Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • New York Post

    Billy Joel’s emotional coming-home story behind ‘New York State of Mind’ — as he says goodbye to his MSG residency

    By Chuck Arnold,

    5 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1x8Lcs_0udbvDUv00

    “Some folks like to get away/ Take a holiday from the neighborhood/ Hop a flight to Miami Beach/ Or to Hollywood.”

    So mused a 27-year-old Billy Joel at the beginning of “New York State of Mind,” his 1976 saloon song that would become a hometown anthem for the ages — and a local crowd favorite during his 10-year monthly residency at Madison Square Garden that ends on Thursday night .

    Unhappy with his contract with Family Productions — the label that released his 1971 debut album, “Cold Spring Harbor” — the Bronx-born, Long Island -bred crooner hopped a cross-country flight from New York to Los Angeles.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=40gzWl_0udbvDUv00
    “New York State of Mind,” released in 1976, was inspired by Billy Joel’s return to the city after his move to Los Angeles. Redferns

    And the big move paid off: After making his getaway in 1972, becoming a resident lounge lizard in La La Land, Joel recorded his second and third albums, 1973’s “Piano Man” and 1974’s “Streetlife Serenade” under a new deal with Columbia Records.

    Wavin’ goodbye: How MSG is bidding farewell to Billy Joel’s 10-year residency

    But you can take the Piano Man out of New York, but you can’t take New York out of the Piano Man.

    With his fourth album, 1976’s “Turnstiles,” Joel said goodbye to Hollywood — in both song and geography. And his return east inspired his now-legendary love letter to his city.

    “‘ New York State of Mind ,’ I wrote actually while I was on a Greyhound bus on my way back from a gig somewhere,” Joel told SiriusXM in 2016. “And I was really homesick for New York, and the words started coming to me on the bus, and the melody.”

    Why Billy Joel refuses to sell front row seats to his shows

    For Joel, writing his own ode to the Big Apple — inspired on that Greyhound bus ride back from Highland Falls, New York — became a very personal mission.

    “There’s a lot of songs about New York. ‘New York, New York,’ ‘On Broadway.’ This was about coming back to this place, which I think it really needed, especially back in the mid-’70s, when it was really kind of crappy,” he told Newsday in 2015. “A lot of bad things were happening in New York then.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=24PAk4_0udbvDUv00
    After “Turnstiles” dropped in May 1976, “New York State of Mind” wasn’t even released as a single. Sbme Special MKTS

    “There was a lot of crime. Drugs were out of control. The city looked bad, it was really dirty. It almost defaulted financially. It really needed a boost, and I wanted to write an anthem for it.”

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR MORNING REPORT NEWSLETTER

    But after “Turnstiles” dropped in May 1976, “New York State of Mind” wasn’t even released as a single. That distinction went to “James,” “I’ve Loved the Days” and “Say Goodbye to Hollywood,” with only the latter becoming a hit of any note.

    But five decades later, it is “New York State of Mind” — nailing the rhythm and blues of his stomping grounds — that has endured as Joel’s signature song, neck and neck with “Piano Man.”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1GZ1c4_0udbvDUv00
    “It was difficult to get through,” said Billy Joel of singing “New York State of Mind” at a 9/11 telethon in September 2001. AP

    And Joel has performed the song on some of the most important occasions of his career, including the Concert for New York City in October 2001 and a 9/11 telethon a month before that.

    “We did it as blues, rather than doing it as a standard. We played it kind of downbeat and soft and slow, almost like an elegy,” he told Newsday in 2015. “It was difficult to get through.”

    Eight years later, the timeless tune even inspired a hip-hop spin with “Empire State of Mind,” the Jay-Z and Alicia Keys smash that went No. 1 in 2009. And it still never fails to give Joel’s beloved New York “a boost” whenever it needs it.

    For the latest in entertainment, top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com/entertainment/

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local New York City, NY newsLocal New York City, NY
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    Consequence (formerly Consequence Of Sound)1 day ago

    Comments / 0