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Billy Joel brings hit-packed show to sold out Fenway Park

Billy Joel performs at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

by Doug MacGunnigle, WPRO

Billy Joel was refreshingly honest early during last nightโ€™s show at Bostonโ€™s Fenway Park: โ€œI donโ€™t have anything new for ya. Same old shit.โ€ The sold-out crowd didnโ€™t mind one bit.

Joel hasnโ€™t released an album of new material since 1993โ€™s โ€œRiver of Dreams,โ€ and has since successfully toured solely on his past catalog of hits.

And what a catalog. The career spanning 28 song show featured mega-hits alongside songs that were singles but didnโ€™t quite reach the heights of his more famous material. โ€œFlops,โ€ as Joel called them.

Taking the stage to the strains of Randy Newmanโ€™s orchestral score from 1984โ€™s baseball themed film โ€œThe Natural,โ€ Joel strapped on a guitar for โ€œA Matter of Trustโ€ before settling in behind his rotating piano for the bulk of the evening.

Billy Joel performs at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

After running through solid versions of โ€œPressure,โ€ โ€œThe Entertainer,โ€ and โ€œVienna,โ€ Joel mumbled something to his backing band about doing something โ€œBoston based,โ€ as they launched into a few verses of Bostonโ€™s โ€œMore Than a Feeling,โ€ sung by singer/guitarist and Joel soundalike Mike DelGuidice.

The crack backing band shone on โ€œBallad of Billy The Kid,โ€ which Joel confessed to the crowd was โ€œ100% bullshit and inaccurateโ€ lyrically but sounded good as a movie song, albeit to a movie that was never made.

A well received โ€œMovinโ€™ Outโ€ was next, followed quickly by โ€œSleeping with the Television Onโ€ from 1980โ€™s Glass Houses LP. This lesser known tune was introduced by Joel as โ€œnot a hit, probably a good time to go to the bathroom if you want.โ€ It was a welcome change of pace, however, and a nice nod to his lesser known, but still top notch catalog material.

Billy Joel performs at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

Joel introduced โ€œThe Downeaster Alexaโ€ after talking about the Gloucester area north of Boston and the struggles of the commercial fishermen in the area.

โ€œNew York State of Mindโ€ followed to some boos, but mostly cheers, from the crowd โ€“ playing a song so identified with New York City in Fenway Park could be seen as sacrilege. Joel addressed it after playing the song. โ€œSomeone in the band told me I had balls to play that one in Fenway Park,โ€ before diffusing whatever tension there was with his declaration that Ted Williams was the the best hitter in baseball history, winning over the offended Sox fans in the crowd.

โ€œAllentownโ€ was next, followed by a note-perfect take on the Beatlesโ€™ โ€œI Feel Fineโ€ which showed off the groupโ€™s impressive vocal harmonies.

Guitarist Tommy Byrnes performs with Billy Joel at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

Another deep cut followed, 1986โ€™s โ€œBig Man on Mulberry Street,โ€ which again showcased the band, particularly the horn section and trumpeter Carl Fisherโ€™s jazzy solo.

The bulk of the rest of the set was solid hits: โ€œMy Life.โ€ โ€œSheโ€™s Always A Woman.โ€ โ€œOnly The Good Die Youngโ€ (with a sprightly solo from longtime saxman Mark Rivera.) The crowd at Fenway was on its feet despite the intermittent rain showers.

Mark Rivera performs with Billy Joel at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

Following โ€œThe River of Dreamsโ€ and a romp through another Beatles tune โ€œA Hard Dayโ€™s Night,โ€ Joel and DelGuidice were left alone on stage for DelGuidiceโ€™s mighty solo vocal performance of Pucciniโ€™s โ€œNessun dorma,โ€ which left the awed crowd spelbound by his vocal prowess.

From that point on, it was song after song, hit after hit. Any band or performer would be blessed to have just one of these: โ€œScenes from an Italian Restaurant,โ€ and โ€œPiano Manโ€ before an encore consisting of โ€œWe Didnโ€™t Start The Fire,โ€ โ€œUptown Girl,โ€ โ€œStill Rock and Roll to Me,โ€ โ€œBig Shot,โ€ and โ€œYou May be Right,โ€ which featured a bit of Led Zeppelinโ€™s โ€œRock and Rollโ€ to close things out.

Billy Joel performs at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

Billy Joel was one of the hottest, most difficult tickets of the summer concert season โ€“ and was his 6th sellout in a row at Fenway Park.

Itโ€™s a pretty simple formula: people want to see and hear great songs (who cares if theyโ€™re old?) And they want to hear them performed well. Thatโ€™s what Joel brought, in spades, to Fenway Park on Saturday night.

Billy Joel performs at Fenway Park in Boston on Saturday, September 14, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle
Tommy Byrnes, Mark Rivera, and Crystal Taliefero perform with Billy Joel at Fenway Park on Saturday, September 15, 2019. Photo by Doug MacGunnigle

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