×
Singer Billy Joel gets off a motorcycle after riding from the Rescue 1 firehouse on West 43rd Street downtown to Ground Zero to honor the victims of the 9/11 attacks, outside the World Trade Center site in New York September 11, 2013. Bagpipes, bells and a reading of the names of the nearly 3,000 people killed when hijacked jetliners crashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field marked the 12th anniversary of the September 11 attacks in 2001. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS ANNIVERSARY ENTERTAINMENT)

Billy Joel Remembers 9/11

Sep 11, 2022 | 12:05 AM

Today marks the 21st anniversary of the horrendous 9/11 attacks. Lifelong New Yorker Billy Joel reflected back on 9/11 and told pulseofradio.com  that although the events of the day will obviously never be forgiven or forgotten, New York’s strength and resilience should never be in  doubt: We’ll never forget. Nah, I don’t think it’ll be forgotten, but I think we’ve recovered a good deal. I know once they nailed (Osama) Bin Laden — that’s another thing that put it behind us. I don’t know, this city has great resolution. There’s a lot of resolve, there’s a lot of character here. You’re not  gonna keep this place down.”

Billy, who performed at both the September 21st America: A Tribute To Heroes telethon and the October 20th, 2001 Concert For New York City, explained that ego  and career played literally no role in saluting the casualties of 9/11: “I felt kind of irrelevant, to tell you the truth. I’m glad they raised money and I’m glad I could do something. It wasn’t nearly enough. I dunno, something like this makes you feel very inadequate, really. That was a feeling I was getting from people — we were meeting and greeting backstage. . . kinda chagrined shrugs, like, ‘Well, at least we can try to do something.'”

Billy Joel recalled his first visit to Ground Zero after his appearance on the September 21st telethon: “I actually got a lot more out of going down to ground zero. And  right after I did my song, I jumped into a squad car with a cop, and we drove downtown, and they took me through the whole site. And I stayed there for about four hours, just talking to cops and firemen. That was absolutely mind-boggling. I felt like I was at least in contact with the people who were right there. It felt. . . As bizarre as the, the scene was, and as horrendous as the carnage was, I felt like I was having more first-hand contact with those people than going on television.”

Billy recalls both the devastation and bravery he saw in the rescue workers: “They were actually surprised I didn’t have a camera man, or a politician, or a photographer, or an entourage with me. They actually appreciated I was just there as a private citizen, trying to boost their morale and thank them. They needed to talk and tell  people their stories, because there are so many stories they have to tell about comrades that were lost, and the horrors that they’ve seen. 

Billy recalled that during his visit, he could see the toll the rescue work was taking on the people he was speaking with: “Are you familiar with a, a painting that was done in World War II called ‘The Thousand Yard Stare’? Well, I saw a lot of that look when I was down there, and these guys, they’re, they’re very determined. They’re very  resolute, but they’re also somewhat shell-shocked. And a lot of the guys have that ‘Thousand Yard Stare’ look.”

Comments

Leave a Reply