elton john Photo Archives - LIFE https://www.life.com/tag/elton-john/ Tue, 08 Apr 2025 16:34:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://static.life.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/02211512/cropped-favicon-512-32x32.png elton john Photo Archives - LIFE https://www.life.com/tag/elton-john/ 32 32 Boss Mode: Springsteen in the 80s and 90s https://www.life.com/arts-entertainment/boss-mode-springsteen-in-the-80s-and-90s/ Tue, 08 Apr 2025 16:33:57 +0000 https://www.life.com/?p=5383473 In 1974 music critic Jon Landau went to a Bruce Springsteen live show and famously declared that he had seen the future of rock and roll. At that point Springsteen was two albums into his career and still in the process of building his audience. The next year Springsteen released Born to Run, which created ... Read more

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In 1974 music critic Jon Landau went to a Bruce Springsteen live show and famously declared that he had seen the future of rock and roll. At that point Springsteen was two albums into his career and still in the process of building his audience. The next year Springsteen released Born to Run, which created so much of a sensation that the rocker appealed simultaneously on the covers of Time and Newsweek.

But it was not until the 1980s that Springsteen truly reached peak popularity. His 1984 album Born in the U.S.A dominated the charts with seven Top 10 singles and became Springsteen’s best-selling record. His concerts moved from arenas to stadiums. And for all the beloved music he wrote before and after Born in the U.S.A., that album is the source of three of Springsteen’s four most streamed songs on Spotify, including top hit “Dancing in the Dark”, which has nearly a billion streams.

This gallery of images captures Springsteen in those years after he had catapulted into the upper stratospheres of fame. Several of these images are among the most popular in LIFE’s print store, which is a tribute to how much his music continues to captivate audiences all these decades later. Besides the boss other notables who appear in the photos include Steven Van Zandt, who played guitar in Springstreen’s E Street Band and would later play Silvio Dante in The Sopranos; Patti Scialfa, who joined the E Street Band in 1984 and became Springsteen’s wife in 1991, and rock luminaries such as Mick Jagger and Billy Joel who shared the stage with Springsteen at various celebrity jams.

In 2025 fans can look forward to the movie Deliver Me From Nowhere, which stars Jeremy Allen White and will focus on the recording of Nebraska, a stripped-down solo acoustic album that Springsteen released in 1982. Some songs from those Nebraska sessions, recorded with the E Street Band, would become the core of Born in the U.S.A., turning up the noise on the music, and on Springsteen’s life as well.

Bruce Springsteen, 1984.

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Bruce Springsteen, with saxophone player Clarence Clemons in the background, 1984.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1984.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1984.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1985.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1985.

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Bruce Springsteen and Steven Van Zandt, 1989,

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Bruce Springsteen, 1990.

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Bruce Springsteen with Patti Scialfa, 1990.

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Bruce Springsteen, with Steven Van Zandt and Patti Scialfa, 1990.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1994.

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Bruce Springsteen, circa 1990.

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Bruce Springsteen and Mick Jagger, with Bob Dylan in the background), performed at the 1988 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremonies.

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Billly Joel, Jon Bon Jovi, Elton John, Sting and Bruce Springsteen performed during a rainforest benefit at Carnegie hall in New York City, 1994.

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Bruce Springsteen, 1990.

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LIFE With Rock Stars . . . and Their Parents https://www.life.com/arts-entertainment/life-with-rock-stars-and-their-parents/ Fri, 03 Jan 2014 12:52:22 +0000 http://time.com/?p=3517247 A gallery of rock legends -- Clapton, Zappa, Elton John, Grace Slick and more -- and their totally square, totally sweet parents.

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They had fame, reams of money and fans willing to do wild, unmentionable things just to breathe the same air but in its September 24, 1971 issue, LIFE magazine illustrated a different side of the lives of rock stars. Like other mere mortals, they often came from humble backgrounds, with moms and dads who bragged about them, fussed over them, called them on their nonsense and worried about them every single day.

Assigned to take portraits of the artists at home with their sweetly square folks, photographer John Olson traveled from the suburbs of London to Brooklyn to the Bay Area, capturing in his work the love that bridged any cultural and generational divides that existed between his subjects.

Here, LIFE.com brings back Olson’s nostalgia-sparking photos—Marvel at the decor! Gaze in wonder at the shag carpets and bell-bottoms!—and shares his memories of hanging out with pop culture icons of the Sixties and Seventies, as well as their mums and their dads.

John Olson on Frank Zappa: “Everyone had told me that Frank Zappa was going to be really difficult, and he couldn’t have been more professional,” Olson told LIFE.com.

Zappa on His Parents: “My father has ambitions to be an actor,” Frank told LIFE. “He secretly wants to be on TV.”

Zappa’s Mom on Zappa: “The thing that makes me mad about Frank is that his hair is curlier than mine and blacker.”

Grace Slick: Grace Slick’s mom Virginia Wing, wrote LIFE, was a “soft-spoken suburban matron” pretty much the opposite of her wild child. “Grace and I have different sets of moral values,” Mrs. Wing told LIFE, “but she’s her own person, and we understand each other.”

