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Tag: Billy Joel

  • Alexa Ray Joel Lands Cafe Carlyle Residency

    Alexa Ray Joel, the 28-year-old daughter of Billy Joel and Christie Brinkley, will perform at Cafe Carlyle on Manhattan’s Upper East Side April 1-12.

    The lounge is located inside New York City’s Carlyle Hotel, where musical greats such as Judy Collins, Sutton Foster, Bobby Short, and Elaine Stritch have performed. Woody Allen and the Eddy Davis New Orleans Jazz Band are currently playing Monday nights, a show that will continue until June 16.

    Joel’s famous father, six-time Grammy winner Billy Joel, is doing a residency of his own in New York City. He’s playing once-a-month, open-ended shows in Madison Square Garden.

    “I have no idea how long this is going to go,” the native New Yorker said. “What was I thinking?”

    Billy Joel’s shows are sold out through November, and tickets to the December 18 show aren’t expected to last long. He’s played 47 shows at the Garden since 1978, and set a record when he sold out 12 consecutive shows back in 2006.

    Joel is talking up her Cafe Carlyle gig on Instagram: “Guys & Dolls… Please join me for a wondrously-whimsical & intrinsically-intimate performance-showcase at ‘Cafe Carlyle’ in The Big Apple on April 1st-12th: Call OR visit their website to get your tickets today!!!”

    In 2006, Joel wrote and released a six-song EP, Sketches. At the time, she differentiated her musical style from her father’s: “It’s a bit more soulful, more blues than my dad’s. He’s more pop rock. And his piano playing is better than mine, but that’s okay. I don’t want to be the Piano Girl. ”

    The singer released her single “Notice Me” in May 2010. She followed that up with a residency at The Plaza Hotel’s famous Oak Room from December 2010 to January 2011.

    Mom Christie Brinkley is proud of her daughter’s upcoming musical engagement:

    Joel is currently dating restauranteur Ryan Gleason.



    Photo via Alexa Ray Joel, Instagram

  • Billy Joel Marks 50 Years as Performer

    Billy Joel Marks 50 Years as Performer

    Billy Joel will meet a benchmark this year in his career, as 2014 will be the star’s 50th year performing.

    It has been nearly two decades since the last time Joel released a new album, but the musician is still headlining sell-out shows; Madison Square Garden recently named a new “franchise” for their company, “Billy Joel at the Garden,” which began running out of tickets within minutes. “Billy Joel at the Garden” is an unlimited-show tour (that began January 27) in which the star will perform concerts at the Garden and other venues across the nation.

    Tickets for the nine shows already scheduled at Madison Square Garden were claimed in a record-breaking amount of time. Passes to watch Joel at the other US venues – including Chicago’s Wrigley Field, the Nationals Stadium in Washington, and the three-night Hollywood Bowl – sold-out rapidly, as well.

    Joel, 64, says that he got his start as a musician by playing in a piano bar and performing with various bands throughout his teenage and early-adult years.

    The “Piano Man” does admit, however, that not many people had much faith in his determination and desire to earn a living while making music.

    Joel related to Billboard that when he would say, “‘I’m gonna be a musician,’” people would respond by telling him, “‘You’re crazy, you’re gonna starve, you’re gonna be poor, a drug addict, go to jail, you’ll never make it, there’s too much competition, it’s a terrible business, etc.’”

    However, one person made a difference in the aspiring star’s life, as well as in the fate of American pop culture.

    According to Joel, “My chorus teacher in high school said, ‘You’ve got what it takes to be a really good professional musician, you should consider it.’ That was an epiphany for me.”

    While music – on most any type of instrument – came naturally to Joel, he says that being a “rock star,” did not; in fact, he attributes the majority of his success in the industry to the singer/songwriter phenomenon that was happening when he was first pursuing a career as a musician.

    “I started just concentrating on songwriting when I was abut 20; I’d been in rock bands six or seven years, kinda got that out of my system. I said, ‘Okay, you ain’t gonna be a rock star, you don’t look like a rock star, it probably ain’t gonna happen. So what you should do is write songs and maybe other people will do your songs.’ I just felt like I had something to write, and the advice I got from the music business people that I knew was, ‘Okay, now you should probably make an album of your songs.’ Get a record deal, make an album. This just happened to coincide with the era of the singer/songwriter. You had James Taylor, Jackson Browne, JD Souther, Joni Mitchell, singer/songwriters. So I got a record deal—a terrible record deal—made a record, and then the advice I got was, ‘Now you should go out on the road and perform and support the album.’ There I was, still 20 years old, so I went out on tours, didn’t get paid nothin’, but played, and it kinda turned into this ‘Billy Joel pop star/rock star guy,’ which to this day is still kinda funny to me, because that’s not at all what I set out to do. I’m not gonna disown it, it’s the best job I ever had, but it ended up happening kind of randomly.”

