Stage Buzz – Live Review: Billy Joel
Wrigley Field, Chicago
Friday, July 18, 2014
In light of his mother Rosalind Nyman passing away last Sunday, Billy Joel couldâve easily postponed a concert at Wrigley Field a mere matter of days later, but in the spirit of âthe show must go on,â the singer/songwriter stepped up to the plate and took a swing. After opening with particularly charged versions of âA Matter Of Trustâ (on guitar no less), âPressureâ and âMovinâ Out (Anthonyâs Song),â the audienceâs roar was palpable and surely helped carry the 65-year-old entertainer through home plate over just over two hours later.
Without a new studio album since 1993, many of Joelâs tours have become rote over the subsequent years, though his first solo engagement in Chicago since 2007 (yet another sell out) definitely took a more considerate overview of a career thatâs sold over 150 million albums. Sure, many of the most obvious hits were included, but he also fittingly uncovered long lost treasures, such as the ode to aging gracefully âViennaâ (one of five cuts from 1977âs breakthrough The Stranger), the jazzy âZanzibarâ and the frenetic rocker âSometimes A Fantasy.â (âRosalindaâs Eyes,â a tribute to his beloved mom who raised him single-handedly, wouldâve also been fitting given the circumstances, but wound up staying on the shelf).
When it was business as usual come âAllentown,â âMy Lifeâ and âDonât Ask Me Why,â Joel might not have had the agility or limberness of his peak recording days, but was still flawless behind the ivories and often took a playful vocal approach, much to the satisfaction of the karaoke-ready crowd. Even so, there were moments of poignancy that shined a light on this troubadourâs sometimes underappreciated lyrical depth with âSheâs Always A Womanâ scoring as one of the sweetest love songs ever crafted and âMiami 2017 (Seen The Lights Go Out On Broadway)â being recast as a post 9/11 tribute to New York City.
The final innings were reserved for the mightiest crowd pleasers with âThe River Of Dreamsâ flowing naturally into âMy Kind Of Townâ and the harmonica-laced âPiano Manâ earning the loudest sing-a-long of the night. While he surprisingly retired âWe Didnât Start The Fireâ and the entire Storm Front album (at least for now), everything from âUptown Girlâ to âItâs Still Rock And Roll To Me,â âBig Shotâ and âYou May Be Rightâ were reprised with precision (and in a few cases, some labored microphone stand twirling). The evening wrapped with âOnly The Good Die Young,â a testament to Joelâs eternal youth (at least in spirit) and message to âThe Friendly Confinesâ that while many regard him as strictly a âPiano Man,â rock nâ roll remains a major component of his musical vocabulary.
– Review and photos by Andy Argyrakis
Category: Featured, Live Reviews, Stage Buzz
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