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Wikipedia

Paul Simon

Paul Frederic Simon (born October 13, 1941) is an American musician, singer, songwriter and actor whose career has spanned six decades.[1] He is one of the most acclaimed songwriters in popular music,[2][3] both as a solo artist and as half of folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel with Art Garfunkel.

Paul Simon
Simon performing at the 9:30 Club in 2011
Background information
Birth namePaul Frederic Simon
Born (1941-10-13) October 13, 1941 (age 81)
Newark, New Jersey, U.S.
OriginNew York City, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • actor
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Years active1956–present
Labels
Formerly ofSimon & Garfunkel
Spouse(s)
Peggy Harper
(m. 1969; div. 1975)
,
(m. 1983; div. 1984)
,
(m. 1992)
Websitepaulsimon.com

Simon was born in Newark, New Jersey, and grew up in the borough of Queens in New York City. He began performing with his schoolfriend Art Garfunkel in 1956 when they were still in their early teens. After limited success, the pair reunited after an electrified version of their song "The Sound of Silence" became a hit in 1966. Simon & Garfunkel recorded five albums together featuring songs mostly written by Simon, including the hits "Mrs. Robinson", "America", "Bridge over Troubled Water" and "The Boxer".[4]

After Simon & Garfunkel split in 1970, Simon recorded three acclaimed albums over the following five years,[5] all of which charted in the Top 5 on the Billboard 200. His 1972 self-titled album contained the hit songs "Mother and Child Reunion" and "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard". The 1975 album Still Crazy After All These Years, which featured guest vocals from Garfunkel, was his first number one solo album. It featured the number 1 hit single "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover", among other Top 40 songs such as "Still Crazy After All These Years", "Gone at Last" and "My Little Town".

Simon reunited with Garfunkel for a performance in New York Central Park in 1981, drawing half a million spectators, followed by a world tour with Garfunkel. After a career slump, Simon released Graceland in 1986, an album inspired by South African township music. It sold 14 million copies worldwide, and remains his most popular and acclaimed solo work.[6] A number of hit singles were released from the album, including "You Can Call Me Al", "The Boy in the Bubble" and "Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes". It won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1987.

Simon continued to tour throughout the 1990s. He wrote a Broadway musical, The Capeman, and recorded a companion album, Songs from The Capeman, which was released in 1997. His 2000 album You're the One was nominated again for Album of the Year honors. He followed that album with several years of touring, including another reunion tour with Garfunkel. He then released Surprise (2006), his last album of the decade. In 2016, he released Stranger to Stranger, which debuted at number 3 on the Billboard Album Chart and number 1 the UK Albums Chart. It marked his greatest commercial and critical success in thirty years. His most recent album is In the Blue Light (2018), which contains re-arrangements of lesser-known songs from his prior albums.

Simon has earned sixteen Grammy Awards for his solo and collaborative work, including three for Album of the Year (Bridge Over Troubled Water, Still Crazy After All These Years and Graceland), and a Lifetime Achievement Award.[7] He is a two-time inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: first in 1990 as a member of Simon & Garfunkel, and again in 2001 for his solo career.[8] In 2006 he was selected as one of the "100 People Who Shaped the World" by Time.[9] In 2011, Rolling Stone named Simon one of the 100 greatest guitarists,[10] and in 2015 he was ranked 8th in their list of the 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time.[11] Simon was the first recipient of the Library of Congress's Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2007.[12]

Early life

Simon was born on October 13, 1941, in Newark, New Jersey, to Hungarian-Jewish parents.[13][14][15][16] His father, Louis (1916–1995), was a college professor, double-bass player and dance bandleader who performed under the name Lee Sims. His mother, Belle (1910–2007), was an elementary-school teacher. In 1945, his family moved to the Kew Gardens Hills section of Flushing, Queens, in New York City.[17]

The musician Donald Fagen described Simon's childhood as that of "a certain kind of New York Jew, almost a stereotype really, to whom music and baseball are very important. I think it has to do with the parents. The parents are either immigrants or first-generation Americans who felt like outsiders, and assimilation was the key thought—they gravitated to black music and baseball looking for an alternative culture."[18] Simon, upon hearing Fagen's description, said it "isn't far from the truth".[18] Simon played baseball and stickball as a child. He described his father as funny and smart, but said he worked late and did not see his children much.[18]

Simon met Art Garfunkel when they were both 11. They performed in a production of Alice in Wonderland for their sixth-grade graduation, and began singing together when they were 13,[19] occasionally performing at school dances.

