Directors of Billy Joel documentary hope viewers learn that he’s more than just the hits

Directors of Billy Joel documentary hope viewers learn that he’s more than just the hits
Directors of Billy Joel documentary hope viewers learn that he’s more than just the hits
Courtesy of HBO

Billy Joel is the subject of a new two-part documentary, Billy Joel: And So It Goes, and the film’s directors Susan Lacy and Jessica Levin didn’t have to hold back when interviewing the rocker for the film.

Lacy tells ABC Audio that from the beginning she asked Joel if there were “any sensitivities” she should be aware of, and he simply told her to “tell the truth.”

“Nothing was off-limits,” she says.

Part two of the documentary debuted Friday on HBO, and Levin says it’s “a little bit of a different animal” than part one, which was somewhat of an origin story.

“It’s a much more personal story,” she says, noting it delves into his time with wife Christie Brinkley, but also touches on his family and his Jewish heritage, explaining, that’s “probably the most important aspect” of the film.

The doc also features artists like Bruce Springsteen, Sting and others talking about Billy and his career.

“The thing about musicians is, whether the critics got him or not, musicians got him,” Lacey says. “It means a lot when you hear Bruce Springsteen say the critics missed a lot of the best of Billy ’cause they just didn’t know how to pigeonhole him, but his melodies are actually better than mine.”

The two parts cover quite a bit of Billy’s life and career, and Levin says she and Lacy hope viewers will “come away with a really complete and satisfying experience of understanding an artist that is a lot more than his top line hits.”

She adds, “I think that you will be really surprised about what a complex and emotionally available artist you find in the film in a way that Billy has never been seen before.” 

Billy Joel: And So It Goes is now streaming on HBO Max.

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Billy Joel blasts Trump over Charlottesville comments in new documentary

Billy Joel blasts Trump over Charlottesville comments in new documentary
Billy Joel blasts Trump over Charlottesville comments in new documentary
Myrna M. Suarez/Getty Images

Billy Joel is not an artist who often gets political. But in the second part of his HBO documentary, Billy Joel: And So It Goes, he has some very strong words for President Donald Trump regarding the comments he made after 2017’s Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

While Billy says in the film that he “never liked getting political onstage,” he did just that after Trump responded to the rally of white nationalists by giving a speech in which he said there were “some very fine people on both sides.”

Not long after the speech, Joel came out onstage at Madison Square Garden with a yellow Star of David on his jacket as a way of protest. He explained in the film, “I had to do something. I was angry.”

“Here they are marching through an American city saying, ‘Jews will not replace us.’ We fought a war to defeat these people!” he says. “And then when Trump comes out and says, ‘There were very fine people on both sides,’ he should’ve come out and said, ‘Those are bad people.’ There is no qualifying it. The Nazis are not good people. Period!”

Joel, whose father’s family escaped Nazi Germany, adds that while he didn’t want to “get up on a soapbox,” the star was his way of doing something. He said that he wore it “basically to say, no matter what, I will always be a Jew.”

Part two of Billy Joel: And So it Goes premieres Friday on HBO. Part one and two will also stream on HBO Max.

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John Fogerty shares two more songs from ‘Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years’

John Fogerty shares two more songs from ‘Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years’
John Fogerty shares two more songs from ‘Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years’
Concord Records

John Forgerty continues to preview his upcoming album of rerecorded Credence Clearwater Revival classics, Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years, which drops Aug. 22.

The rocker has now released his new take on “Travelin’ Band.” Fogerty said rerecording it “was like climbing a mountain,” adding, “I had to work myself up to hit that level again. I’d sing until I didn’t have anything left.”

He’s also released “Long as I Can See the Light,” which he says “means so much” to him.

“If you see a ray of light you can always find your way,” Fogerty says. 

Both songs are now available via digital outlets.

Legacy: the Creedence Clearwater Revival years, produced by Fogerty and his son Shane Fogerty, comes two years after Fogerty fully regained the rights to his CCR catalog. The album also features new takes on CCR classics like “Have You Ever Seen the Rain,” “Proud Mary,” “Fortunate Son” and “Bad Moon Rising.”

The rocker is backed on the album by both of his sons, Shane and Tyler Fogerty.

Legacy is available for preorder now.


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Guitar owned by Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page expected to bring in over $40,00 at auction

Guitar owned by Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page expected to bring in over ,00 at auction
Guitar owned by Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page expected to bring in over $40,00 at auction
Disney/Michael J. Le Brecht II

A guitar that was previously owned by Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page is going up for auction in September and is expected to bring in a pretty penny.

