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but Elton John's money machine keeps churning out millions

All the pay cuts and layoffs cripple me insideI pay the price for living every day

So sings Elton John on his latest album, The One. Since its British launch three weeks ago, The One has sold almost 200,000 copies and is now at No 2 in the chart. PolyGram, its distributor, confidently forecasts it will sell over a million in Britain alone. Worldwide, the figure will be many millions.

Together with a 150 date world tour, The One could, according to industry estimates, make pounds 7m for the 45 year old entertainer over the next year.

Last weekend, more than 200,000 people paid pounds 22.50 each to watch Elton John and Eric Clapton on stage at Wembley. Then Elton was off to sell out performances in Birmingham and continental Europe. Last night he was in Basle; this week it is the turn of Bologna and Rome.

They will pay to see the public face of Elton John. They will watch the legendary Rocket Man, the wearer of zany costumes, weird spectacles and bizarre hats or, as at present, a schoolboy mop hair extension costing a reported pounds 14,000.

But a percentage of their money for the tickets, T shirts, records, posters, programmes and videos will go to his very private business empire.

Administered by John Reid, his manager, Elton John's business nestles in three tightly held private companies,replica rolex oyster perpetual datejust blue face, one of which, Watside Charities, is a registered charity.

All three have substantial turnovers but seem to make comparatively little in the way of taxable profits and therefore pay little corporation tax.

In the case of the two most successful companies, a large chunk of their income is consumed by the cost of their sole employee: Elton John.

In public, Elton is the typical pop star, who once declared he did not read contracts, the traditional bane of a recording star's life. In private, he is a money making machine who, according to his biographer, Philip Norman, on the way back to the hotel after a concert would detail in a notebook the size of the audience and the estimated box office takings.

While other rock stars have succumbed to drugs and booze and he has had his share Elton has kept churning out the music and adding to his fortune, now widely reported to be pounds 100m.

Over the years, no rock star has been able to match his prolific work rate or worldwide appeal. Madonna and Michael Jackson may be bigger, but they have not been hitting the charts, as he has, since 1972. He has 24 platinum albums (sales of more than a million copies each) to his name. They include his last releases, Sleeping with the Past (3.5 million) and The Very Best of Elton John (7.5 million outside North America, where it is not available).

According to one recent music industry calculation,rolex oyster perpetual datejust mens replica, podgy, balding Reginald Kenneth Dwight (his real name) from Pinner, Middlesex, accounts for 3 per cent of annual record, tape and compact disc sales worldwide.

Whenever his popularity shows signs of waning in one country, says a spokesman for Reid, 'we discover somewhere else where he is growing'.

For that the credit must go to Reid. Through more than two decades of Elton's frequently lavish spending and sometimes outrageous behaviour, Reid has kept his charge's business affairs ticking over. Few people have been more famous for spending money and living life to the full than Elton John. Like Liberace, once his hero, nothing was too ornate or fantastic.

He loved football, so he backed Watford, the nearest league club. He gave a gold Rolex watch to each member of an orchestra, an original Rembrandt to a favourite guitarist. He went to Australia and came back with a Melbourne municipal tram. He lost a pounds 6,replica rolex oyster datejust perpetual,000 limited edition gold Cartier watch. He let his bath run over at the Savoy while he made a phone call and caused pounds 5,000 of damage. He once reportedly ran up a pounds 6,000 bill on wines at one meal for himself and a 14 strong party at a Dallas restaurant.

For his 42nd birthday, he spent a reported pounds 200,000 on a party in France. More than 200 guests were flown over and treated to a spectacular meal the centrepiece of which was a nine foot replica of the Eiffel Tower served by uniformed footmen in wigs and tails.

He threw equally spectacular parties at his mansion in Windsor. He mixed with royalty, he went to dinner with the Reagans at the White House and described it as 'so boring I almost fell asleep'.

He went on crash diets and tried expensive baldness treatments. He confessed to being bisexual. In 1984, in a blaze of publicity, he married Renate Blauel, his German recording engineer. They spent much of the next four years apart before separating permanently. He sued Dick James, his former manager, and won. He won pounds 1m in libel damages from the Sun.

More recently he has been selling: shares in Watford and much of the contents of Woodside, his former matrimonial home. The reason for the sales, say his management, is that he is rich and rich people buy and sell things. Sceptics incorrectly put the sales down to desperation: he had frittered his millions away; he was hard up; he was bust. Others put the sales down to a purging of the recent unhappy past rather than a serious attempt to raise cash.

He still has his art and the world's largest private collection of records. He put his penthouse flat in Chelsea on the market for pounds 1.25m he had never spent a night there but still has the Windsor home and a house in Holland Park. And he can still make money at the drop of a hat. Earlier this year, he signed a pounds 9m deal with PolyGram to make just six records and received pounds 3m for making a series of Diet Coke commercials.

He also went public on drink and drugs. He attended sessions of Alcoholics Anonymous and was treated for cocaine addiction at a clinic in Chicago.

In a video costing pounds 11 to fans on the current tour he says: 'There are several things in life now that I never used to take notice of. It sounds terribly corny beautiful days, trees, flowers. I never used to get up during the days. I used to hide behind the curtains. I used to hate the sunshine. I used to get up when the day was finished. I feel I have become a simpler person.'

But while he was hiding behind the curtains, Reid was keeping the money coming in. What began as a love affair in 1970 between Elton and Reid has become one of the most enduring and successful professional relationships in the music business.

They were like chalk and cheese. One was stocky and losing his hair, the other sleek and diminutive. Elton was the well meaning boy from the Home Counties, Reid the hard edged, ambitious wheeler dealer from Paisley, near Glasgow.

When they met, Reid was managing the Tamla Motown label for EMI. Elton and his mother encouraged him to leave EMI and join Dick James Music as Elton's personal manager. At that time, the maximum rate of income tax was over 80 per cent. To reduce the star's tax burden, his overseas earnings were separated from his domestic income. Henceforth, one company would look after his overseas earnings while another would receive his domestic income. 'They expressed unease at what might be happening to John's publishing income in America they suspected that Dick James's US subsidiaries were siphoning off larger than normal amounts before returning his earnings to be split at home.' The final break came in 1975. By then, adds Garfield, 'Elton John had written 136 songs and recorded 169.'

Since then, under Reid's guidance,replica rolex datejust lady, Elton and his manager have apparently prospered. According to Philip Norman, Reid is also a multi millionaire, with a fortune estimated at pounds 12m.

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By zroessgs viesoess
Added May 26 '17

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