The 45th anniversary of Billy Joel's "52nd Street" album is being celebrated by the syndicated radio show In The Studio With Redbeard: The Stories Behind History's Greatest Rock Bands.
Here is the synopsis of the episode from Redbeard: William Martin Billy Joel has sold more albums in the U.S. than any pop/rock singer except for Elvis Presley. Superstar musicians in that rarefied league ( and many more only pretenders to it ) always surround themselves with gaggles of managers, "minders", assistants, agents, and promoters , and the size of the entourage doubles when they're on tour. So imagine my surprise when Billy Joel arrived for our scheduled interview at my Orlando hotel room door at the decidedly unhip hour of 9 a.m. on a Sunday morning - completely alone.
Billy had played to a sold-out audience of 15,000 only 12 hours earlier, but now here he stood before me without security guard or tour manager, dressed in an old navy-blue t-shirt, matching shorts, and well-worn canvas deck shoes, just another schlep tourist whose kid wanted to meet a real celebrity. Like Mickey Mouse, for instance.
What ensued was a delightful conversation with Billy Joel by two guys who had never met, from different parts of America, just shooting the breeze about mutual loves. Sure, we talked rock'n'roll, from Billy seeing the Beatles perform on the Ed Sullivan Show to British Invasion bands that followed; garage rock, and the New York City punk scene that influenced his approach after the1978 52nd Street album. But we also talked at length about baseball (he was a Brooklyn Dodgers fan until they moved to L.A. in 1958, when he switched to the Yankees); about why he signed with Columbia Records, and in spite of revisionist history to the contrary, how 1973's "Piano Man" fifty years ago was only a turntable hit single that never made any money for the long-suffering label until after The Stranger rewrote the record books almost five years later; and about his long creative collaboration with the late producer Phil Ramone.
Find out why 52nd Street , containing "Big Shot", "My Life", "Stiletto", "Honesty", "Half a Mile Away", and "Until the Night" sold over 7 million copies, stayed at #1 for eight consecutive weeks, and won Billy Joel a Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1978. - Redbeard. Stream the episode here.
Billy Joel's Daughter Thanks Fans For Support After Legend's Diagnoses
Billy Joel Cancels Live Dates Due To Health Issue
Billy Joel Recovering From Surgery And Postpones Live Dates
Billy Joel In The Studio For 'Glass Houses' Anniversary
Muscle Shoals: Low Rhythm Rising Exhibit Opens at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum
The Fun Moves Ashore as the Live Loud Fest Makes Port in the Dominican Republic
Tom Morello Caught In The Act In Chicago
Live Loud Fest Cruise: So Much More Than Music
On The Record: Audiophile Releases from A Perfect Circle, Dr. Dre and More
Good Charlotte Get Festive With Cover Of 'Fairytale of New York'
Danko Jones Release New Album 'Leo Rising'
Stryper Release Their New Christmas Album 'The Greatest Gift Of All'
Neil Young And The Chrome Hearts Announce 2026 UK and EU Tour
Stream Yungblud And Aerosmith's New 'One More Time' EP
Guns N' Roses' Live Era '87-'93 Vinyl Set Arrives
Queen Share 50 Years of 'Bohemian Rhapsody' Live
The Smashing Pumpkins Deliver 'Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness' 30th Anniversary Editions