono ricordato degli avvertimenti di zio Neil Young, che dice di ascoltare certa musica in vinile. Detto, fatto. Il corriere arriva, apro il pacchetto e mi trovo davanti la copertina magnifica. Era da Captain fantastic che un suo album non aveva una copertina così efficace e “a tema”. E’ anche una bella sensazione tenre tra le mani un doppio album di Elton. Tre/canzoni per lato, come ai vecchi tempi. I musicisti non sono quelli della EJ band.
    La leggenda di casa Motown Jack Ashford alle percussioni ( “Su A Town Called Jubilee, ha usato lo stesso assetto che ha usato su What’s Going On di Marvin Gaye!” ha esclamato John, ammirato), Jay Bellerose alla batteria, Doyle Bramhall e il T-Bone Burnett, alle chitarre, Keefus Ciancia alle tastiere e Raphael Saadiq al basso. In aggiunta, come ai bei tempi di “Thumbleweed connection”, una sezione fiati come si deve.
    Si parte subito alla grande con “Oceans away”, brano in cui Bernie Taupin parla di suo padre e della II guerra mondiale.
    “Call ’em up, n’ dust ‘em off, let ‘em shine
    The ones who hold on to the ones they had to leave behind
    Those that flew and those that fell, the ones that had to stay
    Beneath a little wooden cross oceans away.”
    Il resto segue di stile in stile, di emozione in emozione. “Oscar Wilde gets out”, che racconta il viaggio verso la francia di Wilde appena uscito da prigione. Il primo singolo, “home again”, che ascoltato con davanti il testo mi fa inumidire gli occhi.
    “I'm counting on a memory to get me out of here
    I'm waiting for the fog
    Around this spooky little town to clear
    All this time I've spent being someone else's friend.
    Just one more time for old time's sake
    I'd like to go back home again

    The world had seven wonders once upon a time
    It’s sure enough the favored nations aided their decline
    And all around me I've seen times like it was back when
    But like back then I'd say amen if I could get back home again

    If I could go back home, if I could go back home
    If I'd never left I'd never have known
    We all dream of leaving but wind up in the end
    Spending all our time trying to get back home again”.
    Il disco si dipana così. Tra classici come “My quickshand” o la soprendenente “The new fever waltz”, il pianismo scatenato di “The ballad of blind Tom”. I tre strumentali sono dei piccoli raccordi tra i brani. Chiude la raccolta l’omonimo “The diving board” ed è un bel chiudere, con la voce di Elton che si fa così simile a quella dell’amico maestro Leon Russell. Insomma,un altro “vecchietto” che ha tirato fuori uno dei migliori album della sua carriera.
  • Luisitos
    5.0 out of 5 stars Magnífico, absolutamente recomendable
    Reviewed in Spain on September 24, 2013
    Como fan de Elton John durante muchos años, conozco bien cuál ha sido su evolución musical: años 70 absolutamente magistrales y unos 80 y 90 bastante irregulares. Después, el "resurgimiento" en 2001 con Songs from the West Coast, un álbum genial y melancólico, seguido por dos discos más, bastante discutibles... Creo que 2010 y la unión con T-Bone Burnett como productor ha sabido encarrilar ese resurgimiento de Elton antes mencionado. En ese año graba The Union junto a Leon Russell (muy, muy recomendable), sorprendiéndonos con nuevos sonidos... Y ahora, con The Diving Board (y de nuevo T-Bone), siguen presentes muchos de esos sonidos americanos, así como un tono general de melancolía y oscuridad que recorre el álbum de principio a fin. La calidad del conjunto es a mi juicio cercana a la perfección. Es la demostración de cómo alguien con más de 40 años de profesión es capaz de "rizar el rizo" y renovarse siendo fiel a sí mismo y seguir aportando nuevos matices. Creo que el disco debe escucharse entero, prestando atención a las tres pequeñas piezas instrumentales (ejemplares) y disfrutar de las penetrantes melodías, el piano (magnífico como siempre) y las letras.
    El único pero lo encuentro precisamente en esta edición "deluxe", que añade una canción nueva (sin duda la peor del disco), y tres versiones en directo que son prescindibles, y no hacen justicia a un cantante que, escuchado en directo, es aún más espectacular.
  • PishPash
    5.0 out of 5 stars A great return
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 23, 2013
    Firstly, Elton's voice is great on this record, and all of the songs appear to fit comfortably within his current vocal range.

    All round good songs here, if I was to pick just 5, would be 'Oscar Wilde Gets Out' 'A Town Called Jubilee' 'The Ballad of Blind Tom' 'Home Again' and 'The New Fever Waltz.' A strong favorite of mine is also 5th Avenue, removed from the album, why I don't know, but it's fortunately available as a free download from Amazon, but not on this 'Deluxe' release. 5th Avenue It's free, so if you're thinking about this album, just go ahead and download it.

