Notes
Elton John
With the release of his first album in 1969, "Empty Sky," Elton John set into
motion a career of extraordinary duration in popular music, surviving setbacks to
achieve new career goals and returning successfully from a period of rest. At the age
of fifty-one, which he reached in 1998, the Academy Award-winning Elton John is still
at the center of his profession. Since "Empty Sky," John has sold well over 200 million
records worldwide.
At the frantic peak of his American popularity in the mid-1970 's, John assembled
a string of seven consecutive US number one albums in just three and a half years - a
chart record pace exceeded only by The Beatles in the mid-60s. The GREATEST HITS
album is one of the best-selling LPs in American history, with certified sales in the
United States in excess of thirteen million. Elton even surpassed that total
internationally with the soundtrack to the Disney film THE LION KING; the collection
of songs he wrote with veteran ly ricist Tim Rice was the number one album in the World
for the year 1994. THE LION KING evolved into a Tony Award-winning Broadway
smash, and includes five new songs from the John-Rice duo, who have already
completed their next Disney project, AIDA.
This occasional partnership with Tim Rice is an example of John's willingness to
work with any individual whose talent he respects. Elton John is the most sociable of
all British chart Artists, succeeding with a record dozen different duet partners
ranging from Aretha Franklin to RuPaul. The most recent joint success was "hive Like
Horses, " the John-Taupin song taken to the British top ten in late 1996 with Luciano
Pavarotti.
Elton John has also led the BILLBOARD HOT 100 with more chums than any
other Artist. Of his eight number one singles, three are collaborations, each from a
different decade. "Don ' t Go Breaking My Heart" with Kiki Dee was the World's
number one single in 1976, "That's What Friends Are For" teamed Dionne Warwick
with Elton, Gladys Knight and Stevie Wonder in 1985, and the live recording of "Don't
Let The Sun Go Down On Me " by George Michael and Elton went to number one in
both the US and UK in 1991.
Proceeds from both "That' s What Friends Are For" and "Don ' t Let The Sun Go
Down On Me" were dedicated to fighting AIDS, as have Elton John ' s royalties on all
his singles in the last several years. He began making this form of donation in Britain
in 1990, just in time for his UK number one hit "Sacrifice," and started the same
practice in America two years later, beginning with his international top ten hit "The
One. " Devastated at the loss of numerous friends and inspired by the courage of many
others fighting the disease, Elton resolved to use his energy and influence to make the
greatest contribution he could in the great struggle.
At the end of 1992 the star began one of the most successful charities in show
business history, the Elton John AIDS Foundation - an international non-profit
organization with bases in the USA and the UK. The Foundation supports projects
providing direct care services for people living with HIV and AIDS, and it also funds
preventative education. He wisely realized that to maximize its effectiveness in fundraising,
and to avoid exhausting himself to the point of diminishing returns, the
Foundation had to raise money in ways other than the Artist's own performances. The
"Annual World Team Tennis All-Star `Smash Hits' with Elton John and Billie Jean
King," a yearly Academy Awards Viewing party, and several art and Elton John
memorabilia auctions all raise money for the Foundation. Between 1993 and 1997 the
Foundation has distributed over $12 million in the US, UK and Australia to charities
running effective programs in their respective locations, as well as contributing to the
fight against the disease in Africa, India and Thailand.