You're My Home

"You're My Home"
Single by Billy Joel
from the album Piano Man
A-side "Piano Man"
Released 1973
Format 45 rpm single
Recorded September 1973, Los Angeles
Genre Rock and roll
Length 3:14
Songwriter(s) Billy Joel
Producer(s) Michael Stewart
Billy Joel singles chronology
"You're My Home"
(1973)
"Worse Comes to Worst"
(1974)

"Piano Man/You're My Home"
(1973)
"Worse Comes to Worst"
(1974)
Piano Man track listing
"Ain't No Crime"
(3)
"You're My Home"
(4)
"The Ballad of Billy the Kid"
(5)

"You're My Home" is a single by Billy Joel. It was originally on Billy Joel's 1973 album Piano Man, and also appears on Songs in the Attic (1981), The Ultimate Collection (2000), The Essential Billy Joel (2001) and 12 Gardens Live (2006). The song appears as a B-side on "Piano Man" and "All My Life" singles. The song was also covered by Helen Reddy on her album Love Song for Jeffrey,[1] which was released as the flipside of her "Keep On Singing" single. It was also recorded by Sami Jo Cole on her album Sami Jo produced by Jimmy Bowen.

The song was written for Joel's first wife (and business manager) Elizabeth Weber because he could not afford to buy her anything while in California.[2] As Joel says in the liner notes of Songs in the Attic, "Corny but true; I was broke at the time ('73) so I wrote this for my wife as a Valentine's Day gift".[3][4]

The bridge makes references to Pennsylvania Turnpike, the early morning dew of Indiana and the hills of California.[5]

The original version is accompanied by a finger-picked acoustic guitar as well as a pedal steel guitar.[1] The latter introduces a country music element to the song.[1] The live version on Songs in the Attic omits the pedal steel guitar, but it is included on the live version from the "All My Life" single.[1]

The version from Songs in the Attic was released as a single in Australia and as a promotional-only release in UK.

Author Ken Bielen describes "You're My Home" as being from the Jim Croce school of singer-songwriting.[1] Allmusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine describes it as the one introspective song on the Piano Man album.[4] Erlewine does state that the line "instant pleasuredome" indicates that Joel "doesn't have an ear for words."[4]

The song was used to wake up astronauts aboard space shuttle mission STS-132 in May 2010. The song was selected for astronaut Kenneth Ham.[6]

Helen Reddy's rendition incorporates an orchestral arrangement, in addition to a finger-picked acoustic guitar.[1] Joel was critical of Reddy's version.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Bielen, K. (2011). The Words and Music of Billy Joel. ABC-CLIO. pp. 24–25, 124. ISBN 9780313380167.
  2. Bordowitz, H. (2006). Billy Joel: The Life & Times of an Angry Young Man. Random House. p. 75. ISBN 9780823082483.
  3. Joel, Billy (1981). Songs in the Attic (LP). Billy Joel. New York: Columbia Records. TC 37461.
  4. 1 2 3 Erlewine, S.T. "Piano Man". Allmusic. Retrieved 2012-07-18.
  5. "You're My Home | Billy Joel Official Site". Billyjoel.com. Retrieved 2016-10-08.
  6. "STS-132 wakeup calls". NASA.
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