    Joel’s first album, Cold Spring Harbor, was released in 1971, and met with a disappointing amount of success. However, Harbor would later become the prologue to a staggeringly-successful career; Piano Man, Joel’s sophomore record released in 1973, earned the musician a Top 20 single, landing Joel on the musical map.

    Billy would go on to make numerous albums throughout the next three decades, and earn many different honors denoting success in his career at events such as the Grammy Awards and the People’s Choice Awards.

    In 1999, Billy Joel’s all-time record sales surpassed $100 million, an achievement few musical artists are ever able to attain; in December 2013, the singer was awarded the Kennedy Center Honors, a title that is reserved for an elite, select-few number of professionals who have experienced monumental success.

    In addition to the national “tour” Joel is embarking upon, he also recently appeared in a televised special on Showtime, Billy Joel: A Matter of Trust – The Bridge to Russia, a documentary about Joel that depicts the frenzy that surrounded his 1987 trip to the former Soviet Union. The film premiered on Showtime on January 31.

    Main image courtesy of minds-eye via Wikimedia Commons.

  • Kennedy Center Honorees Welcomed By Obama

    The Kennedy Center Honorees for this year (Billy Joel, Carlos Santana, Herbie Hancock, Martina Arroyo, and Shirley MacLaine) spent Sunday evening at the White House with the president prior to the Kennedy Center Opera House event. The celebration will be broadcast on December 29th from 9 to 11 p.m. on CBS.

    President Obama spoke about the five talented individuals as being the embodiment of President Kennedy’s wish for a society enriched by talents from the art community. “Each of our brilliant honorees has given us something unique and of richness beyond measure. As individuals and as a nation, together they bring us closer to President Kennedy’s vision of the arts as a great humanizing and truth-telling experience.” Obama said before adding, “Their triumphs have lifted our spirits, and have lifted our nation, and have left us in a better and richer place.”

    Kennedy Center chairman David M. Rubenstein previously released the following statement about the honorees.

    “The Kennedy Center celebrates five extraordinary individuals who have spent their lives elevating the cultural vibrancy of our nation and the world. Martina Arroyo has dazzled the world with her glorious soprano voice and continues to share her artistry with a new generation of opera singers; Herbie Hancock has established himself as one of the most innovative musicians in the world, constantly breaking musical barriers and redefining the art of jazz.”

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    Rubenstein’s statement continued as follows: “Billy Joel’s melodies have provided the soundtrack of our lives for over four decades making him one pop music’s most prolific and memorable singers and songwriters; the remarkable breadth and range of Shirley MacLaine’s acting has left an indelible impression over a nearly 60-year career on stage and screen; from his legendary performance at Woodstock to his sweep at the 2000 Grammys and beyond, Carlos Santana’s artistry transcends genres while entertaining millions.”

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    [Images Via Wikimedia Commons and Courtesy of minds-eye, Sjaak, Tony Shek, Jaud, Andrew Bossi as well as http://www.martinaarroyo.com/]

  • Billy Joel: Depression, Drinking Caused by 9/11

    Just over one decade ago, singer Billy Joel entered rehab for a drinking problem. He followed that up with trip to the Betty Ford Center in 2005. Now, Joel is opening up about his depression, his drinking, and why he was using alcohol to self-medicate.

    In a new interview with the New York Times, the New York native told the newspaper that he used to drink during difficult times in his life, such as during his multiple divorces. He stated that he would use alcohol as a medication for his depression. Joel admitted he would drink scotch, or vodka when things got really bad, and that he still occasionally has a glass of wine.

    Of his trips to rehab, Joel said he doesn’t “subscribe to 12-step stuff” and that he believes he simply “overdid it” sometimes. He emphasized that his multiple car accidents in the early 00s were not drinking-related and that he has never had a DUI. Instead, he said that he was in “kind of a mental fog” and a “deep, deep depression” brought on by the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. Joel, from the interview:

    “9/11 just knocked the wind out of me, and I don’t know even now if I’ve recovered from it. It really, really hurt that man could do that to man. And then there was a breakup with somebody, and it took me a while to get me back on my feet again.”

  • Billy Joel’s Daughter Gets Protection From Cyberstalker

    Earlier this week it was revealed that singer Billy Joel’s daughter, Alexa Ray Joel, had been cyberstalked via Facebook. According to a report from the New York Post, the stalker sent dozens of messages to Alexa, some including references to assault, pedophilia, and murder. Alexa was reportedly too frightened of the messages to leave her house.

    Billy Joel has now hired a bodyguard for his daughter. The body guard was reportedly hired from a private security firm recommended by Paul McCartney.

    Private detectives were also hired to track down the stalker, who turned out to be a woman who lives in Austin, Minnesota. The woman, Sheryl Finley, has a history of mental illness, according to the Post report.

    Alexa Ray Joel, who is 27 years old, is the daughter of Billy Joel and supermodel Christie Brinkley. Like her father, she plays the piano and is a singer-songwriter. Alexa released an independent album titled Sketches in 2006. She is also the spokesmodel for Prell shampoo.