July 2012
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May 2012
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yvpb:
Zedd - Spectrum (feat. Matthew Koma)
April 2012
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August 2011
1 post
July 2011
2 posts
June 2011
5 posts
Billy Joel’s first album as a solo artist, Cold Spring Harbor, came out in 1971. Over the course of six years, several subsequent albums, lineup changes, botched tours and other promotional misfires, he struggled to find his voice as an artist or achieve any real commercial success. Even with classic songs like “Piano Man” and “Say Goodbye to Hollywood” in his pocket, Joel received little airplay and no real chart success.
Then in 1977 he teamed with producer Phil Ramone and released The Stranger.
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Words have been written around the world for 30 years about this album and its legacy, but all you really need to know it that it contains no less than seven all-time, hall-of-fame classic recordings.
Movin’ Out
The Stranger
Only the Good Die Young
Scenes from an Italian Restaurant
Vienna (BJ’s all-time best album b-side?)
Just The Way You Are (Grammy award for song of the year)
She’s Always a Woman!
Not only is this an example of a world-class songwriter in his prime, but the fluency of the album as a whole speaks to Joel’s artistic relationship with the producer, Phil Ramone.
A Julliard grad and musical child prodigy who had just won a Grammy the year before for Paul Simon’s “Still Crazy After All These Years”, Phil Ramone immediately brought an ease and understanding to Billy Joel’s music that allowed him to present it in a context that was missing from Joel’s earlier and less successful releases. It’s easy to overlook the strange brew of Billy Joel’s unlikely influences: Baroque piano harmony, shot through with blues and jazz; a blue-collar folk lyrical sensibility that is deeply American at least in spirit. Ramone captured all of these at their best, and then managed to match the traditional elements already in play with contemporary sounds like loud brass and bold electric guitar that give the music an attitude and relevance that stands up with the best popular music of the ‘70s.
Ramone and Joel’s arrangements of unusually complex songs like “The Stranger” make them immediately accessible, and the many transitions memorable because of their fluidity. One might be surprised at how they sing along to every piano instrumental, whistling solo, or key change in this song; more so the full eight minutes of orchestral theatre that is Italian Restaurant.Then there’s the way Ramone perfectly captures Billy Joel’s singing. Evocative, versatile, effective singing is a vital proposition for a singer-songwriter of any period, and Ramone’s sublime ability to showcase Billy Joel’s voice is all over this album (and would go on to define their collaborations to come; see Glass Houses to The Nylon Curtain).
The fact is, on The Stranger Billy Joel had found in Phil Ramone the avatar to express his specific gifts to the world in album form, and delivered not just his greatest album, but one of the best (and best-selling) of all time. What happened next is even more remarkable. Over the course of nine years and six more albums, Joel and Ramone followed their artist/producer muse and managed to deliver genius albums one after another. Every one of these albums not only evolved Joel’s sound distinctly each time, but managed to define its own place within the history of popular music, while also delivering a sort of slanted , timely commentary on the world around them. These guys had a formula, and put it to use crafting some of the best albums in rock history in rapid succession.
52nd Street, 1978. “Big Shot” and “My Life” are two of Joel’s most enduring songs and stand on their own as proof the guy could immediately live up to the insane promise of Stranger. “Honesty” is without question one of his greatest ballads and an under-recognized song. If you don’t know it, enjoy:
Glass Houses, 1980.
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Tribute to turn-of-the-decade personal excess, good-natured egomania, posturing behind the cultural artifice of “rock and roll.” The most fun album in his catalogue and his first #1. Listen to this thing on vinyl and step into a time machine. Also includes the gem “All For Leyna”:
Songs in the Attic, 1981. Live album with no new material BUT this includes the definitive career recordings of “Say Goodbye To Hollywood” and “She’s Got a Way,” two songs that hadn’t gotten their due in the days before Joel became a household name. As the AllMusic guide says, this album serves to prove that “even if Joel wasn’t a celebrity in the early ’70s, his best songs of the era rivaled his biggest hits.” This thing holds up.The Nylon Curtain, 1982.
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This album to me is the crux of the Joel/Ramone argument. Five years after the two define Billy Joel’s sound and vision within the context of popular rock and roll in the ‘70s with The Stranger, they do it all over again in the ‘80s with an album that is just as progressive and thematically relevant. The songwriting and recording techniques bring Joel in a totally new direction that still feels like it’s been a part of their musical DNA from the start. There’s the imprint of McCartney in terrific album tracks like “Laura”, “She’s Right On Time” and “Surprises”; and the synthesizers and sound effects incorporated more across this album than any other to date (“Allentown” and “Goodnight Saigon” most notably).
But like any great creative work, the grace is in the details, and this album is the ultimate realization of Joel and Ramone’s ability to play to each others’ gifts and deliver a classic musical moment. “Pressure” is filled to the brim with pitch-perfect instrumental touches. The chugging, palm muted guitars; the one-beat-late snare drum accents that suddenly propel the choruses; and most of all, the exultantly screeching main synth riff that to me will always personify anxiety and yes, Pressure in the Reagan era. The dynamics in “Goodnight Saigon”, from the opening helicopter and cricket sound effects up through the epic snare drum roll leading into the first revelatory chorus, are simply transporting, and this somewhat trite thematic recap of loss and brotherhood in Vietnam becomes and living and breathing anthem for any generation.
