Billy Joel Tickets
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About Billy Joel
Although Billy Joel never was a critic's favorite, the pianist
emerged as one of the most popular singer/songwriters of the latter
half of the '70s. Joel's music consistently demonstrates affection for
Beatlesque hooks and a flair for Tin Pan Alley and Broadway melodies.
His fusion of two distinct eras made him a superstar in the late '70s
and '80s, as he racked an impressive string of multi-platinum albums
and hit singles.
Billy Joel was born William Martin Joel on May 9, 1949 in Bronx, New
York. Billy Joel was raised in the Long Island suburb of Hicksville,
where he learned to play piano as a child. As he approached his
adolescence, Joel started to rebel, joining teenage street gangs and
boxing as welterweight. He fought a total of 22 fights as a teenager
and during one of the fights, he broke his nose. For the early years
of his adolescence, he divided his time between studying piano and
fighting. Upon seeing the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964,
Joel decided to pursue a full-time musical career and set about
finding a local Long Island band to join. Eventually, he found the
Echoes, a group that specialized in British Invasion covers. The
Echoes became a popular New York attraction, convincing him to quit
high school to become a professional musician.
While still a member of the Echoes, Billy Joel began playing recording
sessions in 1965, when he was just 16 years old. Joel played piano on
several recordings George "Shadow" Morton produced -- including the
Shangri-La's' "Leader of the Pack" -- as well as several records
released through Kama Sutra Productions. During this time, the Echoes
started to play numerous late night shows. Soon, his musical
commitments occupied all of his time and Joel dropped out of high
school, just a few months shy of his graduation.
Later in 1965, the Echoes changed their name twice -- once to the
Emeralds and finally to the Lost Souls. For two years, he played
sessions and performed with the Lost Souls. In 1967, he left the band
to join the Hassles, a local Long Island rock & roll band that had
signed a contract with United Artists Records. Over the next year and
a half, the Hassles released two albums and four singles, all of which
failed commercially. In 1969, the Hassles broke up. Joel and the
band's drummer, Jon Small, formed an organ and drums duo called
Attila. In Attila, Joel played his organ through a variety of effects
pedals, creating a heavy psychedelic hard-rock album completely
without guitars. On the cover of the band's eponymous album, both Joel
and Small were dressed as barbarians; in an interview on the back of
the album, Billy Joel claimed to forget the name of his previous band
and stated that he only "sweated" two things -- perfecting his sound
and the war in Southeast Asia. Epic released Attila early in 1970 and
it was an immediate bomb and the duo broke up. While the group was
still together, Billy Joel began a romance with Small's wife,
Elizabeth; she would eventually leave the drummer to marry the
pianist.
After Attila's embarrassing failure, Billy Joel wrote rock criticism
for a magazine called Changes and played on commercial jingles,
including a Chubby Checker spot for Bachman Pretzels. However, Joel
entered a severe bout of depression, culminating with him drinking a
bottle of furniture polish in an attempt to end his life. Following
his failed suicide attempt, Billy Joel checked himself into
Meadowbrook Hospital, where he received psychiatric treatment for
depression.
Billy Joel returned to playing music in 1971, signing a deal with
Family Productions. Under the terms of the contract, Joel signed to
the label's parent company, Ripp, for life; the pianist was unaware of
the clause at the time, but it would come back to haunt him -- Ripp
received royalties from every album Joel sold until the late '80s.
Joel refashioned himself as a sensitive singer/songwriter for his
debut album, Cold Spring Harbor, which was released in November of
1971. Due to an error in the mastering of the album, Cold Spring
Harbor was released a couple of tape speeds too fast; the album
remained in that bastardized form until 1984. Following the release of
the album, Billy Joel went on a small live tour, during which he would
frequently delve into standup comedy. The tour received good reviews
but Billy Joel remained unhappy with the quality of his performance
and, especially, the quality of the album. Furthermore, he lost a
manager during this time and Family Productions were experiencing
legal and financial difficulties, which prevented him from recording
an immediate follow-up.
Early in 1972, he moved out to Los Angeles with his girlfriend
Elizabeth. Billy Joel adopted the name Bill Martin and spent half a
year played lounge piano at the Executive Room. Toward the end of the
year, he began touring, playing various nightclubs across the country.
