Finally caught up. Turnstiles was the best album up to that point, with two tracks I had heard of but never heard ("Summer, Highland Falls" and "Miami 2017"). Both earn their place as fan favorites pretty easily - perhaps predictably, they are my favorite new finds from this thread. "Prelude/Angry Young Man" is also cool, if a bit of a weaker version of "Brenda Rinetti" musically
Of course, the Stranger still blows that album away. Hard to deny most of the songs on it, despite having heard them countless times. Had heard and enjoyed "Vienna" a few times before, didn't realize it was one of the few non-single tracks from this album. Save something for the next few albums! Well, I guess "Get It Right the First Time" is a surprising dud, except the Stevie Wonder bit
― Vinnie, Friday, 8 September 2017 01:29 (eight years ago)
And since no one mentioned it (maybe because it's so obvious), "James" seems like a near steal of "Daniel" by Elton John. Same instrumentation, same mood, lyrics about a friend.
― Vinnie, Friday, 8 September 2017 01:42 (eight years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S129T9kav8I
Everybody Has a Dream closes The Stranger with a song Billy had apparently had kicking around since the Cold Spring Harbor era, though I don't know when it got set up with the Charles-influenced verses and gospel-borrowing choruses. The last two minutes are effectively "The Stranger (Reprise)," though not identified as such on the jacket. Love that whistle! Online sources indicate it began life as a James-Taylor inspired song in waltz time - he must have really been struggling to make that work or you figure it would have cropped up on Streetlife Serenade when he was really hard up for material. But anyway.
As before, I recommend to the devoted fans the Sirius XM clips of Billy Joel talking about the album, which have little in the way of deep insight but a lot of little treats. In this case you get him at the piano knocking through the pieces of the Abbey Road medley and some version of the "Oyster Bay" song-fragment when discussing "Scenes," and his attempt at a Gordon Lightfoot impression on "She's Always a Woman."
Also, just to restate what a milestone this album was for him, we've really crossed a rubicon here. The album before this one peaked at #122. This one got to #2; of his seven remaining pop LPs, all would peak in the top ten, and four would hit #1. That's not counting live albums, and of course the juggernaut double-disc Greatest Hits. His singles would perform a bit more unevenly, but he still has twenty top-twenty hits ahead of him, including three number ones. I don't know if Billy Joel can be said to have an imperial phase... but if it weren't for this album, I doubt any of us would have ever heard of him. Maybe from alternate-timeline Sounds of the Seventies comps that dug up "Piano Man" to stuff as filler between bigger hits.
― Doctor Casino, Friday, 8 September 2017 03:18 (eight years ago)
hmmm. a song on one of my all-time favorite artists' signature albums and i don't remember a thing about it. i don't even remember the title. i don't remember the "stranger" reprise outro. i'm aware there were songs after "she's always a woman," but my recollections end there. a billy black hole.
sounds like he's sort of going for '68 comeback era elvis presley, in addition to the usual ray charles reach. and failing miserably. while losing himself in palaces of sand. whatever that means.
also this doesn't sound like it would belong on the stranger even if it was good.
― fact checking cuz, Friday, 8 September 2017 06:33 (eight years ago)
Yeah.... this one's never meant much to me. It's okay I guess but seems kinda obvious and uninspired for how long he'd had it around and how much you'd think the idea of dream-having might have meant to this scrappy underdog guy. The "Stranger" reprise just feels like filler to me - I mean I'm certainly not fooled into thinking this has all been some concept album, or a symphonic composition or something. Maybe the idea is that after all the dreams, what waits for you is not Vienna, but the cynical performances of so many strangers. More of a Plastic Ono Band ending than a Band on the Run ending, if you will - tho obviously, unearned reprises were a favored McCartney device.
― Doctor Casino, Friday, 8 September 2017 21:30 (eight years ago)
Ugh -- imitating Leon Russell but writing for Joe Cocker.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 8 September 2017 21:39 (eight years ago)
Too Vegas-y. I do like the "Stranger" reprise, though.
― the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Friday, 8 September 2017 23:07 (eight years ago)
I always forget about the reprise since I always stop this album before EHAD.
Always make it to the Band on the Run reprise though.
