So why is Billy Joel’s The Nylon Curtain on this best 1,000 albums ever thing?
The Nylon Curtain contains two of Billy Joel’s all time classic narrative songs in “Goodnight Saigon” and “Allentown” – and we’ll get to those soon – but my favorite song on this album is “Pressure.”
So let’s turn it up.
If you wanted to pick one single representative song of the 1980s in the U.S. – go go commercialism, Ronald Reagan’s “city on a hill” conservatism, Cold War, yuppies over hippies, “greed is good,” baby boomers booming – you could do a lot worse than “Pressure.”
It’s something of a narrative song as well, though much broader lyrically than “Goodnight Saigon” and “Allentown.” But most importantly, “Pressure” rocks in that finely tuned way that pianist and songwriting master craftsman Billy Joel can put on display.
As great a job as “Pressure” does of capturing the zeitgeist of the early 1980s in the U.S., “Goodnight Saigon” does at giving you some small sense of what it would have felt like to be a scared, young American soldier deployed to a warzone halfway around the world. It was also written during a time when the scars of that complex, violent, and contentious era were just starting to heal. And on a song level, it’s incredibly compelling and moving. Very few seven-minute songs flow and capture your attention like “Goodnight Saigon.”
And then Allentown takes us into blue collar, coal country in Pennsylvania. It splits the difference between “Pressure” and “Goodnight Saigon” in that it’s a catchy piano-driven rock song, but also gives a sense of what it’s like to live in the “rust belt” during an era when manufacturing jobs were starting to vanish.
Personal stuff that’s somehow related to Billy Joel’s The Nylon Curtain
I grew up on Long Island, New York, where local legend Billy Joel was revered (and I’m sure still is). I was very young when The Nylon Curtain came out (I vaguely recall “Pressure” getting played on the radio, perhaps on WPLJ or Z100, home of the Morning Zoo!), and greatly enjoyed his music growing up.
Then the late ‘80s and early ‘90s hit, I became a teenager immersed in the hard rock of the classic rock era while also actively getting my brain melted on the newer sounds of alternative rock, grunge, college rock, and hip-hop. Joel was older by then, and certainly not in vogue as he was during most of the 1980s.
So I think by that point I was a little bit “over” Joel, but it also dovetailed with my being over Long Island and Long Island culture in general. I was ready to break away from my childhood, from my homeland, and from my past (and rebel me made it all the way to Binghamton University in Binghamton, New York, a solid four-hour drive depending on traffic!), and I’m sure I unfairly dumped Billy Joel into the same unwieldy bucket.
Which is all to say it’s so great to come back to art and pop culture that you’ve set aside for “reasons” and rediscover it. To hear music anew in this case.
And, for me, Billy Joel is incredible as an artist, songwriter, and musician. He always was and still is – I just had to do some growing up in between.
Some stats & info about Billy Joel – The Nylon Curtain
- What kind of musical stylings does this album represent? Rock Music, Album Rock, Soft Rock
- Rolling Stone’s greatest 500 albums ranking – not ranked!
- All Music’s rating – 3.5 out of 5 stars
- When was The Nylon Curtain released? 1982
- My ranking, the one you’re reading right now – #665 out of 1,000
Billy Joel’s The Nylon Curtain on Spotify
A lyrical snippet from Billy Joel’s The Nylon Curtain that’s evocative of the album in some way, maybe
You have no scars on your face, and you cannot handle pressure.
What does the “best 1,000 albums ever” mean and why are you doing this?
Yeah, I know it’s audacious, a little crazy (okay, maybe a lot cray cray), bordering on criminal nerdery.
But here’s what it’s NOT: a definitive list of the Greatest Albums of All-Time. This is 100% my own personal super biased, incredibly subjective review of what my top 1,000 albums are, ranked in painstaking order over the course of doing research for nearly a year, Rob from High Fidelity style. Find out more about why I embarked on a best 1,000 albums ever project.
