IT'S BETTER THAN DRINKIN' ALONE: The Official ILM Track-by-Track BILLY JOEL Listening Thread

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (3497 of them)

Joel does it INSIDE A SYLLABLE with "For the longest/I'm that voice you're hearing in the hall."

The ending "t" of "longest" turns the word "I'm" into "time," which is coincidentally in the title of the song

Have not been able to stop thinking about this.

And we thought "you're the one I depend upOOOONNNNNNNNESTY, IS SUCH A LONLEY WORD....." was crazy.

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 02:37 (seven years ago)

Childhood mishearing watch: "I'm that voice" was "I'm back, boys." I think it felt like something the motorcycle-gangster Billy would say, incongruous as it might be for this song.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 03:03 (seven years ago)

lol this might be weird to admit but this song gives me a Sesame Street vibe too, reminds me of that Shangrila’s throwback they did with “One Way”

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 03:27 (seven years ago)

this might be my favorite song of his

it's pretty rare to have this combination of perfect craft, detail, and minimal arrangement, the only other thing I can think of right now that comes close is "Kiss"

sleeve, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 03:38 (seven years ago)

yeah i've been listening to this all day and i think i've fallen in love with this song for the first time, having previously disliked it for, ahem, the longest time, and before that having been enchanted with it as a kid without being able to place the song stylistically or temporally

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:08 (seven years ago)

what a melody, really

ToddBonzalez (BradNelson), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:08 (seven years ago)

do late 80’s & 90’s kids just intrinsically have a bad kneejerk reaction to the 50’s throwback?

i always wondered why ppl dismissed it so readily

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:18 (seven years ago)

anyway i like this

https://youtu.be/1nR0dkiHEW8

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:21 (seven years ago)

also Billy did doo wop duty on the backing vocals for one of my alltime fave Cyndi Lauper songs “Maybe He’ll Know”

https://youtu.be/IDWZR1_S7Js

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:24 (seven years ago)

Could be that late 80s/90s kids just have less exposure to Billy Joel on account of being less likely to have boomer parents... I suspect they probably have less of a relationship to "A Christmas Story" as well but this is just a personal pet theory.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:27 (seven years ago)

do late 80’s & 90’s kids just intrinsically have a bad kneejerk reaction to the 50’s throwback?

This is very much a Johnny Rockets-era album.

Eazy, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:29 (seven years ago)

I find it so hard to grasp that the early 60s are only twenty years before the early 80s. I mean, the late 90s feel plenty far away from me but maybe not THAT far away. Probably everybody ends up feeling this way of course - our lives are gradual unfolding day by day stories, our parents' lives are a series of anecdotes punctuating a wide and epic tapestry of generational touchstones and transformations.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:32 (seven years ago)

The really weird thing is how little difference there is between stuff recorded in the late 90s vs now imo (compared to the vast sonic gulf separating the 80s and 60s)

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:37 (seven years ago)

The video portrays him as a member of the Class of '59 at his 25th reunion. A 35-year-old playing a 43-year-old.

This of course would be the equivalent today of someone born in 1982 playing a member of the Class of 1992 (of which I am a member.)

All of that discovered and pondered about today as I tried to match 43-year-old Billy's hair with the gray bouffant he wears in the video. Despite having dated Elle Macpherson and marrying Christie Brinkley, he didn't have much on top by 1992.

However, today in 2017, I've still got a full head of hair. It's more than I could ask for.

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 04:44 (seven years ago)

and it's more than I HOPED for

attention vampire (MatthewK), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 05:20 (seven years ago)

Plains, right! Forgot that he used the same trick in Honesty.

what if a much of a which of a wind (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 09:00 (seven years ago)

I keep thinking Daryl Hall would slay this, and, as Casino reminded us yesterday, Hall & Oates attempted this sort of thing. But Hall's specialty isn't warmth.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 12:15 (seven years ago)

And he's gonna be a father again!

Mark G, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 12:55 (seven years ago)

I keep thinking Daryl Hall would slay this

Hmmm, maybe that lyric then should be "I'm that voice you're hearing in the Hall."

