Elton deals John- 17/11/70- Vinyl Print of 1971/ Pickwick Records SHM942/ USED/Good Condition

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Elton deals John- 17/11/70- Vinyl Print of 1971/ Pickwick Records SHM942/ USED/Good Condition, Elton John- 17/11/70- LIVE ALBUMiNFOUsed in Good Condition1971 Pickwick17-11-70 (known as 11-17-70 in the.
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Product code: Elton deals John- 17/11/70- Vinyl Print of 1971/ Pickwick Records SHM942/ USED/Good Condition

Elton John- 17/11/70- LIVE ALBUM


iNFO
Used in Good Condition
1971 Pickwick


17-11-70 (known as 11-17-70 in the United States) is the fifth official album release for English musician Elton John and his first live album.

The recording was taken from a live radio broadcast on 17 November 1970, hence the album's title. According to John, a live album was never planned as a release. Recordings of the broadcast, however, were popular among bootleggers which, according to John's producer, Gus Dudgeon, eventually prompted the record label to release it as an album. It has been said that the release by an eastern bootlegger of the whole 60-minute air cast rather than the 48 minutes selected by Dick James Music significantly cut into the US sales of the live album. However, the entire concert was an 80-minute affair, and double-LPs containing the entire concert were more common than those containing only 60 minutes. Another contributing factor to the original album's soft sales could have been the glut of Elton John product on the market at the time. John also had in release 2 full studio albums (Elton John and Tumbleweed Connection) and a movie soundtrack (Friends) when the live LP was issued. Nonetheless, it became the fourth of John's records simultaneously to land in the Top 100, making him the first act to do so since The Beatles.

According to longtime NYC radio personality Dave Herman (who can be heard at the beginning and end of the album), Elton John cut his hand at some point during the performance, and by the end of the show, the piano keys were covered with blood.

John and his band performed 13 songs during the radio broadcast. The original album included only six of the songs; a seventh, "Amoreena," appeared as a bonus track on the album's 1996 CD reissue. The other six performances remained until 2017 officially unreleased: "I Need You to Turn To", "Your Song", "Country Comfort", "Border Song", "Indian Sunset" and "My Father's Gun".

John has stated in several interviews that he believes that this recording is his best live performance. He has also cited the album deals as a great showcase for the musicianship of drummer Nigel Olsson and bassist Dee Murray. It is also the only officially released example of what John's live band sounded like prior to the arrival of guitarist Davey Johnstone, who wouldn't be a member until the release of Honky Château in 1972.

To commemorate the 10th Record Store Day, on 22 April 2017, John served as the first-ever worldwide Record Store Day Legend and released an expanded, double-vinyl version of the album. Retitled 17-11-70+, the release reinstates seven additional songs from the concert, making it the most complete official edition of the show available in any format. "Amoreena," previously available on the 1996 CD reissue, makes its first appearance on vinyl.



Tracklisting


Side A

1. Take me to the Pilot
2. Honky Tonky Women
3. Sixty Tears On
4. Can I put you on


Side B

1. Bad Side of the Moon
2. Burn Down the Mission
(including): a) My baby left me
b) Get Back



Personnel

Elton John – piano, lead vocals
Dee Murray – bass, backing vocals
Nigel Olsson – drums, backing vocals
Production

Gus Dudgeon – producer
Phil Ramone – recording engineer
David Hentschel – reduction (mix) engineer (US LP)
Clive Franks – reduction (mix) engineer (UK LP)
Matt Howe – reduction (mix) engineer (Rocket reissue)
Coordination: Steve Brown – coordination
Joe Disabato – coordination
David Larkham – design, photography
Gus Dudgeon – liner notes
John Tobler – liner notes
Dave Herman – emcee

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