At the beginning of 1973, Joel married Elizabeth Weber and she
enrolled at UCLA's Graduate School of Management. Around the same
time, a radio station began playing a live version of "Captain Jack"
that was recorded at a Philadelphia radio broadcast. Soon, record
companies were eagerly seeking to sign the pianist, and he eventually
signed with Columbia Records. In order for Joel to sign with Columbia,
the major label had to agree to pay Ripp Productions 25 cents for each
album sold, plus display the Family and Remus logos on each record
Joel released.
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By the end of 1973, Billy Joel's first album for Columbia Records,
Piano Man, had been released. The record slowly worked its way up the
charts, peaking at number 27 in the spring of 1974. The title track --
culled from experiences he had while singing at the Executive Room --
became a Top 40 hit single. At the end of the summer, Joel assembled a
touring band and undertook a national tour, opening for acts like the
J. Geils Band and the Doobie Brothers. By the end of 1974, he had
released his second album, Streetlife Serenade, which reached number
35 early in 1975. After its success, Joel signed a contract with James
William Guercio and Larry Fitzgerald's management company, Caribou,
and moved from California to their hometown of New York. Through songs
like "Say Goodbye to Hollywood" and "New York State of Mind," Joel
celebrated the move his 1976 album Turnstiles. The sessions for
Turnstiles were long and filled with tension, culminating with Joel
firing the album's original producer, Guercio, and producing the album
himself. Once he fired Guercio, Joel also left Caribou, and hired his
wife as his new manager.
Turnstiles stalled on the charts, only reaching number 122. Billy
Joel's next album would prove to be the make-or-break point for his
career and the resulting album, The Stranger, catapulted him into
super-stardom. The Stranger was released in the fall of 1977 -- by the
end of the year, it peaked at number two and had gone platinum and,
within the course of a year, it would spawn the Top 40 singles "Just
the Way You Are" -- which would win Record of the Year and Song of the
Year at the 1979 Grammys -- "Movin' Out (Anthony's Song)," "She's
Always a Woman," and "Only the Good Die Young." Over the next two
decades, the album would sell over seven million copies. Joel followed
The Stranger with 52nd Street, which was released in the fall of 1978.
52nd Street spent eight weeks at number one in the U.S., selling over
two millions copies within the first month of its release. The album
spawned the hit singles "My Life," "Big Shot," and "Honesty," and won
the Grammy award for Album of the Year in 1980. Although he had become
a genuine star, critics had not looked kindly to Billy Joel's music
and the pianist became a vocal opponent of rock criticism in the late
'70s; he was known to have denounced Village Voice pundit Robert
Christgau on stage and then, as a form of protest, had torn up
Christgau's reviews.
In the spring of 1980, Billy Joel released Glass Houses, theoretically
a harder-edged album that was a response to the punk and new wave
movement. By the summer of 1980, Glass Houses had reached number one
in America, where it stayed for six weeks; the album spawned the Top
40 singles "You May Be Right" (number seven) "It's Still Rock'N'Roll
to Me" (number one), "Don't Ask Me Why" (number 19), and "Sometimes a
Fantasy" (number 36) and won the Grammy for Best Rock Vocal
Performance, Male in 1981. In the fall of 1981, Billy Joel released
Songs in the Attic, a live album that concentrated on material written
and recorded before he became a star in 1977. The album's "Say Goodbye
to Hollywood" and "She's Got a Way" became Top 40 hits.
Songs in the Attic bought Billy Joel some time as he was completing an
album he had designed as his bid to be taken seriously as a composer.
Before the album was finished, he suffered a serious motorcycle
accident in the spring of 1982. He broke his wrist in the accident --
it would take major surgery to repair the wound. In July of 1982,
Billy Joel divorced his wife Elizabeth. His new album, The Nylon
Curtain, was finally released in the fall. A concept album about baby
boomers and their experiences, the album was a commercial
disappointment, only selling a million copies, but it did earn him
some of his better reviews, as well as spawning the Top 20 hits
"Pressure" and "Allentown." Billy Joel quickly followed the album in
1983 with the oldies pastiche An Innocent Man.