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 13:09 (seven years ago)

I'm that Oates competing with the Hall
As to who will cover Billy Joel
My take's more earnest
Though my voice ain't the schönest
Now please excuse us for the slanted rhymes

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 13:31 (seven years ago)

Hi all...haven't caught up with Innocent Man yet because Glass Houses/Nylon Curtain had been kinda bugging me, so anyway here is my best attempt The Glass Curtain, a combo of both albums to create the ultimate Billy goes new wave album

https://open.spotify.com/user/matthelgeson/playlist/2ON4y88t2GseUq3OwjLxH6

Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 13:53 (seven years ago)

I can't officially bless it, but going out with Sleeping/Goodnight is inspired.

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 15:20 (seven years ago)

That Beethoven guy didn't need Billy's help - he'd cowritten a hit song with that exact same tune for Louise Tucker just the year before

Scape: Goat-fired like a dog! (Myonga Vön Bontee), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 15:46 (seven years ago)

Wow, what a hack! Did he think no one would notice?

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:00 (seven years ago)

If, as someone pointed out yesterday, "The Longest Time" sounds like it could have come from the actual heyday of doo-wop twenty or thirty years prior, "This Night" sounds very much like an 80s take on the genre. I don't hate it, but its easily the least memorable AIM track up to this point.

iCloudius (cryptosicko), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:29 (seven years ago)

I could see hearing the shoop-shoo-wahs as somehow a little more affected and winking, but for me it totally works. That chorus melody really does a lot of work!

I do wish it were "This night is ours" even if that throws away the "mine / I" rhyme. Everything else about it is a just-we-two kind of thing, time stops around us, this night can last forever. "This night is mine" makes him sound like Conan the Barbarian.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:40 (seven years ago)

I can hear the lamentations of the women

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:40 (seven years ago)

I mean, did the Stray Cats get pissed that someone else was pulling the whole retro thing?

It's a pretty song.

Sting would pull the ol' borrow-from-the-dead trick later on his own album:

https://i.imgur.com/CnYX3em.png

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:50 (seven years ago)

Stray Cats came out of a totally different scene - they're contemporaries/immediate predecessor were people like X and the Gun Club and the Cramps

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:51 (seven years ago)

Built For Speed was #2 behind Business as Usual for 15 weeks. Clearly 'Happy Days' were here again.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:52 (seven years ago)

huh I had no idea the Stray Cats went the Pretenders/Hendrix "let's move to the UK!" success route

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:56 (seven years ago)

Stray Cats couldn't really be that pissed, right? 1950s retro was just in the air, in part because of Boomer demographics obviously. Postmodernist aesthetics got really into postwar suburban kitsch as much or more than they did premodern classicism. We touched on this a bit in that 1985 paint splatter/Keith Haring squiggle-art/polka dot/loud color street style (Memphis Group, Pee Wee's Playhouse, B-52s) but there may be another thread more specifically on that. Hmmm... revisionist doo-wop has a bit on Billy as does Tributes to 50s Rock’n’Roll and Doo Wop by Rockers form the late 60s and early 70s (A List) though both are more interested in a 60s/70s thing. Basically there's a case that some of these sounds never went away, but there is something in the 80s where they stop being novelty tracks buried in the deep cuts, and become singles and in this case a whole album.

Doctor Casino, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 16:57 (seven years ago)

i can see the polecats or the blasters being pissed at the stray cats, but i can't see the stray cats being pissed at anybody.

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 17:08 (seven years ago)

ah the Blasters!!! knew I was forgetting someone crucial from my list

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 17:09 (seven years ago)

OK! The Stray Cats were cool with it!

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 17:57 (seven years ago)

were Seven Mary Three pissed at Pearl Jam?

Universal LULU Nation (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 18:15 (seven years ago)

I know I was!

pplains, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 19:28 (seven years ago)

>:(

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 24 October 2017 19:39 (seven years ago)

lol

Οὖτις, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 19:43 (seven years ago)

Twisted Sister released the follow-up to their 1984 smash Stay Hungry. Come Out and Play was, well, it was not particularly great. While the album was popular enough to go gold, it didn’t quite have the hits that the previous album had and was reportedly one of the first CDs to go out of print. You can get a hint of the direction of the album from its lead single, a cover of the 60s girl group the Shangri-Las’ “Leader of the Pack.”

The multi-platinum success of Stay Hungry led the band to go for broke and take a shot at the mainstream with “Be Chrool To Your Scuel.” As the headline references, not only did the band recruit fellow Long Islander Billy Joel to play piano on the track, they also called in Alice Cooper, who’d also written his own anthem about school. Bruce Springsteeen saxophonist Clarence Clemons, Stray Cats guitarist Brian Setzer and the Uptown Horns, were among the others that played on the track.

