In a new interview released on his social media platforms, Elton John has learned the truth about one of his biggest songs, ”Rocket Man”. In the interview, John sits down with his longtime lyricist Bernie Taupin as the two discuss the Honky Chateau single.
โโRocket Manโ was our first-ever number one record, I think โ and it was on the Honky Chateau record,โ John says. โIt was a pretty easy song to write a melody to because itโs a song about space, so itโs quite a spacious song.โ
โIt was actually a song inspired by Ray Bradbury from his book of science-fiction short stories called The Illustrated Man,โ Taupin explained. โIn that book, there was a story called The Rocket Man, which was about how astronauts in the future would become sort of an everyday jobโฆ so I kinda took that idea and ran with it.โ
John then had a realisation. โDo you know, I never knew that,โ he claimed. John and Taupin famously write their material separately from each other, with Taupin often writing lyrics in one room and John composing music in the other.
Originally released as a single in 1972, โโRocket Manโโ was not actually Johnโs first number one hit. โโRocket Manโโ went to number two in the UK, getting stuck behind T. Rexโs โโMetal Guruโโ. In America, the song would top out at number six on the Billboard Hot 100. John would get his first US number one in early 1973 with โโCrocodile Rockโโ and would have to wait until 1976 to hit number one in his home country with the Kiki Dee duet โโDonโt Go Breaking My Heartโโ. (FarOut)