Billy Joel - An Innocent Man [Columbia Records QC 38837] (8 August 1983)

Dynamic Range Released: 8 August 1983
Country: US
Label: Columbia Records
Catalog: QC 38837
Genre: Rock, Pop

Item# SR-COQC38837
Ratings: C=NM-; LP=NM-


T R A C K L I S T:
01 Easy Money
02 An Innocent Man
03 The Longest Time
04 This Night
05 Tell Her About It
06 Uptown Girl
07 Careless Talk
08 Christie Lee
09 Leave A Tender Moment Alone
10 Keeping The Faith




An Innocent Man
Billy Joel


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Album Review

Stephen Thomas Erlewine [allmusic.com]

Recording The Nylon Curtain exhausted Billy Joel, and even though it had a pair of major hits, it didn't rival its predecessors in terms of sales. Since he labored so hard at the record, he decided it was time for a break -- it was time to record an album just for fun. And that's how his homage to pre-Beatles pop, An Innocent Man, was conceived: it was designed as a breezy romp through the music of his childhood. Joel's grasp on history isn't remarkably astute -- the opener ''Easy Money'' is a slice of Stax/Volt pop-soul, via the Blues Brothers (quite possibly the inspiration for the album), and the label didn't break the pop charts until well after the British Invasion -- but he's in top form as a craftsman throughout the record. Only once does he stumble on his own ambition (''This Night,'' which appropriates its chorus from Beethoven). For the rest of the record, he's effortlessly spinning out infectious, memorable melodies in a variety of styles, from the Four Seasons send-up ''Uptown Girl'' and the soulful ''Tell Her About It'' to a pair of doo wop tributes, ''The Longest Time'' and ''Careless Talk.'' Joel has rarely sounded so carefree either in performance or writing, possibly due to ''Christie Lee'' Brinkley, a supermodel who became his new love prior to An Innocent Man. He can't stop writing about her throughout the album -- only three songs, including the haunted title track, aren't about her in some form or fashion. That giddiness is infectious, helping make An Innocent Man an innocent delight that unwittingly closes Joel's classic period.