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Vegetable_Man View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Simon and Garfunkel
    Posted: August 14 2005 at 18:14
Who listens to them?  Paul Simon is an amazing songwriter and a great guitarist and vocalist, and Artie's got one of the best voices I've ever heard.  One of my favorite bands(or duos, more accurately).  Yes' cover of "America" is awesome, too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2005 at 20:22
I listen to them a bit. I prefer Paul Simon's solo work, though (Graceland is such an awesome album!)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 01:12
Good stuff!!!
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Warning: Listening to jazz excessively can cause a laxative effect.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 02:04

I grew up on the stuff!

Paul Simon also is a superb solo artist...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 02:46
Excellent duo, prefer them over any other sixties' act. Paul Simon also made great albums solo. Graceland is a clear five star pop/rock album.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 03:54
Good music. I just think that many of the younger listeners have only some of their hit collections, which come in five years cycles. Their studio albums are more better! I like "Parsey, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme".
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 04:16

The whole quintet of albums is good. Let's see if I still remember them... some mistakes possible.

Wednesday Morning 3 AM  (or something...), 1965: the folkiest and most acoustic.

Sounds of Silence 1967. Essential, many classic songs and touching lyrics, e.g.  I Am a Rock, Most Peculiar Man, Somewhere They Can't Find Me.

Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme 1968. Yeah, maybe the most enjoyable.

Bookends 1969. Essential with many classics, but not even 30 minutes long. Old Friends, America.

Bridge Over Troubled Water 1970. A strong album all over. El Condor Pasa, So Long Frank Lloyd Wright, The Boxer.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 15 2005 at 11:04

Originally posted by Matti Matti wrote:

Bookends 1969. Essential with many classics, but not even 30 minutes long. Old Friends, America.

Wasn't this a somekind of concept album about getting old? How hip!  Very good but somehow even depressing album.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 00:48
Originally posted by Eetu Pellonpää Eetu Pellonpää wrote:

Originally posted by Matti Matti wrote:

Bookends 1969. Essential with many classics, but not even 30 minutes long. Old Friends, America.

Wasn't this a somekind of concept album about getting old? How hip!  Very good but somehow even depressing album.

I never thought of a concept, but at least it has 'Voices of Old People' which Art recorded in a home for old people - they're just talking - followed by 'Old Friends'. And 'Punky's Dilemma' also fits to the theme. Yeah, I guess the whole album is conceptual.

(Was Paul Simon's Graceland also a concept album, anybody?)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 01:44

I listened to Paul Simon yesterday, for the first time in a while. I think he is very good! My favorite album is probably the "Tribe" one, I can't remember what it's called. Graceland is also dang good! I need to put Simon and Garfunkle on my IPOD!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 08:53
Originally posted by Matti Matti wrote:

Originally posted by Eetu Pellonpää Eetu Pellonpää wrote:

Originally posted by Matti Matti wrote:

Bookends 1969. Essential with many classics, but not even 30 minutes long. Old Friends, America.

Wasn't this a somekind of concept album about getting old? How hip!  Very good but somehow even depressing album.

I never thought of a concept, but at least it has 'Voices of Old People' which Art recorded in a home for old people - they're just talking - followed by 'Old Friends'. And 'Punky's Dilemma' also fits to the theme. Yeah, I guess the whole album is conceptual.

(Was Paul Simon's Graceland also a concept album, anybody?)

Interesting info, Matti & Eetu, I'll admit I'm one of those who knows Simon & Garfunkel compilations better than any album. The day I was born, my father bought a S&G compilation album (it was in Helsinki funnily enough) and the group's music has been with me forever ... yet it is two compilations (Greatest Hits and Definitive) and the live album that I know best ... what a combination, what a songwriter Paul Simon is.

As for Graceland, as far as I know it was not a concept album, although all the songs were recorded with South African musicians giving it a strong stylistic cohesion (I think a couple of them actually involved Simon writing English lyrics over an original composition by South African musicians ... I think Gumboots and Homeless fall under this category). Unfortunately even though Simon's wanted to spread the gospel of South African music, his actions were in defiance of anti-apartheid laws and this promised to give some trouble at one point. Thankfully it all worked out in the end and one of my favourite albums ever was recorded ...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 11:44

Recently re-discovered Graceland.

I also reckon "Bridge Over Troubled Water" is possibly the greatest vocal performance in the history of pop. Very hard song to sing.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 14:55

That was a nice coincidence, Trotsky!  It might seem that Finland is the promised land of Paul & Simons music. Actually "Bookends" didn't even hit charts here, as it was no.1 at U.S.A. and Britain...

Originally posted by Matti Matti wrote:

I guess the whole album is conceptual.

I think it was my mistake. I read what Jake Nyman wrote in "Happy Days 2" (about old records), and it was not intented as a concept album. But the themes of the songs and the music follow up each other very nicely, so it's easy to get such impression.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 16 2005 at 23:18
I play them now and then.
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