Such a performance by the British pop superstar was what President Biden’s predecessor had sought but never received.
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Elton John is on a lengthy tour of the United States, with stops including Philadelphia in July.
WASHINGTON — For anyone who was listening, Elton John’s music was the unofficial soundtrack to Donald J. Trump’s presidency. The songs “Tiny Dancer” and “Rocket Man” were pumped into the background of his political rallies at earsplitting decibels. A copy of Mr. John’s 1972 album, “Honky Château,” became a diplomatic gift for North Korea’s dictator. The singer’s crowd sizes were both a presidential fixation and an aspiration.
Which is why it’s so interesting that Mr. John, a superstar and longtime activist, agreed to play at the White House on Friday as a guest of President Biden and Jill Biden, the first lady, years after sidestepping Mr. Trump’s overtures.
The performance by Mr. John, who is on a lengthy farewell tour in the United States, was part of a larger celebration that was meant to honor people whom the White House called “everyday heroes”: teachers, nurses, emergency and mental health workers, students and activists.
Several people involved with the planning insist that nothing about the event has anything to do with the fact that Mr. Bidens’ predecessor really, really likes Elton John. They say that the singer was simply interested in performing at the White House. (And, they wonder, does everything have to be about Trump?)
Still, Mr. Biden has managed to pull off an A-list invitation that his predecessor had sought but never accomplished. In fact, mainstream celebrities are returning to the White House after years of avoiding the area. In an email, a White House official helpfully pointed out that more than two dozen entertainers, ranging from the Jonas Brothers to Andrea Bocelli, have performed at White House events since the beginning of the Biden presidency.
Mr. Bocelli, like Mr. John, very publicly dodged invitations to perform at the Trump inauguration. But no entertainer’s music — except for that of maybe Lee Greenwood — is more solidly (or unwillingly) linked to Mr. Trump than Mr. John’s.
Mr. Biden does have his own personal relationship to the singer’s music. The president wrote in a memoir that he and his sons, Beau and Hunter, would sing “Crocodile Rock” at the top of their lungs when Mr. Biden drove them to school.
The name for Friday’s event, called a “A Night When Hope and History Rhyme,” is borrowed from a work by Seamus Heaney, one of Mr. Biden’s favorite poets.
If Mr. Biden’s relationship to the music has been poignant, the relationship between the former president and Mr. John has been slightly more volatile.
For starters, Mr. John’s music was a feature of the political rallies that fueled Mr. Trump’s rise. A former Trump campaign official said that Mr. John was so displeased with the use of his songs at Trump rallies that campaign officials received a cease-and-desist request asking them to stop. The former official said that the music was briefly pulled but that Mr. Trump, who personally oversaw the rally music playlists, eventually ordered “Tiny Dancer” and “Rocket Man” back into the mix.
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In late 2016, an aide to Mr. Trump said that Mr. John would play his inauguration, a claim that was quickly squashed. “Incorrect. He will NOT be performing,” Fran Curtis, Mr. John’s longtime publicist, wrote in an email to The New York Times. Mr. John eventually sent an email to Mr. Trump politely declining the gig but suggested that he might play a state dinner sometime.
“I was honoured to perform at a White House State Dinner for the UK during the Clinton presidency and I would be delighted to do the same for you if the opportunity arises,” Mr. John wrote in that email. “I also want to wish you every success with your presidency. I love America deeply, a country that has always welcomed me and my music with kind, tolerant and open arms.”
No plans were made for Mr. John to play such a dinner, according to Stephanie Grisham, a former Trump press secretary. The Trump White House never welcomed Britain to the White House, and such an invitation to Mr. John was “definitely never an effort because we knew he wouldn’t,” she said.
The two men enjoyed friendlier relations before the Trump presidency: Mr. John sang at the wedding of Mr. Trump and Melania Knauss in 2005. And when Mr. John wed his longtime partner, David Furnish, in a civil ceremony, Mr. Trump offered public congratulations: “If two people dig each other, they dig each other. Good luck, Elton. Good luck, David. Have a great life,” Mr. Trump wrote in a blog post, which has since been taken off-line.
As Mr. Trump grew more involved in politics, the singer he was so personally fond of began to publicly declare his support for Democrats. Mr. John, who played at a fund-raiser for Hillary Clinton, Mr. Trump’s Democratic rival for the presidency, said that he had “fear for the world” if Mr. Trump were to win.
“He’ll marginalize people,” Mr. John told the news site Mic in the summer of 2016. “He’s already doing it.” The warning was prescient: After Mr. Trump’s election victory, his administration aggressively moved to strip away the rights of people in the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community.
“I’m not a Republican in a million years,” Mr. John told The Guardian in early 2016 regarding the use of his music at Trump rallies. “Why not ask Ted Nugent?” he said of the far-right musician, adding an expletive.
Somehow, Mr. John was one of few celebrities able to publicly reject Mr. Trump and not get a nuclear-grade Twitter insult in response. Though he was spurned, Mr. Trump remained a fan, to the point that John’s music was awkwardly laced through one of the most geopolitically volatile situations facing the Trump administration.
Mr. Trump called Kim Jong-un, the North Korean ruler, “Little Rocket Man.” To prove to Mr. Kim that it was really more of a pet name than an insult, Mr. Trump directed his secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, to personally deliver a “Honky Château” CD to the dictator.
“Getting this CD to Kim remained a high priority for several months,” John Bolton, Mr. Trump’s former director of national security, wrote in his memoir.
After spending several years with his music piped into Mr. Trump’s political wind turbine, Mr. John, who is 75, seems intent on reclaiming his music and reaffirming his support of communities that Mr. Trump and his supporters have maligned.
Michael Feeney, a spokesman for A+E Networks and The History Channel, two networks paying for the event on Friday evening, said that he had worked with Mr. John’s team to plan the event, which took place mostly through discussions with officials in the East Wing. The White House event was limited to 2,000 people — one of the largest events held to date by the Biden administration; Mr. John is scheduled to play a full concert at Nationals Park on Saturday.
Source: nytimes.com