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Billy Joel - Glass Houses (1980/2014) [Hi-Res]

Billy Joel - Glass Houses (1980/2014) [Hi-Res]

BAND/ARTIST: Billy Joel

  • Title: Glass Houses
  • Year Of Release: 1980/2014
  • Label: Columbia
  • Genre: Pop Rock, Soft Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/96
  • Total Time: 00:35:12
  • Total Size: 791 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. You May Be Right (4:16)
02. Sometimes A Fantasy (3:40)
03. Don't Ask Me Why (3:00)
04. It's Still Rock And Roll To Me (2:58)
05. All For Leyna (4:19)
06. I Don't Want To Be Alone (3:58)
07. Sleeping With The Television On (3:03)
08. C'etait Toi (You Were The One) (3:26)
09. Close To The Borderline (3:48)
10. Through The Long Night (2:44)

The back-to-back success of The Stranger and 52nd Street may have brought Billy Joel fame and fortune, even a certain amount of self-satisfaction, but it didn't bring him critical respect, and it didn't dull his anger. If anything, being classified as a mainstream rocker -- a soft rocker -- infuriated him, especially since a generation of punks and new wave kids were getting the praise that eluded him. He didn't take this lying down -- he recorded Glass Houses. Comparatively a harder-rocking album than either of its predecessors, with a distinctly bitter edge, Glass Houses still displays the hallmarks of Billy Joel the pop craftsman and Phil Ramone the world-class hitmaker. Even its hardest songs -- the terrifically paranoid "Sometimes a Fantasy," "Sleepin' With the Television On," "Close to the Borderline," the hit "You May Be Right" -- have bold, direct melodies and clean arrangements, ideal for radio play. Instead of turning out to be a fiery rebuttal to his detractors, the album is a remarkable catalog of contemporary pop styles, from McCartney-esque whimsy ("Don't Ask Me Why") and arena rock ("All for Leyna") to soft rock ("C'etait Toi [You Were the One]") and stylish new wave pop ("It's Still Rock and Roll to Me," which ironically is closer to new wave pop than rock). That's not a detriment; that's the album's strength. The Stranger and 52nd Street were fine albums in their own right, but it's nice to hear Joel scale back his showman tendencies and deliver a solid pop/rock record. It may not be punk -- then again, it may be his concept of punk -- but Glass Houses is the closest Joel ever got to a pure rock album.


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  • User offline
  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 13:16
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Many Thanks
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  • nilesh65
  •  wrote in 15:57
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Thank you so much!!!!