Celebrating a year of friendship with a Billy Squier playlist


Friendship, it is a remarkable thing. Ask yourself: Where would you be without โ€œa little help from your friends,โ€ as Ringo Starr sang?

Throughout U.S. history, there have been certain friendships that stood above the fray. Take, for example, Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, or the tight bond between Founding Fathers Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.

In contemporary times, there are famous bro-bonds between Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, or Toby Maguire and Leonardo DiCaprio. There are also many famous female friendships, such as Kate Hudson and Liv Tyler, and Nicole Kidman and Naomi Watts.

Then there is the unlikely affinity shared between Snoop Dogg and Martha Stewart.

But one friendship stands above the rest as the greatest friendship in American history, and that would be the bond shared between rocker Billy Squier and me.

So maybe Iโ€™ve never actually spoken in person to my buddy Billy, and maybe we donโ€™t have each otherโ€™s numbers, and weโ€™re not connected on social media, and weโ€™ve never actually met.

But true friendships transcend these pedestrian forms of communication, which is the case with Billy Squier and me.

You see, roughly a year ago, I wrote a column for Manchester Ink Link about my deep admiration for my friendโ€™s music while I was trying to find a vinyl copy of his monster 1981 album โ€œDonโ€™t Say Noโ€ in a used record store. I also touched on how unhinged homophobia surrounding an ill-advised video for โ€œRock Me Toniteโ€ torpedoed his music career in a matter of months.

My editor then forwarded the column to my friend Billy Squierโ€™s publicity people, who sent it to the man himself. And, as friends are wont to do, Billy responded with a gift for me. He mailed me a signed pictureโ€”now framed and displayed proudly in a Man Caveโ€”as well as a vinyl copy of โ€œDonโ€™t Say No.โ€

That, my friends, is friendship.


So to celebrate our first year of friendship, Iโ€™m composing a Billy Squier playlist that circumvents some of his overplayed radio tunes. Everyone knows โ€œThe Stroke.โ€ I get it. It was featured in โ€œBilly Madisonโ€ and the lyrical connotations are fun to giggle at, but itโ€™s notโ€”in my humble opinionโ€”one of my friendโ€™s better songs. Same goes for โ€œEverybody Wants Youโ€ and โ€œLonely Is the Night,โ€ both of which also receive generous amounts of airplay on classic rock stations.

So here is my playlist for those of you who might also like to celebrate my friendship with Billy Squier.

โ€œMy Kinda Loverโ€ (โ€œDonโ€™t Say No,โ€ 1981): I know, this is one of the songs that is still overplayed on the classic rock radio, but deservedly so, in this case. The song opens with a two-chord verse with only an electric guitar and Billyโ€™s smooth vocals, which gives way to a powerhouse chorus then a popping bridge. Musically, itโ€™s one of Billyโ€™s better tunes.

โ€œRock Me Toniteโ€ (โ€œSigns of Life,โ€ 1984): As aforementioned, the music video for this song crushed Billyโ€™s career because a bunch of his homophobic male fans feared pastel colors and crawling on floors, subsequently jumping ship on him. But the song itself is solid, start to finish. Find me a song that uses finger-snapping to such a melodic effect.

โ€œI Need Youโ€ (โ€œDonโ€™t Say No,โ€ 1981): This is a bit of a sleeper on the second side of Billyโ€™s breakthrough album, but itโ€™s also one of the best of the bunch. It has a solid rock nโ€™ roll riff and another exceptional bridge, and lyrically, it is entirely relatable. Who hasnโ€™t been so smitten with a person that the simple thought of them lifts them up when their โ€œamps they blowโ€? I didnโ€™t think so.

โ€œSheโ€™s a Runnerโ€ (โ€œEmotions in Motion,โ€ 1982): My top-two songs are from Billyโ€™s follow-up album to โ€œDonโ€™t Say Noโ€. While it didnโ€™t produce as many charted hits as the former, itโ€™s a dynamic album with some low-key gems, such as โ€œSheโ€™s a Runnerโ€.ย  Again, itโ€™s just a good rock nโ€™ roll song, and it speaks to anyone who has ever been blown off by someone elseโ€”meaning just about everyone.

โ€œLearn How to Liveโ€ (โ€œEmotions in Motion,โ€ 1984): This might be my favorite song by my good friend. It contains all of the essential Billy Squier signaturesโ€”a soft acoustic introduction with an electric overlay, a simple-but-solid riff and a banging bridge. Lyrically, maybe itโ€™s not Descartes, but it does have something to say, and some wisdom to share. I imagine if Billy and I were to go camping, heโ€™d play a softer acoustic version of this song by the campfire, and when he finished, Iโ€™d nod my head and say, โ€œWell done, my friend. Well done.โ€


 


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