- Allentown (song)
Infobox Single |
Name = Allentown
Artist =Billy Joel
Writer =Billy Joel
from Album =The Nylon Curtain
Released =1982
Format = 7"
Recorded =1982
Genre = Rock
Length = 3:48
Label = Columbia
Producer =Phil Ramone
Last single = "Pressure"
(1982)
This single = "Allentown"
(1982)
Next single = "Goodnight Saigon "
(1983):"This article is about the song byBilly Joel . For the city in Pennsylvania, United States, see Allentown. For the city in New Jersey, United States, seeAllentown, New Jersey .""Allentown" is a
Billy Joel song, which first appeared on Joel's "The Nylon Curtain " (1982 ) album, accompanied by aconceptualmusic video . It later appeared on Joel's "Greatest Hits: Volume II" (1985 ), "" (2000 ), "The Essential Billy Joel " (2001), and "12 Gardens Live " (2006) albums. "Allentown" is the lead track on "The Nylon Curtain", which was the seventh best-selling album of the year in 1982. The song reached #17 on the "Billboard Hot 100 ", making it one of the most-played radio songs of 1982. The video was also in heavy rotation onMTV during 1982 and 1983. The original airing of the song featured rear male nudity in the opening of the song as steelworkers showered; the scene was edited from subsequent airings on MTV.Theme
The song's theme is of the resolve of those coping with the demise of the American manufacturing industry in the latter part of the 20th century. More specifically, it depicts the depressed, blue-collar livelihood of Allentown and Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania 's residents in the wake ofBethlehem Steel 's decline and eventual closure.cite book |title= Rock N' Roll Gold Rush |last= Dean |first= Maury |authorlink= Maury Dean |coauthors= |year= 2003 |publisher= Algora |location= |isbn= 0-87586-207-1 |pages= 289 |url= ] Joel witnessed this first-hand while performing at theLehigh Valley 's numerous music venues at the start of his career in the late 1960s and early 1970s.The introductory rhythm of the song is reminiscent of the sound of a
rolling mill converting steel ingots intoI-beam s or other shapes. Such a sound was commonly heard throughout South Bethlehem when the Bethlehem Steel plant was in operation from 1857 through 2003.History
When Joel first started writing the song, it was originally named "Levittown", after the
Long Island town. Joel had grown up in Levittown, but there was nothing interesting there to write about. He had originally written a chord and lyrics for the song, but the lack of anything to write about really brought the idea down. Joel remembered reading about the decline of the steel industry in theLehigh Valley , which included the towns of Bethlehem and Allentown, where he got the inspiration for "Allentown". The original idea for Levittown was in the1970s , but Allentown itself was not written until 1982.cite news|url=http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/5341815.html|title=Billy Joel revisits Allentown|publisher=The Morning Call|author=Len Righi|accessdate=2008-08-08|date=November 30 ,2007 ]A year after the song was released, the mayor of Allentown, Pennsylvania sent a letter to Joel about giving some of his royalites to the town. Mayor Joseph Daddona, who sent the letter, said it would help for scholarships for future musicians in Joel's footsteps.cite news|title=Allentown mayor asks Joel for song royalties|date=
January 21 ,1983 |author=Associated Press|publisher=Daily Collegian] OnJanuary 20 ,1983 , the letter was mailed to Joel with an article next day, quoting Dandonna as saying the following:Not only would this fund be a great way to share a tiny part of your good fortune to others in Allentown, it would also help keep alive the 'Allentown' song and the Billy Joel legend (which you've already become here).
When Joel revisited Allentown on the 25th anniversary of the song on
November 30 ,2007 , the musician had a conversation with a local newspaper,The Morning Call . In the interview he explained where his inspiration came from and how the song came along.Reaction to song in Allentown
The song was met with mixed responses in Allentown. Some criticized the song as degrading and stereotyping by an artist who had never lived in the region (Joel is from
Long Island, New York ). But when Joel returned to the area following the album's release and the song's rise to global popularity, he was awarded the key to the city by Allentown's mayor, who praised it as "a gritty song about a gritty city." Before a sold-out crowd atStabler Arena in neighboring Bethlehem, "People" magazine reported that Joel was greeted enthusiastically with a five minute standing ovation as he closed his third encore with "Allentown." At the end of the song and extended ovation, Joel was greeted with even more sustained applause when, in an apparent defense of the song's meaning, he pointedly told the Allentown crowd: "Don't take any shit from anybody." [Cite Web | last = Neuhaus | first = Cable | title = He Sang of Their Troubles, but Grateful Citizens Say Thank You Anyway to Billy Joel | publisher = People Magazine (Vol. 19, No.1) | url = http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20084021,00.html | accessdate = 2008-06-08]"Where's the Orchestra?"
The song is bookended on the album "The Nylon Curtain" with the song "Where's the Orchestra?", which ends with a brief instrumental version of "Allentown".
Chart positions
References
External links
* [http://music.aol.com/artist/billy-joel/4615/main "Allentown" music video at AOL.com] .
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FSrO_92cO2o Billy Joel performs "Allentown" in "Live from Leningrad", 1987] ,Saint Petersburg, Russia .
* [http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/5341815.html "Billy Joel Revisits Allentown," "Houston Chronicle", November 30, 2007] .
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