NEW YORK: Elton John is retiring from the road after his upcoming three-year global tour, capping nearly 50 years on stages around the world.
“I’ve had a good run, I think you’d admit that,” John said Wednesday, adding that he wanted to “leave people thinking, ‘I saw the last tour and it was fantastic.’“
The 70-year-old singer, pianist and composer said he wanted to spend time with his family. His children will be 8 and 10 when the tour ends in 2021, and John said he hoped he might be able to take them to soccer practice. “My priorities now are my children and my husband and my family,” he said. “This is the end.”
John made the announcement at an event in New York in which he sat at a piano and performed “Tiny Dancer” and “I’m Still Standing.” He wore his signature glasses and a colorful suit jacket that read “Gucci Loves Elton.”
His final tour — dubbed “Farewell Yellow Brick Road” — starts on Sept. 8 in Allentown, Pennsylvania and includes 300 shows in North America, Europe, Asia and South America. Tickets go on sale beginning Feb. 2.
Interest in the announcement was so high his website crashed. He wrote on Instagram that “EltonJohn.com will be fully back online as soon as possible.”
John said he decided on his retirement plans in 2015 in France: “I can’t physically do the traveling and I don’t want to,” he said.
He said he may do a residency after the tour wraps, but ruled out the idea of using a hologram of himself. He called it “spooky” and “a bit freaky,” and said he told his kids to “promise me that there won’t be a hologram of me.”
“Who knows? They may go broke and put me back on the (expletive) stage,” he added.
John has suffered several medical setbacks of late, including a bacterial infection last year that he contracted during a South American tour and an E. coli bacterial infection in 2009. He’s also had appendicitis and has been fitted with a pacemaker. But on Wednesday he said he’s “in great health.”
In an interview after the announcement, John told The Associated Press, “Ten years ago, I wanted to die onstage.”
But, he said, “I just never thought fatherhood could bring me so much joy, and I came to fatherhood late in the day, but it’s been one of the miracles of my life.”
He said two children keep him and husband David Furnish busy: “We thought about (more kids) but we said, ‘No.’ We have enough on our plate with these two. If we were 10, 15 years younger, we probably would have, definitely. I would love to have a little girl.”
At the Grammy Awards, to be presented in New York on Sunday, John is to perform alongside Miley Cyrus and will collect the President’s Merit Award. His Las Vegas residency ends in May after six years. His hits include “Your Song” and “Candle in the Wind.” He has won five Grammys, an Oscar, a Golden Globe for “The Lion King” and a Tony Award for “Aida.” He is the recipient of a Kennedy Center Honor and has sold 300 million records.
“I had a period in my life when I was selling records, I couldn’t stop being No. 1, and I gradually evened out. If you’re good live, it’s about being able to play live. The great artists that are out now — McCartney, Springsteen, Sting, Bob Dylan — they’ve all been great live performers, The Who — that’s the longevity,” he said. “There aren’t many of us left and I don’t think when we go there will be anybody else to replace us.”
John launched his first tour in 1970 and has performed over 4,000 times in more than 80 countries. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.
He said the upcoming tour could include special guests onstage: “Maybe. Yeah, of course. ...That keeps the momentum of the tour going. ...That will happen.”
From 1970-76, John released 10 original studio albums and seven consecutive chart toppers. He remained a hit maker over the following four decades, from “The Lion King” soundtrack song “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” to a revision of his Marilyn Monroe ode “Candle in the Wind,” released in 1997 after the death of John’s friend Princess Diana and one of the best-selling singles of all time.
“I love music. It’s not a chore. It’s pleasure. Music kept me alive when I was doing drugs and I was still working. It’s a constant in my life ever since I’ve been a young boy. The reason I’m here is because of music. And now the reason has changed — it’s because of my children,” he said.
Elton John says upcoming tour will be his last
Elton John says upcoming tour will be his last
New book explores 12 masterpieces of Islamic manuscript art across centuries
- William Greenwood discusses his new book on a dozen masterful Islamic manuscripts
DUBAI: A new book exploring 12 extraordinary Islamic manuscripts has been published with the intention of making these richly illustrated masterpieces accessible to all.