― pplains, Saturday, 9 September 2017 00:52 (eight years ago)
The intro of "The Stranger" is one of the best bits of the album, so I don't mind hearing it a third time. It's better than this merely ok closing song, at least. The reprise has some extra strings too I think
― Vinnie, Saturday, 9 September 2017 01:37 (eight years ago)
https://img.discogs.com/3yTdtKiUS-e9j88GSm4r7hJZA5k=/fit-in/600x603/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-7403788-1441301169-6695.jpeg.jpg https://img.discogs.com/qQFhrlXzWvGrI_-PC7ysFoON0ig=/fit-in/600x607/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-7403788-1441301178-2299.jpeg.jpg
https://img.discogs.com/fk3RHgU110t6Kzsl-Q3EovgiFig=/fit-in/600x599/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-7403788-1441301181-7806.jpeg.jpg https://img.discogs.com/jO3d20RswbhKAsHlp9Ia_QPEhNM=/fit-in/600x608/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-7403788-1441301172-6397.jpeg.jpg
52nd Street was recorded in the summer of 1978, a year after the Stranger sessions, and following, as before, a substantial Spring tour. This time, of course, Joel had a mega-hit under his belt. I haven't actually found a ton of "making of the album" stuff, just a lot of chatter about how the title, besides being an Abbey Road-like nod to the location of the recording studio, tipped the album's slightly jazzier hat to the incredible musical history of that part of Midtown. But overall it seems like Billy, the band, and Ramone just got back to work making another record.
The album, as already noted, was a massive seller. Released October 13th, 1978, it reached #1 a month later and held on through the end of the year, plus another week at the end of January. It would go on to be 1979's best-selling album; I suspect it would have held the title in '78, if not for a certain couple of Travolta-headed items. Its three US singles were all hits, and in 1980 it was awarded an Album of the Year Grammy. For a real glimpse into the moment, check out his nice long Rolling Stone profile by Dave Marsh. Cheech & Chong got the cover, this time.
https://www.superseventies.com/oaaa/oaaa_joelbilly3.jpg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhF8AgBR8hM
Big Shot opens the album with an appropriately scuzzy, mean-tempered rocker. Released as the second single in January 1979, it peaked at #14 and probably swung that second #1 stint for the LP. As well, unless I missed something along the way, this is our first encounter with a Billy Joel music video, though arguably it's Liberty DeVitto who gets the white-hot spot-light.
https://img.discogs.com/V2jtk7fnM7lGhEdVyAfnElR7E8g=/fit-in/600x606/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-3332642-1326192231.jpeg.jpg
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 15:42 (eight years ago)
i love the opening of Big Shot, like a real punch inthe face musically
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 16:16 (eight years ago)
the circus-style drums/cymbals for the slow tempo part of the chorus is a great touch
or at least it sounds like a circus to me
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 16:20 (eight years ago)
i remember being VERY excited as a kid when he said "dont come bitchin to me"
HAHA HEY MUM BILLY SWORE
Mum *narrows eyes* yep
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 16:22 (eight years ago)
yeah that seemed very transgressive and shocking to me too!
in general of course this is another key "adult"-sounding joel song to me. i've said this before on ILX but like, i had no idea what a Halston dress signified, if i even understood what he was saying. it was ages before i could parse 'people that you knew at Elaine's' versus 'people that you knew out in Leans,' presumably short for New Orleans. a 'spoon up your nose' would not have meant cocaine to me, maybe at best i parsed it as some kind of drunken antic, like the party attendees wearing lampshades on their heads in the corny old anonymous cartoons in this big newsprint omnibus of 1950s/60s humor that my sister had. but it all certainly sounded seedy. and someone strutting around like a beeeg shot, now this was comprehensible to me.
yeah, love that opening guitar salvo. love the whole thing really, especially now that i'm old enough to register that it's as much a hungover "song to yourself in the mirror" as it is a sneering takedown of the day's hipster elite. maybe his best rock number?
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 16:29 (eight years ago)
definitely!
and yeah, adult content agogo in this thing. this song (& the entire Grease movie) did not fully reveal its meaning to me until I was MUCH older
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 16:39 (eight years ago)
That comically affected "nohnohnohnoh you had to be a beeeg shot, deeenja" bit ruins this song for me. Otherwise, it's fine, if a little lyrically underfed. It sounds like he was very deliberately going for another "Movin' Out"-style album opener.
Also, some serious ACT-ING! in that video.
― the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Saturday, 9 September 2017 18:33 (eight years ago)
"deeenja" for me is redeemed by the later "Mmmm, big shot!" BRAAAOOOWOWOWOWOWoowowowo....
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 18:42 (eight years ago)
or maybe ACT-ING! BRAAAOOOWOWOWOWOWoowowowo....
