Elton John’s Discography: Every Album, Every Chart Peak, Every Era
I’ve watched him walk to the piano more times than I can count — sequins flashing, crowd roaring — and every time it hits me: this isn’t just a performer. This is a living archive of pop music.
Elton John didn’t simply have a long career. He built one of the most commercially dominant and critically celebrated discographies in rock and pop history. With lyricist Bernie Taupin as his lifelong creative counterpart, he turned melody into mythology.
What follows is the full studio album timeline — release dates included — along with his Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 hits by year, as documented by Billboard.
Settle in. This is a long, golden road.
The Studio Albums: 1969–2023
1969 – Empty Sky
Released: June 6, 1969 (UK)
Elton’s debut. Psychedelic flourishes, ambitious arrangements, but limited commercial impact.
1970 – Elton John
Released: April 10, 1970
Breakthrough album featuring “Your Song.” Introduced the world to his piano-driven pop balladry.
1970 – Tumbleweed Connection
Released: October 30, 1970
Americana themes, cinematic storytelling. Cult favorite.
1971 – Madman Across the Water
Released: November 5, 1971
Orchestral textures and darker moods. Included “Levon” and later live staple “Tiny Dancer.”
1972 – Honky Château
Released: May 19, 1972
First U.S. No. 1 album. Contained “Rocket Man.”
1973 – Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Piano Player
Released: January 26, 1973
Spawned “Crocodile Rock” and “Daniel.”
1973 – Goodbye Yellow Brick Road
Released: October 5, 1973
The masterpiece. A double album packed with hits.
1974 – Caribou
Released: June 28, 1974
Quickly recorded but commercially huge.
1975 – Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy
Released: May 19, 1975
Autobiographical concept album. First album ever to debut at No. 1 on Billboard 200.
1975 – Rock of the Westies
Released: October 24, 1975
Harder-edged rock approach.
1976 – Blue Moves
Released: October 22, 1976
Double LP, expansive and introspective.
1978 – A Single Man
Released: October 16, 1978
1979 – Victim of Love
Released: October 13, 1979
Disco experiment.
1980 – 21 at 33
Released: May 13, 1980
1981 – The Fox
Released: May 20, 1981
1982 – Jump Up!
Released: April 9, 1982
1983 – Too Low for Zero
Released: May 30, 1983
Major comeback album.
1984 – Breaking Hearts
Released: June 18, 1984
1985 – Ice on Fire
Released: November 4, 1985
1986 – Leather Jackets
Released: November 3, 1986
1988 – Reg Strikes Back
Released: June 20, 1988
1989 – Sleeping with the Past
Released: August 29, 1989
Marked resurgence in the UK.
1992 – The One
Released: June 22, 1992
1995 – Made in England
Released: March 20, 1995
1997 – The Big Picture
Released: September 22, 1997
2001 – Songs from the West Coast
Released: October 1, 2001
Return to piano-driven roots.
2004 – Peachtree Road
Released: November 9, 2004
2006 – The Captain & the Kid
Released: September 18, 2006
Sequel to Captain Fantastic.
2010 – The Union (with Leon Russell)
Released: October 19, 2010
2013 – The Diving Board
Released: September 13, 2013
2016 – Wonderful Crazy Night
Released: February 5, 2016
2021 – The Lockdown Sessions
Released: October 22, 2021
Collaborative album featuring contemporary artists.
Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 Hits by Year
Now let’s turn to the singles — the songs that stormed radio and defined eras.
1971
- “Your Song” (#8)
1972
- “Rocket Man” (#6)
1973
- “Crocodile Rock” (#1)
- “Daniel” (#2)
1974
- “Bennie and the Jets” (#1)
- “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” (#2)
1975
- “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” (#1)
- “Philadelphia Freedom” (#1)
- “Someone Saved My Life Tonight” (#4)
1976
- “Island Girl” (#1)
1982
- “Blue Eyes” (#10)
1983
- “I Guess That’s Why They Call It the Blues” (#4)
1984
- “Sad Songs (Say So Much)” (#5)
1985
- “Nikita” (#7)
1986
- “That’s What Friends Are For” (with Dionne Warwick, Stevie Wonder, Gladys Knight) (#1)
1988
- “I Don’t Wanna Go On with You Like That” (#2)
1989
- “Sacrifice” (U.S. peak later in 1990 at #18; UK #1)
1992
- “The One” (#9)
1994
- “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” (#4)
1997
- “Something About the Way You Look Tonight” (#1)
- “Candle in the Wind 1997” (#1)
1998
- “Written in the Stars” (#2 Adult Contemporary; pop Top 20)
2021
- “Cold Heart (Pnau Remix)” (global No. 1s; U.S. Top 10 in 2022)
Awards & Milestones
Elton John’s chart dominance translated into historic recognition:
- 5 Grammy Awards
- 2 Academy Awards (including for “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” from The Lion King, written with Tim Rice)
- 2 Golden Globes
- 1 Tony Award
- 1 Emmy Award (achieving EGOT status)
His 1997 re-recording of “Candle in the Wind,” dedicated to Princess Diana, became one of the best-selling physical singles in history.
He has sold more than 300 million records worldwide. Seven consecutive No. 1 U.S. albums during the 1970s. More than 50 Top 40 hits in America. Nine No. 1 albums in the United States.
And then there was the Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour — one of the highest-grossing tours ever mounted.
The Legacy in Context
What makes Elton’s discography extraordinary isn’t just volume. It’s range.
- Glam rock maximalism (Goodbye Yellow Brick Road)
- Confessional autobiography (Captain Fantastic)
- MTV-era resilience (“I’m Still Standing”)
- Disney renaissance crossover
- 21st-century collaborations with artists half his age
Through it all, the piano remained central. The melody remained king.
I’ve heard 20,000 people sing “Your Song” in unison — and what strikes me isn’t nostalgia. It’s durability. These songs don’t belong to a decade. They float.
The release dates tell one story — relentless productivity, reinvention, commercial peaks and valleys.
The Billboard charts tell another — dominance, resilience, comeback power.
But the real story?
It’s that Elton John wrote songs sturdy enough to survive fashion cycles, cultural shifts, and even his own excesses.
Underneath the rhinestones and rocket ships sits a songwriter who understood something elemental: give people a melody they can carry home.
And for more than five decades, that’s exactly what he did.