Elton John: In 1970, Elton John was just three albums into his prolific career, and still had countless hits— “Rocket Man,” “Daniel,” “Bennie and the Jets” and “Candle in the Wind” among them—in his future. (As well as the 2019 biopic, Rocketman.) “When he was four years old,” his mother said of her prodigiously talented son, “we used to put him to bed in the day and get him up to play at night for parties.”

Ginger Baker: The world knew him as Ginger, on account of his red hair, but his mother christened him Peter, and to her he was always “my Pete.” As she told LIFE magazine: “He would bring people over and they would say, ‘You realize your son is brilliant,’ and I’d say, ‘Is he? I wish he was a bit more brilliant at keeping his room tidy.'” Ginger died in late 2019.

John Olson on Ginger Baker: “I had worked with lots of these musicians before and on the first go-round some of them had been really difficult. But when they were with their parents, they were totally different people. Baker, who had been terribly obnoxious before, acted like a grown-up. I don’t think it had anything to do with respect for me, so it must have been the parents.”

Joe Cocker: Facial contortions, flailing arms, gallons of sweat: the blues singer poured all that and more into his passionate performances. But off stage, LIFE observed, “he is cool and withdrawn a temperamental mixture of Harold Cocker, his civil servant father who preferred gardening to posing with his famous son, and his outgoing, chatty mother.”

David Crosby: With his parents divorced, the “Crosby” of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young posed with his father Floyd, an Oscar-winning cinematographer, in the Ojai, Calif., home Floyd shared with his second wife in 1970. “In the last few years we’ve become good friends,” David told LIFE magazine. “What I like best about him is that he seems to feel no need for me to be like him, so we’re not offended by each other’s differences. Like he knows I get high. He doesn’t do it and he doesn’t approve of it, but he doesn’t inflict his values on me.”

Jackson 5: Unlike the other stars featured in LIFE’s story, the Jackson brothers Michael, Marlon, Tito, Jermaine and Jackie experienced fame as kids, and still lived with their parents (father/manager Joe and mother Katherine). At the time of LIFE’s shoot, they were the hottest act in pop, skyrocketing in 1970 with “ABC” and “I’ll Be There,” and had just moved into an expansive new house.

“It was very controlled,” Olson says of the photo shoot that resulted in the September, 24, 1971 LIFE cover. “As I remember, they followed my requests to a T, and were incredibly polite. The dad was pretty stern.” Indeed, Joe who had been a crane operator in Gary, Indiana, just three years before hinted at the relentless drive toward fame about which Michael would later voice such ambivalence. “It wasn’t hard to know they could go on to be professionals,” Joe told LIFE of his young sons. “They won practically all the talent shows and I wasn’t surprised when they did make it.”

Donovan: His parents’ love of Scottish and English folk music inspired Donovan, the singer/songwriter behind such hits as “Season of the Witch” and “Mellow Yellow.” But by the time of his photo session with Olson, Donovan’s fruitful partnership with record producer Mickie Most had soured, and his career was in decline. Perhaps as a result, Donovan was the only musician Olson photographed who was left out of the story that LIFE eventually published.

David Crosby with his father Floyd, together in the father’s house, 1970.

John Olson/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Frank Zappa in his Los Angeles home with his dad, Francis, his mom, Rosemarie, and his cat in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Frank Zappa with his dad, Francis, and his mom, Rosemarie, in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

The Jefferson Airplane’s Grace Slick posed with her mother, Virginia Wing, in the living room of the home where she grew up in Palo Alto, California. “We raced out there because she was nine months pregnant,” remembered Olson, the photographer. “And the rest of the story took so long to complete, her daughter was a year old when it finally ran.”

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

In a second shoot with Grace Slink, the new mom dangled her daughter China by the feet in 1971

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Grace Slick stepped outside with her mom and little China in 1971.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Eric Clapton with grandmother Rose Clapp in 1970 in Surrey, England.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

The former Reggie Dwight, later known as Elton John, laughed with his mom Sheila Fairebrother and Sheila’s husband Fred (whom Elton affectionately called “Derf,” Fred spelled backwards) in their suburban London apartment in 1970.

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LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

David Crosby with his father, 1970.

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LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Richie Havens with his parents in Brooklyn, 1970. The musician who opened the show at Woodstock grew up with his folks, Richard and Mildred, in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, but he bought them this home in nearby East Flatbush when his music career took off. The Havenses had nine kids and, as Mrs. Havens told LIFE, “Richie is the only one who’s really moved away. I can’t get rid of most of them.”

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Ginger Baker, the Cream and Blind Faith drummer, flashed a smile with his mother Ruby Streatfield inside her rowhouse in Bexley, outside London, in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Ginger Baker and his mum, 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Jackson 5 pose with their parents in Encino, Calif., in 1970.

The Jackson 5 posing with their parents in Encino, Calif., in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

LIFE photographer John Olson set up to shoot the Jackson 5 in their backyard in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

With their parents standing by, 13-year-old dynamo Michael (front left) and his brothers Jackie, Marlon, Tito and Jermaine straddled their motorbikes by the pool, 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Donovan and his parents, Donald and Winifred Leitch, England in 1970.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE With Rock Stars and Their Parents

Joe Cocker with his mother, 1970, from a series John Olson shot on rock stars and their parents.

John Olson/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

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