If this song has any big sin, for me, it's staying on its lyrical mark too doggedly; I won't call it one-dimensional cause I do think the "guy is singing it to himself" angle is interesting, but essentially each verse recapitulates the same point, the story doesn't go anywhere, and this other angle would be clearer if we had a "Stranger"-like admission that Billy's been there, or even some discussion of what's going to happen tonight after all this (though that would risk a 'punchline' type ending I guess). I think in my unconscious desire for a plot I've always read "but you went over the line!" in the third verse as carrying more weight than it does, indicating a situation beyond this pain-in-the-neck character that's really getting worse... glasses were smashed, guns were drawn, someone was killed - - - you just can't carry on and on like that with these mafiosos, big shot!
Interesting that "Who Are You" was released around the time this was recorded. As we've seen, Billy was no stranger to hangover songs, but it's fun to think of them as some kind of pair: our singer is actually talking to Daltrey, still so wasted from the night before that he doesn't even register any of the rant, thinks Billy is a policeman, and just keeps slurredly asking him "who are you???"
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 18:52 (eight years ago)
Liberty is incredibly, hilariously distracting in that video
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 18:58 (eight years ago)
wow i've never seen that video. liberty being liberty. billy being the worst mick jagger i've seen in a long time.
― fact checking cuz, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:10 (eight years ago)
just wait til the "you may be right" video
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:12 (eight years ago)
lol otm
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:25 (eight years ago)
ha.
there's a lot i love about "big shot" -- the stop-start rhythms, the use of "front-page bold-type" as a putdown (he really *did* love the new york times, the daily news) -- but mostly i can't get over how much he sounds like michael j. fox fronting a rock band. was this song mjf's primary source for how to rock? not fair to blame billy for what came later. but i do.
― fact checking cuz, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:32 (eight years ago)
"this is your cousin marvin! MARVIN JAGGER!"
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:36 (eight years ago)
haha
― fact checking cuz, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:37 (eight years ago)
I wish he'd written lyrics for at least one go-round of the "oh oh wo, oh woooooah" part. No idea what they should be about but it does feel a bit like "My Love" with so much obvious "I've got writer's block but it's time to record the album" placeholder stuff.
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, 9 September 2017 19:40 (eight years ago)
And just for trivia fun, this album was the first ever commercially released CD y'all.http://ultimateclassicrock.com/the-first-compact-disc-released/
― attention vampire (MatthewK), Saturday, 9 September 2017 22:02 (eight years ago)
ha my mom sent me that tidbit recently, it was the anniversary of release I believe?
― sleeve, Saturday, 9 September 2017 22:08 (eight years ago)
That comically affected "nohnohnohnoh you had to be a beeeg shot, deeenja" bit ruins this song for me.
― the general theme of STUFF (cryptosicko), Saturday, September 9, 2017 1:33 PM
I kept calling that the Guido part, but really, I think I'm gonna start calling it the "Triumph the Insult Comic" part.
― Doctor Casino, Saturday, September 9, 2017 1:42 PM
Was about to say. Falls right down this Joe Walsh hole there for a moment.
(Which, if you've ever fallen down a Joe Walsh hole...)
It works ok as a hungover narrator talking to himself, but hearing how this song and "Just the Way You Are" may have been written about the same person adds some texture. They were a team, so it's probably based on them both.
He did the Triumph voice on the demo too. Also noteworthy, what a difference there is between "spoon in your nose" and "spoon UP your nose"!
Had the same idea as DC had about adult drunken antics. Putting spoons up their nose, probably forks up their rear... just another Friday night of doing swigs of beer and making cigarettes glow.
― pplains, Saturday, 9 September 2017 23:51 (eight years ago)
Oh, and those BRAAAOOOWOWOWOWOWoowowowo parts sound like he's still trying to channel Ronnie a little bit.
― pplains, Saturday, 9 September 2017 23:52 (eight years ago)
Not the guitar parts, but the bridge with the horns part - oh i moved a lot of furniture today.
― pplains, Saturday, 9 September 2017 23:53 (eight years ago)
Huh, Wiki leans on the old tale that it was about Bianca Jagger - though based only on observing her at dinner with Mick, and not on a terrible first date as older lore had it. Her close association with Halston himself made that a little *too* obvious of a clue - "You're So Vain" it ain't.
― Doctor Casino, Sunday, 10 September 2017 00:26 (eight years ago)
Why is he holding a trumpet?
― calstars, Sunday, 10 September 2017 01:22 (eight years ago)
"Big Shot" annoys the hell out out of me -- "Bennie and the Jets" covered in snot.
― the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 10 September 2017 01:31 (eight years ago)
He looks like he's taking a real painful onstage dump on that 7" cover
― Οὖτις, Sunday, 10 September 2017 01:51 (eight years ago)
This is really bad, two-note hook that goes nowhere. Video is A+ hilarious though, "cool" these guys were not.
