... interesting perspective on the course of rock and pop music over the past half-century, with notable insights into how the public's attitude toward gay performers has evolved.
Kirkus
On Elton John brings the Rocket Man back to earth, in the best possible way. John's influence on culture is so outsize, his story so well known, that it's easy to forget the precise artistry and work ethic that made him a superstarin the first place. By writing in the same way John composes-with style, passion, and a bit of cheek-Matthew Restall enacts a kind of reverse myth-making. His assiduous research and probing analysis show how John's best work emerged through a shifting web of collaborations, rivalries, and restless creativity, and it reveals the manifold ways John's music resonates through our modern world.
Nate Sloan, Assistant Professor of Musicology, USC Thornton School of Music
The best thing any book about pop music can do is send us back to records we thought we knew in order to hear the many things that we missed and to learn how they came to be. With this absorbing book about the restless musical life of Elton John, Matthew Restall has done us all that service.
David Hepworth, author of Uncommon People: The Rise and Fall of the Rock Stars