At the age of 12 or 13 Simon wrote his first song, "The Girl for Me", for him and Art Garfunkel. According to Simon, it became the "neighborhood hit". His father wrote the words and chords on paper for the boys to use. That paper became the first officially copyrighted Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel song, and is now in the Library of Congress. In 1957, in their mid-teens, they recorded the song "Hey, Schoolgirl" under the name "Tom & Jerry", a name that was given to them by their label Big Records. The single reached number 49 on the pop charts.

After graduating from Forest Hills High School, Simon majored in English at Queens College and graduated in 1963, while Garfunkel studied mathematics education at Columbia University in Manhattan.[20][18] Simon was a brother in the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity,[21] and went on to attend Brooklyn Law School for one semester in 1963.[22][23]

Career

 
Simon in 1966

Between 1957 and 1964, Simon wrote, recorded and released more than 30 songs. He occasionally reunited with Garfunkel as Tom & Jerry for some singles, including "Our Song" and "That's My Story". Most of the songs Simon recorded during that time were performed alone or with musicians other than Garfunkel. They were released on minor record labels including Amy, Big, Hunt, King, Tribute and Madison. He used several pseudonyms for these recordings, usually "Jerry Landis", but also "Paul Kane" and "True Taylor". By 1962, working as Jerry Landis, he was a frequent writer/producer for several Amy Records artists, overseeing material released by Dotty Daniels, The Vels and Ritchie Cordell.

Simon enjoyed moderate success with singles as part of the group Tico and the Triumphs, including "Motorcycle", which reached number 99 on the Billboard charts in 1962. Tico and the Triumphs released four 45s. Marty Cooper, known as Tico, sang lead on several of these releases, but "Motorcycle" featured Simon's vocal. Also in 1962, Simon reached number 97 on the pop charts as Jerry Landis, with the novelty song "The Lone Teen Ranger". Both chart singles were released on Amy Records.

1960s: Simon & Garfunkel

In early 1964, Simon and Garfunkel auditioned for Columbia Records, whose executive Clive Davis signed them to produce an album. Columbia decided that the two would be called Simon & Garfunkel instead of Tom & Jerry; according to Simon, this was the first time artists' surnames had been used in pop music without their first names.[24] Simon and Garfunkel's first LP, Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., was released on October 19, 1964. It consisted of 12 songs, five of which were written by Simon. The album initially flopped.[25]

 
Garfunkel, left, with Paul Simon, right, performing outside at a concert in Dublin as Simon & Garfunkel

After the album release, Simon moved to England[26] and performed in folk clubs. Simon enjoyed his time there. He said in 1970, "I had a lot of friends there and a girlfriend there. I could play music there. There was no place to play in New York City. They wouldn’t have me."[25] In England, he produced Jackson C. Frank's first and only album and co-wrote several songs with Bruce Woodley of the Australian pop group the Seekers, including "I Wish You Could Be Here", "Cloudy" and "Red Rubber Ball". Simon also contributed to the Seekers' catalog with "Someday One Day", which was released in March 1966, charting around the same time as Simon and Garfunkel's "Homeward Bound". The song was a Top 10[27] hit from their second UK album, Sounds of Silence, and later included on their third U.S. album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme.

Back on the American East Coast, radio stations began receiving requests for the Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. track "The Sound of Silence". Simon & Garfunkel's producer, Tom Wilson, overdubbed the track with electric guitar, bass guitar and drums. It was released as a single, eventually reaching number 1 on the US pop charts.[28] Wilson did not inform the duo of his plan, and Simon was "horrified" when he first heard it.[29] The success drew Simon back to the US to reunite with Garfunkel, and they recorded the albums Sounds of Silence (1966), Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme (1966) and Bookends (1968). Their final album, Bridge over Troubled Water (1970), became at that time the bestselling album of all time.[30]

Simon & Garfunkel also contributed to the soundtrack of the Mike Nichols film, The Graduate (1967), starring Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft. While writing "Mrs. Robinson", Simon toyed with the title "Mrs. Roosevelt". When Garfunkel reported this indecision over the song's name to the director, Nichols replied, "Don't be ridiculous! We're making a movie here! It's Mrs. Robinson!"[31]