The U.K. publication The Standard reports that the guitar up for grabs was originally part of a collaboration between New Music Express magazine and the band over 50 years ago. Back then, the mag ran a sweepstakes with the grand prize being a 1957 Gretsch Chet Atkins 6120 electric guitar that Page purchased in Nashville for about $270.

In order to enter to sweepstakes, competitors had to match six guitars with their superstar owners; a man named Charles Reid from North London won.

Reid sold the guitar in 1990 to a man named Phil O’Donoghue for under $3,000. Following O’Donoghue’s death earlier this year, the family decided to put it up for auction.

The auction is now scheduled to take place Sept. 9 in England; the guitar is estimated to sell for somewhere between $40,000 and $70,000.

Whoever purchases the guitar will also get original copies of New Music Express, along with receipts and correspondence.

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Warren Haynes releases new track from upcoming album ‘The Whisper Sessions’

Warren Haynes releases new track from upcoming album ‘The Whisper Sessions’
Warren Haynes releases new track from upcoming album ‘The Whisper Sessions’
Fantasy Records

Warren Haynes is sharing another preview of his upcoming release, The Whisper Sessions, which features seven stripped-down versions of songs from his 2024 solo album, Million Voices Whisper.

The latest is a new take on the song “You Ain’t Above Me” and is available now via digital outlets.

“This stripped-down version is actually the only time I’ve ever performed it this way,” Haynes shares. “I played it on my new Signature Gibson Les Paul with P-90 pickups which offers a cleaner and brighter sound than most folks would expect from me, which worked perfectly for the rhythm accompaniment of this kind of soul ballad.”

This is the second song released from the album. Haynes previously shared the track “These Changes,” which features his Allman Brothers bandmate Derek Trucks, who co-wrote the tune with Haynes.

In addition to the new takes on Million Voices Whisper tunes, The Whisper Sessions includes a new version of the Allman Brothers Band classic “Melissa,” featuring Trucks.

The Whisper Sessions is available for preorder now.

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Actor Paul Walter Hauser’s surprising connection to Bruce Springsteen

Actor Paul Walter Hauser’s surprising connection to Bruce Springsteen
Actor Paul Walter Hauser’s surprising connection to Bruce Springsteen
Bruce Springsteen on the set of ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere’/Bobby Bank/GC Images

Actor Paul Walter Hauser has a role in the upcoming Bruce Springsteen movie Deliver Me From Nowhere, and it turns out he also has a surprising connection to the New Jersey rocker.

Hauser plays Springsteen’s guitar tech Mike Batlan, who helped engineer 1982’s Nebraska. While appearing on The Rich Eisen Show, Hauser said he once lived in a home previously owned by Springsteen.

“What’s crazy is I lived in his old house without knowing it,” Hauser said. “I lived there for six months.”

He said that after living there a week, his brother-in-law informed him that The Boss had owned the place for about 25 years.

Asked whether Springsteen left anything behind, Hauser suggested it’s possible some ghosts, sharing, “The speaker system in the home randomly played ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ and none of us had it on our Spotify or Apple Music or anything.”

Hauser said he has happy memories of the house, because he and his wife conceived their second child there.

“So when I met Bruce, I said, ‘I used to live in your old house.’ He goes, ‘I heard,'” Hauser said. “And I was like, ‘I conceived a child in your old bedroom.’ He goes, ‘So did I.'”

Hauser added, “And we hugged it out. It was insane. It was the funniest, like, first conversation to have with an icon.”

Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere, starring Jeremy Allen White as The Boss hits theaters Oct. 24.

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Chuck Mangione, ‘Feels So Good’ musician and bandleader, dead at 84

Chuck Mangione, ‘Feels So Good’ musician and bandleader, dead at 84
Chuck Mangione, ‘Feels So Good’ musician and bandleader, dead at 84
Bettmann Archive via Getty Images.

Chuck Mangione, the Grammy-winning jazz bandleader and musician who scored an unlikely top-five hit in 1978 with the jazz instrumental “Feels So Good,” has died at age 84, according to a note on his official website.

Born in Rochester, New York, on Nov. 29, 1940, Mangione early on performed and recorded as the Mangione Brothers with his brother, keyboardist Gaspare “Gap” Mangione. After graduating from the prestigious Eastman School of Music in his hometown, he played trumpet with famed bandleader Art Blakey‘s Jazz Messengers, as well as with various other ensembles, including recording the album Friends & Love…A Chuck Mangione Concert with the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra in 1970.

Mangione’s notoriety grew with subsequent recordings of his compositions, including the 1975 RIAA-certified Gold album Chase the Clouds Away, the title track from which was used in coverage of the 1976 Summer Olympics, and the Grammy-winning Bellavia in 1977.

