
eBook - ePub
The Billy Joel Essays
Essays from Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and Chuck Klosterman IV
- 24 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
The Billy Joel Essays
Essays from Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and Chuck Klosterman IV
About this book
Originally collected in Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs and Chuck Klosterman IV, and now available both as a stand-alone essay and in the ebook collection Chuck Klosterman on Pop, these essays are about Billy Joel.
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Yes, you can access The Billy Joel Essays by Chuck Klosterman in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Music Theory & Appreciation. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Every Dog Must Have
His Every Day, Every Drunk
Must Have His Drink
Several months before nineteen unsmiling people from the Middle East woke up early on a Tuesday in order to commit suicide by flying planes into tall New York office buildings, I sent out a mass e-mail to several acquaintances that focused on the concept of patriotism. At the time, âpatriotismâ seemed like a quaint, baffling concept; it was almost like asking people to express their feelings on the art of blacksmithing. But sometimes I like to ask people what they think about blacksmithing, too.
So ANYWAY, here was the content of my e-mail: I gave everyone two potential options for a hypothetical blind date and asked them to pick who theyâd prefer. The only things they knew about the first candidate was that he or she was attractive and successful. The only things they knew about the second candidate was that he or she was attractive, successful, and âextremely patriotic.â No other details were provided or could be ascertained.
Just about everyone immediately responded by selecting the first individual. They viewed patriotism as a downside. I wasnât too surprised; in fact, I was mostly just amused by how everyone seemed to think extremely patriotic people werenât just undateable, but totally fucking insane. One of them wrote that the quality of âpatriotismâ was on par with âregularly listening to Cat Stevensâ and âloves Robin Williams movies.â Comparisons were made to Ted Nugent and Patrick Henry. And one especially snide fellow sent back a mass message to the entire e-mail group, essentially claiming that any woman who loved America didnât deserve to date him, not because he hated his country but because patriotic people werenât smart.
That last response outraged one of my friends, a thirty-one-year-old lawyer who had been the only individual in the entire group who claimed to prefer the extremely patriotic candidate to the alternative. He sent me one of the most sincerely aggravated epistles Iâve ever received, and I still recall a segment of his electronic diatribe that was painfully accurate: âYou know how historians call people who came of age during World War II âthe greatest generationâ? No one will ever say that about us,â he wrote. âWeâll be âthe cool generation.â Thatâs all weâre good at, and thatâs all you and your friends seem to aspire to.â
Whatâs kind of ironic about this statement is that I think my lawyer friend was trying to make me reevaluate the state of my life, but it mostly just made me think about Billy Joel. Nobody would ever claim that Billy Joel is cool in the conventional sense, particularly if theyâre the kind of person who actively worries about what coolness is supposed to mean. Billy Joel is also not cool in the kitschy, campy, âheâs so uncool heâs coolâ sense, which also happens to be the most tired designation in popular culture. He has no intrinsic coolness, and he has no extrinsic coolness. If cool was a color, it would be blackâand Billy Joel would be sort of burnt orange.
Yet Billy Joel is great. And heâs not great because heâs uncool, nor is he great because he âdoesnât worry about being coolâ (because I think he kind of does). No, heâs great in the same way that your dead grandfather is great. Because unlike 99 percent of pop artists, there is absolutely no relationship between Joelâs greatness and Joelâs coolness (or lack thereof), just as thereâs no relationship between the âgreatnessâ of serving in World War II and the âcoolnessâ of serving in World War II. What he does as an artist wouldnât be better if he was significantly cooler, and itâs not worse because he isnât. And thatâs sort of amazing when one considers that heâs supposedly a rock star.
For just about everybody else in the idiom of rock, being cool is pretty much the whole job description. Itâs difficult to think of rock artists who are great without being cool, since thatâs precisely why we need them to exist. There have been countless bands in rock historyâT. Rex, Janeâs Addiction, the White Stripes, et al.âwho I will always classify as âgreat,â even though theyâre really just spine-crushingly âcool.â What they are is more important than what they do. And this is not a criticism of coolness; by and large, the musical component of rock isnât nearly as important as the iconography and the posturing and the idea of what weâre supposed to be experiencing. If given the choice between hearing a great band and seeing a cool band, Iâll take the latter every single time; this is why the Eagles suck. But itâs the constraints of that very relationship that give Billy Joel his subterranean fabulousity, and itâs why heâs unassumingly superior to all his mainstream seventies peers who got far more credit (James Taylor, Carole King, Bruce Springsteen, etc.). Joel is the only rock star Iâve ever loved who I never wanted to be (not even when he was sleeping with Christie Brinkley). Every one of Joelâs important songsâincluding the happy onesâare ultimately about loneliness. And itâs not âclever lonelyâ (like Morrissey) or âinteresting lonelyâ (like Radiohead); itâs âlonely lonely,â like the way it feels when youâre being hugged by someone and it somehow makes you sadder.
Now, I know what youâre thinking: What about that godawful current events song that seemed like a rip-off of R.E.M. (1989âs âWe Didnât Start the Fireâ)? Whatâs lonely about...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- The Billy Joel Essays
- More by Chuck Klosterman