Simon and Garfunkel's relationship became strained, and they split in 1970.[32] At the urging of his wife, Peggy Harper, Simon called Davis to confirm the duo's breakup.[33] For the next several years, they spoke only two or three times a year.[34]

1970–1976: Solo and Still Crazy After All These Years

In 1970, Simon taught songwriting at New York University. He said he had wanted to teach for a while, and hoped to help people avoid some of the mistakes he had made: "You can teach somebody about writing songs. You can't teach someone how to write a song, I don't think ... I'd go to a course if the Beatles would talk about how they made records because I'm sure I could learn something."[25]

Simon pursued solo projects, reuniting occasionally with Garfunkel for various projects. Actor Warren Beatty brought Simon into a solo performance at the Cleveland Arena in April 1972,[35] a benefit concert for the George McGovern 1972 presidential campaign. After that, Beatty obtained the duo's agreement to reunite in mid-June at Madison Square Garden, another political concert called Together for McGovern.[36] Garfunkel joined Simon again on the 1975 Top 10 single "My Little Town". Simon wrote it for Garfunkel, whose solo output Simon felt lacked "bite". The song was included on Simon's album Still Crazy After All These Years and Garfunkel's album Breakaway. Contrary to popular belief, the song is not autobiographical of Simon's early life in New York City.[37] Simon also provided guitar on Garfunkel's 1973 album Angel Clare, and added backing vocals to the song "Down in the Willow Garden".[38]

Simon's album Paul Simon was released in January 1972, preceded by his first experiment with world music, the Jamaican-inspired "Mother and Child Reunion". It reached both the American and British Top 5. The album received universal acclaim, with critics praising the variety of styles and the confessional lyrics, reaching number 4 in the U.S. and number 1 in the UK and Japan. It later spawned another Top 30 hit with "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard".

Simon's next project was the pop-folk album, There Goes Rhymin' Simon, released in May 1973. It contained some of his most popular and polished recordings. The lead single, "Kodachrome", was a number 2 hit in America. The follow-up, the gospel-flavored "Loves Me Like a Rock" was even bigger, topping the Cashbox charts. Other songs like the weary "American Tune", or the melancholic "Something So Right" (a tribute to Simon's first wife Peggy), became standards in the musician's catalog. Critical and commercial reception for this second album was even stronger than for his debut. The album reached number 1 on the Cashbox album charts. As a souvenir for the tour that came next, it was released as a live album, titled Live Rhymin' (1974). The album was moderately successful and displayed some changes in Simon's music style, adopting world and religious music.

Highly anticipated, Still Crazy After All These Years was his next album. Released in October 1975, and produced by Simon and Phil Ramone, it marked another departure. The mood of the album was darker, as he wrote and recorded it in the wake of his divorce. Preceded by the feel-good duet with Phoebe Snow, "Gone at Last" (a Top 25 hit) and the Simon & Garfunkel reunion track "My Little Town" (a number 9 on Billboard), the album was his only number 1 on the Billboard charts to date. The 18th Grammy Awards named it the Album of the Year, and Simon's performance the year's Best Male Pop Vocal. With Simon in the forefront of popular music, the third single from the album, "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" reached the top spot of the Billboard charts, his only single to reach number 1 on this list. Simon put together a benefit show at Madison Square Garden to raise money for the New York Public Library on May 3, 1976. Phoebe Snow, Jimmy Cliff and the Brecker Brothers also performed. The concert produced over $30,000 for the Library.

1977–1985: One-Trick Pony and Hearts and Bones

After three successful studio albums, Simon became less productive during the second half of the 1970s. He dabbled in various projects, including writing music for the film Shampoo, which became the music for the song "Silent Eyes" on the Still Crazy album, and acting (he was cast as Tony Lacey in Woody Allen's film Annie Hall). He achieved another hit in this decade, with the lead single of his 1977 compilation Greatest Hits, Etc., called "Slip Slidin' Away" (which reached number 5 in the United States).

In 1980, Simon released One-Trick Pony, his debut album with Warner Bros. Records and his first in almost five years. It was paired with the motion picture of the same name, which Simon wrote and starred in. Although it produced his last Top 10 hit with the upbeat "Late in the Evening" (also a number 1 hit on the Radio & Records American charts), the album did not sell well.