― Οὖτις, Sunday, 10 September 2017 01:58 (eight years ago)
Both songs covered by the Beastie Boys!
― pplains, Sunday, 10 September 2017 03:11 (eight years ago)
More fun from http://www.popspotsnyc.com/billy_joel_52nd_street/
― pplains, Sunday, 10 September 2017 03:16 (eight years ago)
Billy is so much better at snotty lyrics than romantic or serious lyrics. "Big Shot" is not really a favorite, but there's a few sharp lines in this and he also hits the delivery. I don't know much of this is aimed at himself (though it can easily be read that way) - are there many songs of his where he is self-aware and/or self-deprecating? I can't think of them, and I've never heard the song that way
― Vinnie, Sunday, 10 September 2017 15:08 (eight years ago)
Well, not counting things like the Stranger kicking him right between the eyes, "Angry Young Man" has a similar sympathetic "it's really about him" fan reading, with a similar weakness - "go to his grave as an angry old man" and "Halston dress" make it sorta unlikely that this is supposed to be the narrator.
― Doctor Casino, Sunday, 10 September 2017 16:04 (eight years ago)
The Halston and Elaine's namechecks are kinda clunky too but the song's Bennie & The Jets style bounce still makes me happy.
― MaresNest, Sunday, 10 September 2017 16:11 (eight years ago)
Man, the PopSpots for this one is bonkers, hats off to that guy. Tracking down college librarians and old hands who remember the coffee shop and shit... that's cool.
So the trumpet apparently belonged to Freddie Hubbard (who shows up later on the album). Billy says in the 2016 Sirius clips that he never knows what to do with his hands in photo shoots, without the piano, and clearly this is a super hurried shoot since they just went straight downstairs from either the studio or the label (both on 52nd Street). So apparently they were just kind of casting about for something he could hold and probably the trumpet fit the bill being both jazzy and 52nd-Street-ish, and not a normal part of the Billy Joel band/sound. Kinda wish he'd gone with one of the early keytars.
That reminds me - RIP Billy's Moog! I don't think we heard it anywhere on The Stranger. I wonder if Joel was just tired of it or if it was, like, Phil Ramone's one condition for recording.
― Doctor Casino, Sunday, 10 September 2017 16:54 (eight years ago)
yeah RIP moog :D
― Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 10 September 2017 17:04 (eight years ago)
yeah that photo blog is amazing, kudos
― sleeve, Sunday, 10 September 2017 17:05 (eight years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4gOIt-M02A
After that rockin' opener, Honesty, like the intro to "The Stranger," reassures us that the Piano Man is still in the house. Later referred to by Joel as "the most bullshit song I ever wrote," it apparently got its lyric written quickly in order to fend off Liberty DeVitto singing the title line as "sodomy."
It was the album's third single, oddly backed with either "Root Beer Rag" or "Mexican Connection." It peaked at a respectable #24 (same as "Only The Good Die Young") going Top Ten on Easy Listening (aka "Hot Adult Contemporary" as of 1979) and to #1 in France. Though nominated for a Grammy for Song of the Year, it never had a chance with competition including "I Will Survive" and "Chuck E.'s In Love." "What A Fool Believes" took the crown and I can't really argue. Ultimately, it would be his biggest hit not to be included on the original Greatest Hits package, except in some overseas editions where it replaces "Don't Ask Me Why." (The CD reissue added it back in.)
There's another music video but it isn't much to look at - just a straight run through the song.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a5/Honesty_single.jpg
― Doctor Casino, Sunday, 10 September 2017 17:20 (eight years ago)
They really got their money's worth out of what must have been a ten-minute photo shoot with that trumpet... fifteen if they stopped to grab a coffee before heading back to the elevator.
― Doctor Casino, Sunday, 10 September 2017 17:21 (eight years ago)
apparently they were just kind of casting about for something he could hold and probably the trumpet fit the bill being both jazzy and 52nd-Street-ish, and not a normal part of the Billy Joel band/sound.
also, trumpets were kind of a thing at that exact moment. maynard ferguson, the "rocky" theme, chuck mangione (ok not a trumpet but still), randy brecker, all sorts of groups w/brass sections and jazz and jazz fusiony pretensions. and billy definitely appealed to that crowd.
― fact checking cuz, Sunday, 10 September 2017 18:59 (eight years ago)
only really familiar with songs in the attic, which i used to borrow from my dad when i was in middle school. been following this thread to see when "summer highland falls" would show up -- that was always my favorite. i'm glad it seems to be popular here too!
― k3vin k., Sunday, 10 September 2017 19:01 (eight years ago)
i can definitely hear the jackson browne influence, not a bad thing necessarily imo