The original version, which is in the key of
E major, appeared on John's 1973 album
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road and was released as a single in 1974. The lyrics of the song are a sympathetic portrayal of the life of
Marilyn Monroe. The song's opening line "Goodbye, Norma Jean" refers to Monroe's real name, Norma Jeane (more commonly spelled Jean) Mortenson. Taupin was inspired to write the lyrics after hearing the phrase "candle in the wind" used by
Clive Davis in tribute to
Janis Joplin: "I just kept hearing this term [and] I thought, what a great way of describing someone’s life". Taupin has noted that the theory about him being a "rabid Marilyn Monroe fanatic" has been a common misconception: "It's not that I didn't have respect for her. It's just that the song could just as easily have been about James Dean or Jim Morrison,
Kurt Cobain,
Sylvia Plath,
Virginia Woolf. I mean, basically, anybody, any writer, actor, actress, or musician who died young and sort of became this iconic picture of
Dorian Gray, that thing where they simply stopped aging. It's a beauty frozen in time." In an interview with
Rolling Stone in 2014, Taupin disputed the implication that he was a Monroe fan: "She is absolutely not someone I admired a lot as a kid or anything. She was just a metaphor for fame and dying young, and people sort of overdoing the indulgence, and those that do die young". On the song itself, he stated: "I think it's one of the best marriages of lyric and melody that Elton and I have ever put together. But it doesn't change the fact that I wasn't particularly enamored by Marilyn Monroe." The single release of the original song reached No. 11 in the UK charts in 1974. At the time, it was not released as a single in the United States as "
Bennie and the Jets" was chosen instead.
Legacy This version was ranked No. 347 on
Rolling Stone's list of
The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time in 2004. In 2010, the ranking dropped to No. 356. During a concert on 7 April 1990 at
Farm Aid IV, John dedicated the song to
Ryan White, who had been suffering from
AIDS. White died of AIDS complications the next day. John performed the song "
Skyline Pigeon" at White's funeral.
Personnel •
Elton John – piano, lead vocals •
Davey Johnstone – electric guitar, acoustic guitar, backing vocals •
Dee Murray – bass guitar, backing vocals •
Nigel Olsson – drums, backing vocals
Charts Certifications ==1986 live version==