“Illuminated: Art, Knowledge, and Wonder in Twelve Islamic Manuscripts,” published by Empty Quarter Press, showcases a dozen of the finest manuscripts ever produced, including the medieval Arab classics “Maqamat al-Hariri,” “Kalila wa Dimna,” “Aja’ib Al-Makhluqat Wa Ghara’ib Al-Mawjudat,” and “Kitab Al-Diryaq,” as well as spectacular works spanning the 13th to 17th century Timurid, Safavid, and Mughal worlds.
Its author, William Greenwood, is a specialist in Islamic art and culture. The featured manuscripts were valued as both vessels of knowledge and as artistic products in their own right. From medical treatises and celestial charts to epic poetry and fables, each manuscript reflects the diverse traditions of Islamic intellectual and artistic life.
For Greenwood, who has worked as a curator for more than 10 years, most recently at Zayed National Museum in Abu Dhabi, the featured manuscripts are important for several reasons. Firstly, they are incredible works of art. Secondly, each is “a snapshot of the time when it was made, in terms of the artistic styles and content, but also the historical context.”
The first chapter of “Kitab al-Diryaq,” for example, has been attributed to mid-13th-century Mosul, and “is very much about glorifying the ruler,” Greenwood says. “Kitab Suwar al-Kawakib al-Thabita,” copied in 15th-century Samarkand, speaks to the flourishing of science during the Timurid Renaissance, while the Hamzanama, from 16th-century India, marks the beginning of a distinctively Mughal style of painting.
“The third reason is that, as beautiful as the paintings and illumination are, these are almost always intended to enliven texts which in themselves are wonderful – whether they are national epics like the “Shahnameh,” encyclopaedic works like “Aja’ib al-Makhluqat,” or demonstrations of virtuoso linguistic skill like “The Maqamat of Al-Hariri.”
Lastly, he says, they are “remarkable testaments to a multicultural and cosmopolitan Islamic world, absorbing, refining, and rethinking everything from Indian fables and classical astronomy into a coherent and distinctively ‘Islamic’ whole.”
Greenwood’s interest in illuminated manuscripts was initially sparked by a mid-14th-century Mamluk copy of “Sulwan al-Muta’ fi ‘Udwan al-Atba’,” which he encountered while working at the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha.
“It’s the only illustrated medieval copy of this text and was probably made for a royal patron,” explains Greenwood, who has also worked at the British Museum in London. “The mix of Byzantine, Persian, and Chinese elements within the painting appealed to my interest in cross-cultural encounters. The text itself is part of the ‘mirrors for princes’ genre, which is supposed to provide guidance for rulers; this was a very important type of writing, which is represented in ‘Illuminated’ by an early 14th-century Mamluk copy of ‘Kalila wa Dimna.’”
However, it was not a single discovery or experience that prompted him to write the book, but rather a growing realization that, although the general public engages with illustrated and illuminated Islamic manuscripts, there were few general works on the topic.
“There are lots of very detailed publications which deal either with specific manuscripts or particular design elements across them, but not much for an interested but non-academic audience. It was also quite exciting to think about having paintings from these very different manuscripts together in one publication. Here you can follow the evolution of styles and ideas from the 13th through to the 17th century, which is helpful for non-specialists.”
The end result is a richly illustrated book written for a wide audience. Both a celebration of the artistic traditions of the Islamic book and an invitation to uncover its beauty and treasures, “Illuminated” brings together Islamic art, scholarship, and storytelling in an accessible and engaging form.
“I hope that being able to see these works together in one publication will open readers’ eyes to how wonderful they are,” says Greenwood. “This is really intended for everyone, and if it sparks wider interest in the manuscripts featured, then that in itself brings a unique value. All of these works deal with learning and imparting wisdom in some way, and if this book can help to spread that a little further, then it has done its job.”