Never even heard of this! Sub-Meat-Loaf!

http://www.metalinsider.net/news/today-in-metal-twisted-sister-team-up-with-billy-joel-alice-cooper-for-come-out-and-play

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWAJG71Urbw

Eazy, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 19:45 (seven years ago)

1950s retro was just in the air

see also: neil young everybody's rockin', released one week before an innocent man

fact checking cuz, Tuesday, 24 October 2017 19:50 (seven years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fprpTNVM8EY

Tell Her About It closes Side One on an upbeat note. Its Motown stylings and avuncular wisdom made it Billy's second Hot 100 number-one, for one week in September of 1983 - between the longer stints of "Maniac" and "Total Eclipse of the Heart." Naturally, it also topped the Adult Contemporary chart (where it helped keep "Human Nature" and Air Supply's "Making Love Out of Nothing At All" to #2), and was a top-ten hit in Australia, Canada, and the UK. Naturally, it also had a video.

The 12" single featured a 5:35 remix by John "Jellybean" Benitez on the A-side (it's weird) and on the reverse, "Easy Money" and a live version of "You've Got Me Hummin'" (made famous by Sam & Dave, and previously covered by Billy with the Hassles); again, as it's a live number, I'll just link it here rather than treating it as a separate song entry.

https://img.discogs.com/xJhCyYd8VN_MCLE14Ioa3pJKZxM=/fit-in/600x600/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-1256084-1429725044-8746.jpeg.jpg

https://img.discogs.com/iE62dMFW8jkr08vupUECPYxAI1s=/fit-in/586x582/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-2569100-1362569012-8465.jpeg.jpg

https://img.discogs.com/Y-HrTVEycI-ZJHxmHlBsb4NLkuc=/fit-in/600x595/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-1953164-1392759548-5885.jpeg.jpg

Doctor Casino, Wednesday, 25 October 2017 12:56 (seven years ago)

Like I said upthread, "The Longest Time" and "Uptown Girl" have lived longer in public memory than this thing.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 12:58 (seven years ago)

Gotta admit, it's a bouncier closer to Side A than what Nylon Curtain had.

Also, this is the second video we've watched this week where a black guy looks directly into the camera and does a WATWUZTHAT face.

pplains, Wednesday, 25 October 2017 13:07 (seven years ago)

Ooooooohhoooooohooooo

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 13:46 (seven years ago)

"The Longest Time" and "Uptown Girl" may be more ubiquitous this days, but this song is the most played out of those, for me. If I think that "The Longest Time" is magical and this is simply meh, it might have a lot to do with my having a much greater familiarity with Motown than I do with doo wop. I've lived with so many better versions of this song for about the same length of time that I've lived with this song, so it's never really had the chance to register as anything other than "oh, I see what he's doing there" for me.

iCloudius (cryptosicko), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 13:52 (seven years ago)

I wonder what Joel and his crew thought the real overlap between "MTV watchers" and "Ed Sullivan show fans" (or even people old enough to remember Sullivan) was?

Anyway, I love this tune -- it's like the lyrical riposte to "Sleeping With The Television On." Guys, don't be afraid, talk to women and tell them how you feel!

Not enough discussion yet around this record about how well the band adjusts to all these different 50s-60s rock idioms. Stylistically they're stepping a little more outside what they've done on past records. Liberty and Doug in particular seem to be having a great time on every song.

Monster fatberg (Phil D.), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 13:52 (seven years ago)

Good points.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 25 October 2017 13:55 (seven years ago)

The Ed Sullivan thing -

One of the reasons I feel old is because I remember the big deal made about the 20th anniversary of the Beatles appearing on Ed Sullivan. So by the time this video appeared, I was more than aware of Ed Sullivan, Topo Gigio, Señor Wences, Jackie Mason, and "Let's Spend Some Time Together."

Weird to think that if they did that video today, they'd just CGI Ed Sullivan in there somehow, and miss out on having him standing on the side of the stage. (Or they could just do what the Rutles did 40 years ago.)

(40 years since the Rutles! Good grief!)

pplains, Wednesday, 25 October 2017 14:07 (seven years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.