Simon & Garfunkel included eight songs from Simon's solo career on the set list for their September 19, 1981, concert in Central Park. Five of those were rearranged as duets. Simon performed the other three songs solo. The resulting live album, TV special and videocassette (later DVD) releases were all major hits.

Simon released Hearts and Bones in 1983, without Garfunkel. This was a polished and confessional album that was eventually viewed as one of his best works, but achieved the lowest sales of Simon's career.[39] Hearts and Bones included "The Late Great Johnny Ace", a song partly about Johnny Ace, an American R&B singer, and partly about slain Beatle John Lennon. In January 1985, Simon lent his talent to USA for Africa, and performed on the relief fundraising single "We Are the World".[40]

1986–1992: Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints

 
Miriam Makeba and Paul Simon (1986)

In 1986, Simon was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Music degree from Berklee College of Music, where he has served on the board of trustees.[41][42]

After Simon was given a bootlegged tape of mbaqanga, South African street music,[43] he decided to record an album of South African music. Simon traveled to Johannesburg where he recorded with African musicians in early 1986. Additional sessions were held in April in New York.[44] The sessions featured many South African acts, particularly Ladysmith Black Mambazo. Simon also collaborated with several American artists, singing a duet with Linda Ronstadt in "Under African Skies", and playing with Los Lobos in "All Around the World or The Myth of Fingerprints".[45] Before leaving for Johannesburg, Simon contributed to "We Are the World", a charity single benefiting African famine relief.[45]

Graceland became Simon's most successful studio album and his highest-charting album in over a decade. It is estimated to have sold more than 16 million copies worldwide.[46] Graceland won the 1987 Grammy for Album of the Year. In 2006, the album was added to the United States' National Recording Registry as "culturally, historically or aesthetically important".[47]

Following the success, Simon faced accusations that he had broken the cultural boycott imposed by the rest of the world against the apartheid regime in South Africa[48] by organizations such as Artists United Against Apartheid,[49] anti-apartheid musicians (including Billy Bragg, Paul Weller and Jerry Dammers),[50] as well as James Victor Gbeho (then Ghanaian Ambassador to the United Nations),[51] Simon denied that he had gone to South Africa to "take money out of the country", noting that he paid the black artists and split royalties with them, and was not paid to play to a white audience.[43] The United Nations Anti-Apartheid Committee supported Graceland, as it showcased black South African musicians and offered no support to the South African government, but the African National Congress protested it as a violation of the boycott.[49] The Congress voted to ban Simon from South Africa, and he was also added to the United Nations blacklist.[52] He was removed from the blacklist in January 1987.[53]

Dion's song "Written on the Subway Wall"/"Little Star" from Yo Frankie (1989), featuring Simon, peaked at number 97 in October 1990.[54][55]

After Graceland, Simon extended his roots with the Brazilian music-flavored The Rhythm of the Saints. Sessions for the album began in December 1989, and took place in Rio de Janeiro and New York. It featured guitarist J. J. Cale, as well as many Brazilian and African musicians. The tone of the album was more introspective and relatively low-key, compared to the mostly upbeat numbers of Graceland. Released in October 1990, the album received excellent critical reviews and achieved very respectable sales, peaking at number 4 in the U.S. and number 1 in the UK. The lead single, "The Obvious Child" (featuring the Grupo Cultural Olodum), became his last Top 20 hit in the UK and appeared near the bottom of the Billboard Hot 100. Although not as successful as Graceland, The Rhythm of the Saints received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year.

Simon's ex-wife Carrie Fisher said in her autobiography Wishful Drinking, that the song "She Moves On" is about her. It's one of several she claimed, followed by the line, "If you can get Paul Simon to write a song about you, do it. Because he is so brilliant at it."[56]

The success of both albums allowed Simon to stage another New York concert. On August 15, 1991, almost a decade after his concert with Garfunkel, Simon staged a second concert in Central Park with African and South American bands. The success of the concert surpassed all expectations, and reportedly over 750,000 people attended one of the largest concert audiences in history. He later remembered the concert as "the most memorable moment in my career." The success of the show led to both a live album and an Emmy-winning TV special. In the middle, Simon embarked on the successful Born at the Right Time Tour, and promoted the album with further singles, including "Proof" (accompanied with a humorous video that featured Chevy Chase and Steve Martin). On March 4, 1992, he appeared on his own episode of MTV Unplugged, offering renditions of many of his most famous compositions. Simon and Garfunkel were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990.[8]

