I Want You So Hard

Hole In The World

John DeBoer

Nov. 8th, 2013

Jackson Brown The Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 1974

New York 1974

Take it easy

Hotel California (w/ Glenn Frey)


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Eagles

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Echo Chamber

Billy Joel Shuffles Onstage in Florida, Sings Two Hits, Keeps It in the Family

Billy Joel reemerges unannounced on a Florida stage, following a period of absence linked to a brain disorder diagnosis. In an unexpected yet low-key moment, he performs just two songs, opting for familiarity—likely “Piano Man” and “You May Be Right”—flanked by members of his family rather than long-time bandmates.

Video footage also shows a brief stumble onstage, an incident noted without drama but inevitably replayed across screens. The appearance marks Joel’s first public performance since reports of his health surfaced.


Source: Music Industry News – Published on January 4, 2026

Billy Joel Joins Florida Cover Band, Skips Spotlight in Low-Key Two-Song Return

Emerging unexpectedly from the quietude following his 2025 diagnosis with a brain disorder, Billy Joel resurfaces onstage in a Florida village, where—rather than take center spotlight—he sidles up with a local cover band to deliver a brief, two-song set. The anniversary event serves up a modest backdrop for a decidedly unceremonious return.

Far from a grand reentrance, the outing feels more akin to an impromptu nod to routine than a career milestone, a casual drop-in rather than a full-throated comeback.


Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on January 3, 2026

Channeling turmoil into melody, Billy Joel recounts two suicide attempts following an entanglement with his best friend’s wife—a storyline that skews far closer to Greek tragedy than piano man nostalgia.

Billy Joel confesses a harrowing chapter in his HBO documentary And So It Goes, revealing he attempted suicide twice in the aftermath of an affair with Elizabeth Weber—his best friend Jon Small’s wife. In the early '70s, while playing in the heavy rock outfit Attila alongside Small, Joel falls into a spiral of guilt and heartbreak.

Sleeping in laundromats and medicated by despair, he downs an entire bottle of sleeping pills. Days in a coma follow. The second attempt involves Lemon Pledge and lands him back in the hospital—this time rushed by the very man he betrayed.

Small, though betrayed, chooses forgiveness, attributing Joel’s spiral to how much it pained him to inflict that hurt. Joel later checks into an observation ward and starts channeling his misery into music, recalibrating his trajectory from collapse to catharsis.

Premiered at Tribeca, the film lands as Joel copes with health struggles, including a recent diagnosis of normal pressure hydrocephalus. His daughter Alexa Ray confirms he’s fully focused on recovering, while Joel insists, “I’m not dying.”


Source: News | NME – Published on June 9, 2025

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