The Long Island Music & Entertainment Hall of Fame (LIMEHOF) has announced a first ever “Billy Joel Symposium”, inviting fans, scholars, critics, musicians, and students to submit individual papers on the Piano Man himself.
The Symposium will be held June 6 and 7 at LIMEHOF in Stony Brook. The deadline for submissions is January 15, 2026.

The two-day conference will be devoted to the music, lyrics, themes, and cultural impact of music legend and LIMEHOF inductee Billy Joel. As one of America’s most influential songwriters and performers (as well as being one of Long Island’s own), Joel’s body of work offers a unique lens through which to explore popular music, regional identity, and American culture. This symposium will gather a wide range of experts and scholars who will engage in a critical analysis of Joel’s artistry, life, and legacy.
“Billy Joel’s body of work functions as a mirror of contemporary America, reflecting social change, personal experience, and collective memory, said Tom Needham, LIMEHOF Vice Chairman and Billy Joel Symposium Executive Director. “We welcome research that considers his recordings, performances, and lyrics as vital cultural texts, ripe for rigorous analysis and critical engagement.”
LIMEHOF is looking for submissions on topics including, but not limited to the following:
- Lyrics & Narratives: Storytelling, character studies, social commentary
- Music & Style: Harmonic language, piano-centered composition, genre fusion (e.g., rock, pop, jazz, classical)
- Place & Identity: Suburban Long Island and New York as cultural landscapes
- History & Memory: Nostalgia, generational commentary (e.g., “Allentown,” “We Didn’t Start the Fire”)
- Performance & Persona: Joel’s stage presence, Madison Square Garden residency, audience relationships
- Comparative Perspectives: Joel alongside Elton John, Dylan, Springsteen, McCartney
- Reception & Criticism: Popular acclaim vs. scholarly neglect, canonization in American song
- Cultural Impact: Joel in film, television, and cultural memory
- Biographical & Historical Contexts: intersections of Joel’s personal story with larger cultural and political shifts
- Abstract: Between 250 and 300 words
- Short Bio: 100 words (include name, affiliation, contact information)
- Format: Single PDF or Word document with abstract and bio together
- Final Presentations: A Q&A session to last 20 minutes and 10 minutes
The Symposium Committee will review all proposals. Accepted papers may be grouped by theme into 90-minute panels. Presenters will be notified of their panel assignment when acceptances are sent. Selected papers may be considered for inclusion in an edited collection or digital proceedings published by LIMEHOF.
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