Regimental Sgt. Zippo is the thirty-first studio album by English musician
Elton John. Recorded during late 1967 and early 1968, it was originally intended to be John's debut album, but his publisher
Dick James did not approve of the record's musical style, and the album was scrapped. John then recorded and released Empty Sky (1969) as his debut album instead. Regimental Sgt. Zippo remained unreleased until
Record Store Day of June 2021, when it was issued in mono on vinyl. It was followed by a wider release of the album in July 2022 in stereo vinyl and stereo/mono CD.
Background
Regimental Sgt. Zippo was recorded between November 1967 and May 1968.[4] For the sessions, John worked with musicians who were either his or his manager Steve Brown's associates, including guitarist
Caleb Quaye and drummer Roger Pope (both members of the band
Hookfoot at the time), and bassist Tony Murray (from
the Troggs).[5] The songs were recorded in a four-track studio at the offices of
Dick James Music.
The project was eventually shelved in favour of what became John's debut album, Empty Sky (1969).[3] Bernie Taupin later confirmed his and Elton John's love of The Beatles and Moody Blues,[6][7] however,
Dick James whose company published John and Taupin's songs didn't believe that this was the right artistic direction for them.[8]
According to John's collaborator
Bernie Taupin, the album's trippy sound was "a tip of the hat to Sgt. Pepper. It certainly proved that we were hanging on the coattails of things that were currently popular – things like '
A Whiter Shade of Pale' were in vogue at that particular point in time. I think, in a way, I was literally trying to be part of a gang."[9]
Plastic Penny, which featured drummer
Nigel Olsson, who played on Empty Sky, and by 1970 was a member of John's band, covered "Turn to Me" in 1969.[10]
Release
Regimental Sgt. Zippo was eventually released, 53 years after its recording, on 12 June 2021 for
Record Store Day, as a mono vinyl-only release[3] limited to 7,000 copies.[11][12] It was released on compact disc on 8 July 2022, featuring both mono and stereo mixes of the complete album, along with a stereo vinyl version.[13]
^John, Elton (15 October 2019).
Me: Elton John Official Autobiography. Pan Macmillan. pp. 50: “Caleb Quaye was the in-house engineer, a multi-instrumentalist with a joint permanently smouldering between his fingers. Caleb was very hip and he didn’t let you forget it.”.
ISBN978-1-5098-5333-5.