The highlight of the album, and maybe one of Joel’s best songs of all time, is the opening track “Allentown.” Opening with (again) some very literal sound effects – in this case, a steel manufacturing plant in the titular town in Pennsylvania – something happens when Joel’s vocal enters the mix in the opening line of the song. There is a unique effect on his voice – call it reverb, delay, I leave that classification up to Phil Ramone – that has never been heard on a Billy Joel vocal before, and immediately transports this song and the album into new artistic territory; Joel and Ramone are exploring the bounds of their own pop legacy together and it’s thrilling. As for “Allentown” itself- what could have been just a pleasant observational riff on the decay of the American working class becomes, through the prism of Joel’s writing and Ramone’s production, a definitive and moving cultural statement that holds up and is still deeply moving to this day.
Everyone knows “Allentown” so here’s the unsung gem of the album, “Laura”:
An Innocent Man, 1983. Old pals Billy and Phil decide to mess around and tackle the Frankie Valli doo-wop sound of the ‘50s. These guys are so on fire that even a left-field turn like delivers another American classic. “The Longest Time” “Tell Her About It”, “An Innocent Man”, “Leave a Tender Moment Alone” and of course “Uptown Girl” are all Top 40 hits.
Enjoy:
The Bridge was still to come in 1986; not a classic, although the music once again is an uncanny reflection of the sonic recording trends of the era. “A Matter of Trust” is the most enduring example of this. Just listen to that guitar and tell me this doesn’t sound like 1986:
There have been plenty of essential artist/producer relationships in the course of rock and roll history; The Beatles and George Martin might be the most revered, and then there’s Quincy and Michael, Eno and U2; for my money, Brendan O’Brien and Pearl Jam is worth at least as many words as this. But the albums created by Billy Joel and Phil Ramone represent a special flashpoint in the evolution of pop music in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and signify the genesis of Billy Joel’s greatest work. They’re also a few of the greatest pop albums ever made; buy them all (on vinyl if possible), listen to them in sequence and find your own special moments to celebrate on each one.
Footnote: these thoughts were inspired by a couple of hours spent reading through credits and assessments of Billy Joel’s catalog on All Music Guide; the link is here if you want to get into more detail, always a good time.
Are you guys ready to see the album cover for ‘Hold On ‘Til The Night’?? You can help unlock it piece by piece by signing up for my mailing list! Keep checking back to see the cover before anyone else, and grab the widget below for your own blogs so you can share with your friends and help reveal the full cover faster! Can’t wait for you guys to see it(:
Several fast trips to NYC, two performances of Spider-Man on Broadway, late night and early morning global conference calls, a late afternoon and evening in the Chateau Marmont courtyard, and one very long day at the American Idol season finale.
This is “Rise Above 1”, performed by Reeve Carney featuring Bono and The Edge.
Couple notes on the Idol clip:
There was an amazing Bono-emerging-from-the-spider-web entrance that the show completely missed in the broadcast video edit;
The audio could have been mixed better and that version is coming soon.
Official version of the song is here. Music video, album, live performances and much more coming soon…
May 2011
2 posts
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Record Store Day and physical/digital music retail. ”Free” (As A Bird?)
I’ve been thinking about my experience at Amoeba in LA on Saturday April 16th, aka Record Store Day.
Bought the following:
- new TV on the Radio album (support the home team — at a weighted account no less)
- Used vinyl and CDs. Mostly R.E.M.; I justify buying used because I bought them all new in the ’90s but lost them since
- a 7” vinyl copy of The Beatles’ Free As A Bird release from 1996.
Amoeba was also generous enough to include a bonus “surprise pack” of specialty vinyl and stickers. One of these turned out to be a major score - an otherwise unreleased 7” of David Gray’s “Fugitive” recorded at Downtown Records. I loved this song without knowing it, and upon hearing this, not only bought the single immediately on iTunes so I could have an MP3 of it - but a week later I also sought out a digital copy of the live version.
Would have bought that too- if it was available at digital retail. But sadly no, and this after almost 3 weeks of theoretical exclusivity since the Record Store event weekend.
Just now, I also went searching for the aforementioned Beatles FAAB MP3. Not available at digital retail.
This brings me to an issue I have with those lamenting the downfall of physical music retail. Beyond the transaction, digital and physical music retail represent mutually exclusive experiences for the music fan. Physical retail is place to discover music. Browsing the racks, observing a cascade of album covers, ears open to the in-store programming. This is something digital retail can never offer.
Digital retail is an access point to content. Anything you need, available immediately to load to whatever is your preferred device. (There was a degree of selectivity to Apple’s store programming at first but this has given way to algorithm store placement based on sales over time.) Thumbnails, genre pages and “based on if you like” will never replace wandering the aisles of Amoeba, or Newbury, Sound Garden in Baltimore, any of the classics.
Someone needs to figure out how the two can exist as complements to one another. The music I “found” at Amoeba - David Gray live track and a Beatles recording I had all but lost since the ’90s - I would gladly have paid Apple or Amazon for. Someone either decided that they needed to be “exclusive” to indie retail or just overlooked the need to deliver to digital partners. People are creating demand by accident and not bothering to supply on the other end.
In the meantime I’ll just grab it for free and upload to my new Amazon Cloud.
Enjoy!
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April 2011
11 posts
Read KROQ’s take here and watch the full show below. Alongside some of my dearest friends and family, it was an amazing way to close out a crazy and unforgettable week in the big city.
7 months in the making. 10 directors, 59 minutes, one dojo. Movie complement to the new album released today, as seen on www.Youtube.com (with a special greeting video from singer and chief producer of the film, Tunde Adebimpe).
Screened for the first time last night in NYC at the Sunshine Theatre for a standing room only crowd consisting of friends and family, press, a few guests and a lucky few who bought tickets with the album on Gilt City.
Poster below. It comes with the fan deluxe on www.tvontheradio.com
Please enjoy the movie in its entirety. New album is out today.
