Shameless (song)

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"Shameless"
Single by Billy Joel
from the album Storm Front
Released 1989
Format 7" single
Genre Rock
Length 4:26
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Billy Joel
Producer(s) Mick Jones
Billy Joel singles chronology

"And So It Goes"
(1990)
"Shameless"
(1991)
"All Shook Up"
(1992)
"Shameless"
Single by Garth Brooks
from the album Ropin' the Wind
B-side "The Dance"/"Rodeo"/"The Thunder Rolls"
Released October 21, 1991
Format CD single, 7" 45 RPM
Genre Country, country rock
Length 4:20
Label Liberty
Writer(s) Billy Joel
Producer(s) Allen Reynolds
Garth Brooks singles chronology

"Rodeo"
(1991)
"Shameless"
(1991)
"What She's Doing Now"
(1991)

"Shameless" is a song written by American singer Billy Joel and recorded on his 1989 album Storm Front. His version was a #40 single on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks charts. Two years later, the song was covered by country music artist Garth Brooks on his third studio album, 1991's Ropin' the Wind. Brooks' rendering of the song was his seventh Number One hit on the Billboard country charts in late 1991. It also reached #71 on the UK Singles Chart.

Background and production

Garth Brooks version

The song features harmony vocals by Trisha Yearwood. Garth provided the following background information on the song in the CD booklet liner notes from The Hits:

"Shameless" was the longest shot we took with a song. I was talked into becoming a member of a CD club... you know, the 40,000 CD's for a penny deal. With those clubs they write you with the selection of the month. If you don't write back and cancel, then they send it to you and charge you for it. I was on the road for six months with no one to check the mail and came home to find six compact discs in my mailbox. Storm Front by Billy Joel was one of them. I hadn't listened to Billy Joel since the late seventies, probably since Glass Houses. I fell in love with the album and fell back in love with Billy Joel's music. One of his songs really captured me, a song called "Shameless." I kept watching it, and when he did not release it as a single, we contacted his people in the hopes that we could cut it. His people sent us a letter acknowledging that he knew who I was and was very honored that I was cutting it. That was quite a compliment for me then, as it is now. My hope is that Billy, as writer, hears this cut and says, "Yeah, man, the guy's got balls."[1]

Garth Brooks performed "Shameless" with Billy Joel during Joel's Last Play at Shea concerts in 2008, and after Brooks performed it in his Central Park concert in 1999, Joel came out on stage and they sang a duet of "New York State of Mind." In June 2010, Joel and Brooks performed the song together again when Brooks was inducted to the Songwriters Hall of Fame by Joel.

Reception

Garth Brooks version

Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic described Brooks' rendering of the song favorably in his review of the album, saying that Brooks "made his '70s rock influences more explicit" by "transform[ing] the song from a rock power ballad into contemporary country."[2]

Chart positions

Billy Joel version

Chart (1989) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks 40

Garth Brooks version

Chart (1991) Peak
position
Canada Adult Contemporary Tracks (RPM)[ 1] 23
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[ 1] 1
Dutch Singles Chart[3] 43
UK Singles Chart[4] 71
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[ 1] 1

Year-end charts

Chart (1991) Position
Canada Country Tracks (RPM)[5] 38
Preceded by
"Someday" by Alan Jackson
Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks number-one single
November 16–23, 1991
Succeeded by
"Forever Together" by Randy Travis
Preceded by
"Anymore" by Travis Tritt
RPM Country Tracks number-one single
November 30-December 7, 1991

References

  1. Garth Brooks - The Hits: transcription from the CD booklet (bar code 7-2438-29689-2-4)
  2. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "Ropin' the Wind review". Allmusic. Retrieved 2008-10-29. 
  3. http://www.swisscharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=Garth+Brooks&titel=Shameless&cat=s
  4. http://www.officialcharts.com/artist/_/garth%20brooks/
  5. "RPM Top 100 Country Tracks of 1991". RPM. December 21, 1991. Retrieved August 16, 2013. 

External links

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