1993–1998: Paul Simon 1964/1993 and The Capeman

After Unplugged, Simon's place in the forefront of popular music dropped notably. A Simon & Garfunkel reunion took place in September 1993, and in another attempt to capitalize on the occasion, Columbia released Paul Simon 1964/1993 in September. A three-disc compilation, it received a reduced version on the two-disc album The Paul Simon Anthology one month later. In 1995, he made news for appearing on The Oprah Winfrey Show, where he performed the song "Ten Years", which he composed specially for the tenth anniversary of the show. Also that year, he was featured on the Annie Lennox version of his 1973 song "Something So Right", which appeared briefly on the UK Top 50 once it was released as a single in November.[57]

Since the early stages of the 1990s, Simon was fully involved in The Capeman, a musical that eventually opened on January 29, 1998. Simon worked enthusiastically on the project for many years and described it as "a New York Puerto Rican story based on events that happened in 1959—events that I remembered."[58] The musical tells the story of real-life Puerto Rican youth Salvador Agron, who wore a cape while committing two murders in 1959 New York, and went on to become a writer in prison. Featuring Marc Anthony as the young Agron, and Rubén Blades as the older Agron, the play received terrible reviews and poor box office receipts.

Simon recorded an album of songs from the show, which was released in November 1997. It was received with very mixed reviews, though many critics praised the combination of doo-wop, rockabilly and Caribbean music that the album reflected. In commercial terms, Songs from The Capeman was a failure. Simon missed the Top 40 of the Billboard charts for the first time in his career. The cast album was never released on CD but eventually became available online.

1999–2007: You're the One and Surprise

After The Capeman, Simon's career was again in an unexpected crisis. However, entering the new millennium, he maintained a respectable reputation, offering critically acclaimed new material and receiving commercial attention. Simon embarked on a North American tour with Bob Dylan in 1999, with each alternating as the headline act with a "middle section" where they performed together, starting on the first of June and ending September 18. The collaboration was generally well-received, with just one critic, Seth Rogovoy from the Berkshire Eagle, questioning the collaboration.[59]

In an attempt to return successfully to the music market, Simon wrote and recorded a new album very quickly, with You're the One arriving in October 2000. The album consisted mostly of folk-pop writing combined with foreign musical sounds, particularly grooves from North Africa. While not reaching the commercial heights of previous albums, it managed to reach both the British and American Top 20. It received favorable reviews, and received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. He toured extensively for the album, and one performance in Paris was released to home video.

In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, Simon sang "Bridge Over Troubled Water" on America: A Tribute to Heroes, a multi-network broadcast to benefit the September 11 Telethon Fund and performed "The Boxer" at the opening of the first episode of Saturday Night Live after September 11. In 2002, he wrote and recorded "Father and Daughter", the theme song for the animated family film The Wild Thornberrys Movie. The track was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Song.

In 2003, Simon and Garfunkel reunited once again when they received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. This reunion led to a US tour—the acclaimed "Old Friends" concert series, followed by a 2004 international encore that culminated in a free concert at the Colosseum in Rome that drew 600,000 people.[60] In 2005, the pair sang "Mrs. Robinson" and "Homeward Bound", plus "Bridge Over Troubled Water" with Aaron Neville, in the benefit concert From the Big Apple to The Big Easy – The Concert for New Orleans (eventually released as a DVD) for Hurricane Katrina victims.

In 2004, Simon's studio albums were re-released both individually and together in a limited-edition nine-CD boxed set, Paul Simon: The Studio Recordings 1972–2000. At the time, Simon was already working on a new album with Brian Eno called Surprise, which was released in May 2006. Most of the album was inspired by the September 11 terrorist attacks, the Iraq invasion and the war that followed. In personal terms, Simon was also inspired by turning 60 in 2001, which he humorously referred to on "Old" from You're the One. Surprise was a commercial hit, reaching number 14 on the Billboard 200 and number 4 in the UK. Most critics also praised the album, and many of them called it a comeback. Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic wrote that "Simon doesn't achieve his comeback by reconnecting with the sound and spirit of his classic work; he has achieved it by being as restless and ambitious as he was at his popular and creative peak, which makes Surprise all the more remarkable." The album was supported with the successful Surprise Tour from May to November 2006.

