Second album from Elton John's "renaissance" period, which spans from "Songs From the West Coast" to "The Diving Board", where he recovered his artistic dignity, lost under the sofa towards the end of the '70s and then unfortunately fallen down the drain after 1983. He started composing songs and albums that always wavered between the excellent and the decent, at least. This album leans towards "decent" and is the least beautiful of the years 2001-2013, but it remains pure gold compared to those wonderful mishaps that the Sir graciously gifted us at the end of the '80s. "La Strada del Pesco" has the flaw of being almost entirely composed of ballads and slow songs, and if they were all masterpieces, it would be fine, but only a few are actually good songs (and none truly memorable, anyway, standard stuff from standard Elton John, albeit pleasant to hear), so the result is an album that is not bad but still too heavy, repetitive, and quite boring overall, without peaks or particular flashes, where the only more lively moment, "They Call Her the Cat," is welcomed with joy, perhaps precisely for this reason, it seems to me the best part of the album. Oh, there are some lovely little Elton John ballads here, for sure, but 4-5 out of 11; the others are too irrelevant, and that’s not enough to avoid the sense of boredom.
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