An Innocent Man restored Billy Joel to his multi-platinum status,
eventually selling over five million copies and spawning the hit
singles "Uptown Girl" (number three)," "Tell Her About It" (number
one), "An Innocent Man" (number 10), and "Keeping the Faith" (number
eighteen). Several of the songs on the album were about model Christie
Brinkley, who was engaged to Billy Joel by the time the album was
released. During 1983 and 1984, Joel became one of the first '70s
stars to embrace MTV and music videos, shooting a number of clips for
the album which were aired frequently on the network. The videos
usually starred Brinkley, as well as Joel. Brinkley and Joel were
married in the spring of 1985.
Billy Joel released a double album compilation, Greatest Hits, Vols. 1
& 2 in the summer of 1985. Two new songs -- the Top Ten "You're Only
Human (Second Wind)" and the Top 40 "The Night Is Still Young" -- were
added to the hits collection; the album itself peaked at number six
and would eventually sell over four million copies. In the summer of
1986, Joel returned with the Top Ten single "Modern Woman," which was
taken from the soundtrack of Ruthless People. "Modern Woman" was also
a teaser from his new album, The Bridge, which was released in August.
The Bridge was another success for Joel, peaking at number seven,
selling over two million copies, and spawning the Top 40 hits "A
Matter of Trust" (number 10) and "This Is the Time" (number 18), as
well as "Big Man on Mulberry Street," which was used as the basis for
an episode of the popular Bruce Willis/Cybill Shepherd television
series Moonlighting.
In the spring of 1987, Billy Joel embarked on a major tour of the
USSR, during which he had an onstage temper-tantrum and shoved a piano
off the stage. His Leningrad concert was recorded and released in the
fall of 1987 as the double-live album Kohuept, which means concert in
Russian. Joel was quiet for much of 1988, only appearing as the voice
of Dodger in the Walt Disney animated feature Oliver and Company.
Billy Joel fired his long-time manager and former brother-in-law Frank
Weber in August of 1989, after an audit revealed that there were major
discrepancies in Weber's accounting. Following Weber's dismissal, Joel
sued Weber for 90 million dollars, claiming fraud and breach of
fiduciary duty. Immediately after filing suit, Joel was hospitalized
with kidney stones. All of this turmoil didn't prevent the release of
his twelfth studio album, Storm Front, in the fall of 1989. It was
preceded by the single "We Didn't Start the Fire," whose lyrics were
just a string of historical facts. The single became a huge hit,
reaching number one and inspiring history students across America.
Storm Front marked a significant change for Billy Joel -- he fired his
band, keeping only Liberty DeVito, and ceased his relationship with
producer Phil Ramone, hiring Mick Jones of Foreigner to produce the
album. Storm Front was another hit for Joel, reaching number one in
the U.S. and selling over three million albums.
During 1990, Joel undertook a major U.S. tour that ran well into 1991.
In January, the court awarded Joel two million dollars in a partial
judgment against Frank Weber, and in April, the court dismissed a 30
million dollar countersuit. At the end of the year, the National
Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences honored Billy Joel with a
Grammy Living Legend award; that same year, Quincy Jones, Johnny Cash,
and Aretha Franklin were also given the honor.
Following the Storm Front world tour, Billy Joel spent the next few
years quietly. In 1991, he was awarded an honorary doctorate by
Fairfield University in Connecticut; a few years in the summer of
1992, Joel filed 90 million dollar lawsuit, charging his former lawyer
Allen Grubman of fraud, breach of contract, and malpractice; in
October of 1993, the two parties settled their differences out of
court. Joel returned in the summer of 1993 with River of Dreams, which
entered the charts at number one and spawned the Top Ten title track.
Following the River of Dreams tour, Joel divorced Christie Brinkley.
In 1996, he gave a series of lectures at a variety of American
colleges. He performed at the 1999 New Year's Eve Party in Times
Square, and 2000 Years: The Millennium Concert, a live album of this
concert, was released early the following year.
Billy Joel Tickets
Ticket Retriever sells tickets for Billy Joel concert events. We
specialize in providing you with premium and other Billy Joel Tickets
that are in high demand. We can help you gain access to tickets for
all major events.
How to Find Billy Joel Tickets:
1. Browse our ticket inventory by clicking on the "Billy Joel" button.
2. Sort ticket events by price, section, or row.
3. Use the seating chart to help you find the Billy Joel tickets that meet
your preferences.
4. Place your ticket order for Billy Joel Tickets on our secure
system.