Artist: Billy Joel · Album: The Stranger · Year: 1977 · Label: Columbia · Rank: 169 / 500

The Stranger is Billy Joel’s defining balance: sharp songwriting, character-driven storytelling, and melodies built to live in the public ear. It’s an album of people — not archetypes, but recognizable lives framed with empathy and theatrical timing.
Hits That Don’t Feel Disposable
“Movin’ Out,” “Just the Way You Are,” and “Only the Good Die Young” became radio staples because they’re structurally strong, not because they chase a trend. Joel writes in scenes and gestures, turning everyday tension into memorable lines. The production keeps things warm and direct.
The Mask and the Mirror
The album’s title suggests hidden selves, and that theme runs through the record: bravado covering insecurity, romance tangled with self-preservation. Joel isn’t only telling stories — he’s mapping emotional contradiction.
Legacy
The Stranger remains one of the great pop-rock albums of the ’70s, a record where craftsmanship meets personality without strain. It’s built to last because it understands people, not just hooks.