Posted on 03/01/2020 4:47:58 PM PST by Twotone
When you're weary
Feeling small
When tears are in your eyes
I will dry them all...
When you're weary of songs that feel small, it's nice to have a song that feels big - seems to be about something more than just boy-meets-girl, goes on twice as long as your run-of-the-mill pop record, has a sense of its own importance but not to the point of self-parody ("Bohemian Rhapsody"). For a long time "Bridge Over Troubled Water" fulfilled that role. In 1973, when Capital Radio became the first ever (legal) commercial music-format radio station in the United Kingdom, Richard Attenborough launched the station by welcoming listeners and then playing, as the very first record, Simon & Garfunkel. Until well into the Eighties, whenever Capital and many other stations polled listeners on their all-time Top 100, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" would invariably be voted Number One. It had a broad appeal. Back in the Sixties, Simon & Garfunkel were the rockers your parents liked. Not just put up with, but really liked: Nestling among the Ray Conniff LPs and Fiddler on the Roof cast album, you could usually find a Bookends or Sounds of Silence, and well played, too. I once made Paul Simon visibly bristle when I said airily that a lot of suburban couples with two on the aisle for Hello, Dolly! listened to their eight-tracks of Bridge Over Troubled Water while driving to the theatre. But he conceded the essential truth of the observation. The Bridge album became one of the biggest sellers of the rock era, and its title track hit Number One on the Billboard Hot 100 exactly fifty years ago - February 28th 1970. It marked the high point of the Simon & Garfunkel collaboration - and also the end.
(Excerpt) Read more at steynonline.com ...
Just drop off the key Lee, and get yourself free.
Unless it’s an Italian girl.
Then you have to change SS number and legal name and go into witness protection :)
The Boxer is one of the greatest songs ever written IMHO.
Lovely song and an amazing vocal by Garfunkle.
“The Boxer is one of the greatest songs ever written IMHO.”
—
I have a soft spot for some of their lesser known tunes, like At The Zoo and Fakin It.
Art singing Bridge solo at their NY Central Park concert is my favorite YouTube video. He’s such a much better singer than Simon.
and Patterns ...
I don’t care for them personally but they were extremely talented.
In 1970 I dated a little cutie whose favorite song was “Bridge”. I never heard her say why but I am sure she had a reason to like it. Something in her past.
“Kodachrome” by Simon is one swinging song.
That's what made their collaboration so great. Paul wrote 'em and Art sang 'em. And their voices did work well together.
The only living boy in New York
“I have a soft spot for some of their lesser known tunes, like At The Zoo and Fakin It.”
Likewise...So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright.
Kathy’s Song
April Come She Will
For Emily Whenever I May Find Her
They don’t write ‘em like that anymore.
My favorite short tune...”Old Friends” as I get older, it has more meaning to me now than before.
Yeah, that’s kinda obscure. I think it’s not well known because it’s not really radio friendly and not as catchy as something like 59th St Bridge Song.
yes - and “time it was and what a time it was”. Times of innocence, times of confidence...
Love Sunday mornings and asking Alexa to play Simon and Garfunkel! Their songs are timeless.
I tweeted to Steyn today that I heard the end of Feelin Groovy yesterday and recalled how cool that song was.
In 1980 or 81, I saw Simon and Garfunkel perform at the Pontiac Silverdome in Michigan.
No disrespect to S & G, but having just listened to Elvis’s rendition of the song, he knocked it out of the park.........
Elvis had a great voice. He considered Roy Orbison as the best of any.
BOTW was written about the impending separation of Paul Simon & his wife.
“Sail on silver girl, sail on by
Your time has come to shine
All your dreams are on their way”
BOTW is not Paul Simon’s best composition...but it is very good nonetheless.
“René and Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After the War” is HUGELY underrated.
Without a doubt, Paul Simon is truly one of the great pop songwriters of our time.
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