Buried Treasure: Billy Joel - Streetlife Serenade (1974)

Billy Joel's second Columbia album, and third overall, is among his least remembered records. It was inevitable that Streetlife Serenade, the followup to Piano Man, wouldn’t have the same impact as his major label debut because the earlier platter was such a huge success. While Streetlife will never make any list of Joel's masterworks it definitely doesn't deserve its fate of completely falling off the musical radar. Here, he still presents himself more as a singer-songwriter than the rocker and showman he became during his major hit making years.

Joel, who hasn't recorded a new studio album since 1993's mediocre River of Dreams, still performs Piano Man’s most popular songs in concert today. "The Ballad of Billy the Kid," the arena rock anthem "Captain Jack," and the title track are all staples of classic rock radio. What Streetlife lacks are those kind of songs, the ones that embed themselves in your head for eternity.

Easily the best track on the album is "The Entertainer," a rock 'n roll commentary about what it's like dealing with the business side of making records highlighted by it's pointed lyrics about "Piano Man" being edited down to fit on a single. Joel sings, "It was a beautiful song but it ran too long, if you want to have a hit you’ve got to make it fit, so they cut it down to 3:05." The song is perfect for the baseball stadiums Joel performs in today but he never makes it part of his set list.

The upbeat "Los Angelenos" is an observation on the left coast's biggest town from someone who, at the time, was a transplanted New Yorker. Joel grew up on Long Island, in an area where families had longtime roots. He sounds astonished when he tells us "Los Angelenos all come from elsewhere." It's one of the better songs on the LP.

The rest of Streetlife is filled with decent tunes, the kind that will make you say "that’s nice" when you hear them, but they will immediately disappear from your brain about ten minutes after you stop listening. Among these are "The Great Suburban Showdown," "Roberta," "Weekend Song," and "Streetlife Serenader."

The album also suffers because, in spots, it doesn’t offer the detailed songcraft Joel is known for. There are two instrumentals. Did life on the road prevent him from fully developing "The Mexican Connection" and "Root Beer Rag?" They're both easy to listen to but neither is anything more than pleasant filler.

If you haven't played Streetlife Serenade in a long time, or you have never heard it at all, now is the time to take it out for a test drive. An album doesn't have to be a classic to be satisfying and, if you're worn out listening to Joel's often overplayed radio hits, this may feel like fresh, new music to you. Remember, minor artwork needs love too.

Comments

  1. Yeah, I probably should. I've never hated anything I've heard from Joel, though I've never passionately loved his work, either...a craftsman, though.

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  2. Plenty of the songs from Streetlife Serenade showed up in the Billy Joel musical MOVIN' OUT. I'm also fond of GLASS HOUSES and AN INNOCENT MAN.

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  3. Excellent summation of this LP. I'm really fond of his next record, "Turnstiles" which takes a small thread from "Los Angelenos" in the real life leap that Joel made from LA back to New York. "New York State of Mind" is a reflection of his decision to go back. I think that he was developing his craft as a writer over those first three albums, found his niche by the fourth and then had the big commercial break with The Stranger. His style was firmly set by that point.

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