But it was Mangione’s 1977 album Feels So Good and its pop radio title track hit that made him a household name. Featuring Mangione playing the flugelhorn and backed by his longtime quartet of guitarist Grant Geissman, bassist Charles Meeks, multi-instrumentalist Chris Vadala and James Bradley Jr. on percussion, the single reached #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, while the album peaked in the #2 position on the all-genre Billboard 200 albums chart – second only to the soundtrack to Saturday Night Fever by the Bee GeesFeels So Good ultimately was RIAA-certified double-Platinum for sales of more than 2 million units.

Mangione’s follow-up albums included the 1978 Gold-selling soundtrack to the Anthony Quinn film Children of Sanchez, the title track from which earned Mangione his second of two career Grammy Awards. His 1979 album Fun and Games, which also was certified Gold, featured the single “Give It All You Got,” which was used in ABC’s coverage of the 1980 Winter Olympics and scored two Grammy nominations; Mangione earned 13 lifetime Grammy nods, including his two wins.

Mangione recorded some 30 albums during his career, the last of which was the 2000 release Everything for Love. His general popularity waned following his 1970s heyday but he remained a pop culture touchstone well into the 2000s, sending up his image with a recurring voice role in the animated TV comedy King of the Hill, playing an exaggerated version of himself as he appeared on the cover of the Feels So Good album.

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Paul McCartney adds San Antonio date to Got Back tour

Paul McCartney adds San Antonio date to Got Back tour
Paul McCartney adds San Antonio date to Got Back tour
Photo: © 2024 MPL Communications Ltd / Photographer: MJ Kim)

Paul McCartney has added another city to the upcoming North American leg of his Got Back tour.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Famer is now set to play the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, on Oct. 25.

A ticket pre-sale starts on July 29 at 10 a.m. local time, although fans will need to pre-register for access. Tickets go on sale to the public Aug. 1.

McCartney will now be headlining 20 dates on this leg of the Got Back tour, which is his first North American tour since 2022. The trek kicks off Sept. 29 in Palm Desert, California, and wraps with a two-night stand in Chicago, Nov. 24 and 25.

A complete list of dates can be found at PaulMcCartney.com.

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On This Day, July 24, 2022: Joni Mitchell surprises with performance at Newport Folk Festival A

On This Day, July 24, 2022: Joni Mitchell surprises with performance at Newport Folk Festival A
On This Day, July 24, 2022: Joni Mitchell surprises with performance at Newport Folk Festival A

On This Day, July 24, 2022 …

Joni Mitchell was the surprise musical performer at the Newport Folk Festival, joining Brandi Carlile for a special set that featured the legendary musician performing with a variety of guests.

The so-called Joni Jam was Joni’s first public performance since surviving a brain aneurysm in 2015.

During the set, a seated Joni was joined by artists like Wynonna Judd, Marcus Mumford and DawesTaylor Goldsmith, performing 13 songs, including some of her classic tunes like “Both Sides Now,” “A Case of You” and “Big Yellow Taxi.”

An album from the performance, Joni Mitchell at Newport, was released in July 2023.

The appearance turned out to be the catalyst for more Joni Jams. She held one in June 2023 at the Gorge Amphitheatre in George, Washington, and then headlined two similar concerts at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles in October 2024.

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Documentary about the making of Tom Petty’s ‘Wildflowers’ coming to Blu-ray

Documentary about the making of Tom Petty’s ‘Wildflowers’ coming to Blu-ray
Documentary about the making of Tom Petty’s ‘Wildflowers’ coming to Blu-ray
Warner Bros.

The 2021 documentary about the making of Tom Petty’s second solo album, Wildflowers, is getting its first-ever physical release.

Tom Petty, Somewhere You Feel Free: The Making of Wildflowers, directed by Mary Wharton, will be released on Blu-ray Sept. 12. It features 30 minutes of extra material made up of outtakes and music videos.

Originally released on YouTube, the film follows Petty as he works on Wildflowers with producer Rick Rubin. It features archival footage of the pair in the studio, which was unearthed following Petty’s death in 2017.

The making of Wildflowers will also be chronicled in a new book being released in December. Also titled Wildflowers, the limited-edition book will feature rare photography, handwritten lyrics and personal stories from Petty, the Heartbreakers and his musical collaborators.

It is available for preorder now.

Released in November 1994, Wildflowers was the first of three albums produced by Rubin. Although credited to just Petty, Heartbreakers members Mike Campbell, Benmont Tench and Howie Epstein played on the record, which peaked at #8 on the Billboard 200. It featured the singles “You Don’t Know How It Feels,” “You Wreck Me” and the title track.

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