No lasers, fireworks or fancy synthesizers. Just a bust of Beethoven and a piano--a real piano.
"The problem with a synthesizer is you can't stand on it," a grinning Billy Joel proclaimed from atop his Baldwin grand Wednesday night.
Billy Joel
At the Providence Civil Center
Today and tomorrow, at 7:30 p.m.
Perhaps Beethoven would have cringed at such impetuous behavior, but for Joel--who has been climbing pianos for almost two decades--it was his own way of harkening back to tradition, something he did plenty of during his first of three shows at the Providence Civic Center Wednesday night.
At 41, Joel has lost just a little of the spark that has ignited his constantly sold-out concerts in the past. He doesn't hop into audiences anymore, and he usually leaves his shoes on.
But for a guy who played his first concert when Richard Nixon was president, Joel still puts on an energetic performance. He belted out the rapidfire piano chords of "Angry Young Man" as quickly as he did 15 years ago, and did not one, but two flips off his piano during "Bigshot"--a perennial crowd pleaser.
"And I aint burnt out yet," Joel shouted. "We got a ways to go."
Since his last trip to New England--a set of dates in Worcester this December to open up the current tour--Joel has tightened the set a bit. It includes fewer slow songs, and is less top-heavy with new material.
Not to worry--the "revised" show still boasts plenty of recent hits, including "A Matter of Trust" and "Uptown Girl," as well as "We Didn't Start the Fire"--Joel's number one hit from the triple-platinum Storm Front.
But longtime fans will be happy to know that Joel built Wednesday's show around the old staples from the '70s and early '80s, like "Scenes from an Italian Restaurant" and "My Life." (Joel told the crowd he pulled that song "out of mothballs"--he hadn't played it for more than a decade).
"You May Be Right," "Still Rock'n'roll to Me" and "Only the Good Die Young" all made the encores.
Joel is also sporting a new band on this tour: only guitarist David Brown, drummer Liberty DeVito and sax player Mark Rivera remain from his old Long Island gang.
And at times, the seams showed through. There were a few noticeable miscues, and on songs like "Pressure," the keyboards and bass tended to drown out the vocals--something rare in a Joel performance.
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