Song for Guy
"Song for Guy" is a mainly instrumental piece of music by British musician Elton John. It is the closing track of his 1978 album A Single Man.
Musical structure
"Song for Guy" opens with a solo piano, which is then accompanied by a looped Roland CR-78 drum machine, with occasional shaker and wind chimes alternating; other keyboards are often layered in shortly after, with a bass guitar mainly accompanying this. It is instrumental until the end, in which the words "Life isn't everything" are repeated."Song for Guy" stands as one of the few pieces written by John alone and the only instrumental he made and released as a single. His subsequent instrumentals were released only as B-sides, notably "Choc Ice Goes Mental" and "The Man Who Never Died".
Reception
"Song for Guy" was successful in the UK, peaking at No. 4 in January 1979, and remaining on the chart for ten weeks. It marked his return to the Top Ten for the first time since 1976's "Don't Go Breaking My Heart", which reached No. 1 on the same chart. The single was not released in the US until March 1979 where it barely made the charts, peaking at No. 110. It was a modest success, though, on the American adult contemporary charts, where it reached No. 37 in the spring of 1979.Cash Box wrote that "Song for Guy" had "an alluring beauty", with "spunky piano chording, rhythm ace backing, evocative synthesizer explorations and chimes". Record World said it would surprise his fans as "an instrumental with traditional orchestral arrangements and John's own semi-classical piano work".
Use in media
"Song for Guy" was used extensively throughout all six episodes of the 1985 BBC comedy series Happy Families. It is also used in the seventh episode of Diamonds in the Sky, a BBC–Channel 9 Perth co-production about the history of commercial aviation, and is played frequently in the 1980 movie Oh Heavenly Dog starring Chevy Chase and Jane Seymour and directed by Rod Browning. The song also features prominently in the 2017 film Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool. In November 2020, the track was featured in The Crown, during a scene in which Lady Diana Spencer dances alone in a Buckingham Palace ballroom. It was also used for the german weekly show "Sport unter der Lupe", a show about the regional sport in the south west of germany, from 1979 till the end in 2000.Personnel
- Elton John – piano, Mellotron, Polymoog, ARP String Ensemble, vocals
- Ray Cooper – wind chimes, shakers
- Clive Franks – bass