Nikita (song)

"Nikita" is a song by English musician Elton John from his 19th studio album, Ice on Fire (1985). It was released as the album's lead single on 4 October 1985, charting at number three on the UK Singles Chart, peaking at number seven in the United States, and reaching the top 10 worldwide, topping the charts of eight countries. The song features George Michael on backing vocals and Nik Kershaw on guitar.

Song synopsis
In the song, John describes his crush on a person called Nikita, an East German border guard patrolling the Berlin Wall whom he cannot meet because he is not allowed into East Germany. Though the name Nikita can refer to women in other languages, it is a male name in Russian. In interviews, John has said that he was aware of Nikita being a male name in Russian.

Composition
The song is composed in the key of G major in 4/4 time. The song employs a verse-chorus-verse format, with the second chorus being shorter than the first, plus an instrumental bridge mechanically-themed breakdown halfway through the second chorus.

Reception
Cash Box said the "tune is as sensitive as the subject matter" and that the song has "a mesmerizing tempo, well textured production and John’s inimitable vocal style." Billboard called it a "lilting tune."

Music video
The video for the song was directed by Ken Russell. John accepted the proposed script written by Russell which was a male–female love interpretation of the song, depicting his attempted romance of an blonde female East German border guard at a Berlin border crossing with short hair and bright blue eyes. Scenes showed the two together in various happy situations, including wearing the colours of Watford FC, of whom John is a supporter and former chairman. The video also features a red Bentley Continental Convertible, which was owned by John from 1985 to 2000.

Anya Major plays the role of Nikita; Andreas Wisniewski plays a male border guard who seems to be her commanding officer.

Live performances
John played "Nikita" during the album's tour in 1985 to 1986 and again in the 1988–1989 Reg Strikes Back Tour plus the 1998 leg of The Big Picture Tour. John continued to perform the song in mid-2000s, however the song was only played on his solo concerts ever since.

Allegation of plagiarism
Elton John, Bernie Taupin and Big Pig Music were accused of plagiarism by South African photographer and songwriter Guy Hobbs. Hobbs wrote a song in 1982 entitled "Natasha", about a Russian waitress on a cruise ship, who was never allowed to leave it. The song was copyrighted in 1983, and sent to Big Pig Music (John's publisher) for a possible publishing deal, but Hobbs never heard back from the publisher. In 2001, Hobbs came across the lyric book to "Nikita" and noticed similarities with his song. Despite repeated attempts by Hobbs to contact John over the issue, he never heard from him and so commenced legal action in 2012.

On 31 October 2012, a US federal judge granted John and Taupin's motion to dismiss, finding that the song did not infringe Hobbs' copyright because the only similar elements were generic images and themes that are not protected under copyright law.

Track listings

 * 7-inch single
 * 1) "Nikita" – 4:54
 * 2) "The Man Who Never Died" – 5:10
 * or "Restless" – 4:26
 * or "I'm Still Standing" – 3:03
 * or "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" – 6:12


 * 12-inch maxi single
 * 1) "Nikita" (album version) – 5:43
 * 2) "The Man Who Never Died" – 5:10
 * 3) "Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word" (live) – 3:26
 * 4) "I'm Still Standing" (live) – 4:38

Personnel

 * Elton John – Yamaha GS1 piano, synthesizer, lead vocals, backing vocals
 * Fred Mandel – synthesizers
 * Nik Kershaw – electric guitar, backing vocals
 * David Paton – fretless bass
 * Dave Mattacks – drums, percussion
 * Davey Johnstone – backing vocals
 * George Michael – backing vocals