Paul Simon (and Garfunkel)

sus

Moderator
Graceland I think is the best thing Simon ever did in his career, with or without Garfunkel.
 

sus

Moderator
"Cecilia" does indeed teeter on that edge. Same with "El Condor Pasa"

I think "Song for the Asking" is really lovely though, always underrated that one.

The "Bookends" theme is lovely. When they write really short, humble touched songs like that they're lovely.

Maybe I listened to "Boxer"/"Sounds of Silence" too much as a kid but they feel like they're trying too hard to me now, straining toward epic drama or profundity in a way that their little simple songs about being old and sitting on park benches aren't
 

sus

Moderator
I think the recent "Seven Psalms" release, the 30-minute long religious piece he put out in his old age, is the best thing he's done since the 90s I reckon:



There was a nice interview with Simon where he talks about how he was gonna quit music, and Chuck Close the painter told him, no, you've got to stick it out, the Old Period is very important, it's a very unique time, the last years in an artist's life. I think we did a thread on it once actually
 

0bleak

Well-known member
But basically if you were roughly our generation then your parents had some Simon and Garfunkel albums. Bridge Over Troubled Water sold more than virtually anything right, probably more than Rumours which is the other one our parents had (actually not mine but whatever)

Rumours sold way more. and FM was still way more huge in the 80s (over here at least).
Simon, and even more so for Garfunkel - they barely existed in people's minds by the 80s, and I barely even knew about them, and besides You Can Call Me Al which I hated - Graceland was more of an "adult contemporary"/NPR listener thing.
 

jenks

thread death
Glad to see some love being shown for Paul Simon. I reckon the albums from Parsley through Bookends and Bridge and then into those early solo albums - PS, There Goes, Crazy and ending with Hearts and Bones is as good a run as many of his more esteemed peers.
I think Still Crazy might his most complete work - a sweet spot of mature lyrics with clever and subtle compositions.
I like the way he didn’t stand still, is willing to collaborate and understands that there’s music outside the US - we might make jokes about pan pipes now but El Condor Paso was new to American ears once.
The work with the Muscle Shoals on There Goes is worth replaying - some lovely moments.
What I suppose I’m saying in a rambling first cup of coffee way is that he’s a lot more than Graceland
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
"Cecilia" does indeed teeter on that edge. Same with "El Condor Pasa"

I think "Song for the Asking" is really lovely though, always underrated that one.

The "Bookends" theme is lovely. When they write really short, humble touched songs like that they're lovely.

Maybe I listened to "Boxer"/"Sounds of Silence" too much as a kid but they feel like they're trying too hard to me now, straining toward epic drama or profundity in a way that their little simple songs about being old and sitting on park benches aren't

Yeah I hear that with The Boxer for sure, those massive echoes.
 

luka

Well-known member
i'll give the paul simon solo ones jenks mentions a cursory listen to see if im missing out but i know simon and garfunksel are not for me.
 

luka

Well-known member
or maybe those albums are unlike all the other albums and i like those albums not the ones that dont sound like those albums
 
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