    I do very much like most of the album though, have mentioned something about those I'm less fond of below, though they in no way hinder the album (the Dream sequences amount to nothing more than song intro extensions, in my opinion. The 3rd dream sequence is good on it's own, but the other two quite simply extend 'My Quicksand' and 'The New Fever Waltz').

    One thing I have liked about this album comes from my own desire to decipher the meanings of seemingly cryptic lyrics, in so far as the exact story is concerned. Elton's annunciation isn't always particularly great anyway, in song, so without the lyric insert you could easily misinterpret what is being sung about, however once you've got a grip of what the stories are about, after absorbing the melody (I seem to only be able to manage the melody at first), then you can also enjoy that swell of additional layers. Bernie Taupin also explains that, other that the obvious, and the obvious exists here in many cases, he likes his listeners to gather their own interpretations, and is often reticent when it comes to answering questions about his lyrics, again leaving it up to the interpretation of the listener.

    I found this particularly to be the case with songs like 'The New Fever Waltz,' which appears to be about the spread of a fatal flu, at the end of war, 'A Town Called Jubilee,' about a small family upending in search of pastures new, while capturing fond memories of the place they leave behind, or maybe something about the sweeping fire across California, not so long ago, and 'Voyeur,' which appears to be about the observation of surrounding relationships, amidst the backdrop of ones own relationships, the things we take note of in secret, 'to keep you in my heart.' Neither of these are wholly clear, other that certain references, such as 'when the last good horse went down,' in 'The New Fever Waltz, the 'new fever' as a further reference to Trench Fever, but otherwise it's largely up to you.

    Some people seem to think that there's a perverse element to 'Voyeur,' but I don't see it, as I feel it refers only to an observation of love in the surrounding world, and people in it, the way they are with each other, as compared to ones own experiences in that regard. 'Illicit lovers,' perhaps a reference to 'gay relationship' or other supposedly forbidden relationships, and the corollary fear and secrecy those scenarios evoke, in the face of inhuman cultural or religious expectations/ideals, and the ensuing confrontation with judgement and condemnation, and such, referring then to the self, assuming you're fortunate enough to be living in a better circumstance. In a sense feeling better about one's own experiences in the face of what you see in others. My view in this case may well be entirely different to Bernie Taupins feelings upon writing it. It's a good lyric.

    'Oscar Wilde Get's Out' is a superb song, melodically and lyrically, the 'Ballad of Blind Tom' too. I'm finding difficult to start singling out certain tracks, without wanting to write more about them, but I won't in this case.

    Overall - Very much a concept album, with lots of interesting stories, in many cases musically complimented. There's not an overemphasis on person centered love interests, however there is a focus on relationship, attachment/detachment, and experience on a broader scale, all woven into a wide array of stories and circumstance.

    I didn't particularly like 'Can't Stay Alone Tonight' at first, which I read had been a quick favorite for many people, and didn't think it was a particularly well constructed ballad, despite a good set of lyrics, but it has grown on me somewhat. I didn't like 'Take this dirty water' either, at first, but time with the lyrics and understanding it's meaning has made it better, clearing all the s*** out of life and starting a fresh, however it does remain a very simplistic gospel drone, without any real drive behind it. But in any case I do tend to skip those particular songs more often than I do any others on this album.

    I did like 'Candlelit Bedroom,' however it has worn thin. I have also been able to find, via other means, subject to it being unavailable in the UK, 'Gauguin Gone Hollywood,' another good song removed for reasons unknown. Well, it is known that Elton John thought this song belonged on a different Elton John album, along with '5th Avenue,' but I find that view disagreeable.

    With regards 'The Diving Board' (song), Elton John said that it referred to the likes of 'Justin Bieber' and 'Lindsay Lohan,' as being thrown, unready, into the grips of fame and wide adoration, light as 'butterflies' amidst the 'fangs and the claws,' and the horrors that lie in their path, which isn't something that I'm particularly interested in, particularly in relation to those two personalities, and his mention of it in that regard had completely overshadowed the song for me, for a while. Bernie Taupin later said that he was thinking of people like Judy Garland when he wrote that, which all a sudden switched my opinion towards it, and I was able to enjoy it more, from a different angle, or take, and it went on to become a favorite.

    Elton did also say in a trailer for this album that 'I am on the Diving Board,' so he also appears to relate to it by way of throwing himself into an unknown, and the nervous anticipation of response, to the album in this case, but on a broader scale as a youth (obviously not Elton in this case), diving into an unknown current. In any case the lyrics come to make or break a song, and in most cases the lyrical content is diverse and satisfying.

    I like that the cover, by Tim Barber, is of a diving board a bunch of kids must have constructed aside a vast lake, and he just happened upon it, out walking with friends (he mentioned the location in an interview, but I can't remember). The photo is about 10 years old, although I think the man about to jump was Photoshopped onto the diving board quite recently! The original appears to be on the reverse of the album's sleeve. But then Tim Barber, so I read (I know very little about him otherwise), likes to take pictures that lure you into thinking about what happened next, which does fit in with the picture as shown on the sleeve. In any case the art work appears to compliment the album quite nicely.