• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Billy Joel not motivated to write pop songs

Thu May 3, 2007 6:47am EDT
Six-time Grammy award winner Billy Joel performs for the first time in Johannesburg, in this October 26, 2006 file photo. Despite the recent digital release of ''All My Life,'' Billy Joel's first new pop song in 14 years, the singer/songwriter says he doesn't foresee a re-opening of the creative floodgates that led to 33 Top 40 hits. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Six-time Grammy award winner Billy Joel performs for the first time in Johannesburg, in this October 26, 2006 file photo. Despite the recent digital release of ''All My Life,'' Billy Joel's first new pop song in 14 years, the singer/songwriter says he doesn't foresee a re-opening of the creative floodgates that led to 33 Top 40 hits.

Credit: Reuters/Siphiwe Sibeko

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Despite the recent digital release of "All My Life," Billy Joel's first new pop song in 14 years, the singer/songwriter says he doesn't foresee a re-opening of the creative floodgates that led to 33 Top 40 hits.

Music

"I'm not ruling out the possibility of writing songs again," Joel tells Billboard.com. "I suppose if I had the motivation to write a song, I'm not gonna stop myself from doing it. I just haven't felt the compulsion to write songs in pop form. I guess these days I just think of myself as a composer."

Joel's last album of original material, "River of Dreams," came out in 1993 and concluded with, appropriately, a track called "Famous Last Words." He released a classical album, "Fantasies & Delusions," in 2001.

He says he has "lots of thematic pieces" that he's composed in the Long Island, N.Y., home he shares with his third wife, culinary journalist Katie Lee Joel.

"All My Life" was something of a surprise. Joel composed it in 2005 as a first anniversary gift for his wife, with hopes that Tony Bennett would record it. He decided to make his own version for their second anniversary -- "Call me a cheapskate," he cracks -- and was surprised when Columbia Records executives campaigned to release it as a digital single.

And if nothing else, he notes, it's given him at least one new song to perform at his shows, although he wraps up his current road trek May 9 in St. Paul, Minn., and has no definite plans ahead of him.

"Look," Joel says, "I still love rock'n'roll. I still love pop music. I haven't divorced myself from the material I wrote before. That's why I'm out here on the road playing this stuff. I still believe in it."

Reuters/Billboard



More from Reuters

Tea Party member Mike Kopczyk holds a sign during a rally marking the one-year anniversary of the movement in Troy, Michigan February 27, 2010. Some Tea Partiers say they can pinpoint the precise moment when they made it clear to the Republican Party they had no intention of being its lapdog. Picture taken February 27, 2010. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook

Special Report: Tea Partiers vs. Republicans

Tea Partiers want it known that they are not Republican Party lapdogs, but are they a fringe movement or a sleeping giant, awakened?  Full Article 

    Tomatoes are on display at an organic fruit and vegetable stall at a market in Montalivet, southwestern France, August 13, 2009. Credit: REUTERS/Regis Duvignau

    Organic a tough slog in China

    After incidents of melamine-tainted milk to toxic cowpeas, selling organic food to the Chinese is not an easy business.   Full Article 

    A host shows off the back of Apple's new "iPad" in San Francisco, January 27, 2010. REUTERS/Kimberly White

    Once bitten, twice shy of Apple

    European carriers sacrificed profits to carry the iPhone. They won't make that same mistake with the iPad.   Full Article