In March 2004, Walter Yetnikoff published a book called Howling at the Moon, in which he criticized Simon personally and for his tenuous business partnership with Columbia Records in the past.[61] In 2007 Simon was the inaugural recipient of the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song, awarded by the Library of Congress, and later performed as part of a gala of his work.[62][63]

2008–2013: So Beautiful or So What and touring

 
Simon performing live in Mainz, Germany, July 25, 2008

After living in Montauk, New York, for many years, Simon relocated to New Canaan, Connecticut.[64]

Simon is one of a small number of performers who are named as the copyright owner on their recordings (most records have the recording company as the named owner of the recording). This noteworthy development was spearheaded by the Bee Gees after their successful $200 million lawsuit against RSO Records, which remains the largest successful lawsuit against a record company by an artist or group. All of Simon's solo recordings, including those originally issued by Columbia Records, are currently distributed by Sony Records' Legacy Recordings unit. His albums were issued by Warner Music Group until mid-2010. In mid-2010, Simon moved his catalog of solo work from Warner Bros. Records to Sony/Columbia Records where Simon & Garfunkel's catalog is.

In February 2009, Simon performed back-to-back shows in New York City at the Beacon Theatre, which had recently been renovated. Simon was reunited with Art Garfunkel at the first show as well as with the cast of The Capeman. Also playing in the band was Graceland bassist Bakithi Kumalo. In May 2009, Simon toured with Garfunkel in Australia, New Zealand and Japan. In October 2009, they appeared together at the 25th anniversary of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

In October 2009, Dion performed "The Wanderer" with Simon at the 25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Concert.[65]

In April 2010, Simon & Garfunkel performed again in New Orleans at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.[66]

Simon released a new song called "Getting Ready for Christmas Day" on November 10, 2010. It premiered on National Public Radio,[67] and was included on the album So Beautiful or So What. The song samples a 1941 sermon by the Rev. J. M. Gates, also entitled "Getting Ready for Christmas Day".[68] Simon performed the song live on The Colbert Report on December 16, 2010.[69] The first video featured J. M. Gates giving the sermon, and his church in 2010 with its display board showing many of Simon's lyrics. The second video illustrates the song with cartoon images.

In the premiere show of the final season of The Oprah Winfrey Show on September 10, 2010, Simon surprised Oprah and the audience with a song dedicated to her show lasting 25 years (an update of a song he did for her show's 10th anniversary).[70]

Simon's album So Beautiful or So What[71] was released on the Concord Music Group label on April 12, 2011.[72] The album received high marks from the artist: "It's the best work I've done in 20 years". It was reported that Simon attempted to have Bob Dylan featured on the album.

Rounding off his 2011 World Tour (which included the United States, the UK, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Germany), Simon appeared at Ramat Gan Stadium in Israel in July 2011, making his first concert appearance in Israel since 1983.[73] On the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks (September 11, 2011), Paul Simon performed "The Sound of Silence" at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, site of the World Trade Center.

 
Simon paying tribute to musicians Leonard Cohen and Chuck Berry, the recipients of the first annual PEN Awards for songwriting excellence, at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on February 26, 2012

On February 26, 2012, Simon paid tribute to fellow musicians Chuck Berry and Leonard Cohen, who were the recipients of the first annual PEN Awards for songwriting excellence at the JFK Presidential Library in Boston, Massachusetts.[74]

Simon released a 25th anniversary box set of Graceland on June 5, 2012. It included a remastered edition of the original album, the 2012 documentary film Under African Skies the original 1987 "African Concert" from Zimbabwe, an audio narrative The Story of Graceland told by Paul Simon, as well as other interviews and paraphernalia.[75] He played a few concerts in Europe with the original musicians to commemorate the anniversary.[76]

On December 19, 2012, Simon performed at the funeral of Victoria Leigh Soto, a teacher killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.[77]

On June 14, 2013, at Sting's Back to Bass Tour, Simon performed his song "The Boxer" and Sting's "Fields of Gold" with Sting.[78]

In September 2013, Simon delivered the Richard Ellmann Lecture in Modern Literature at Emory University.

2014–2021: Stranger to Stranger and In the Blue Light

In February 2014, Simon embarked on a joint concert tour titled On Stage Together with English musician Sting, playing 21 concerts in North America.[79] The tour continued in early 2015, with ten shows in Australia and New Zealand,[80][81] and 23 concerts in Europe,[82] ending on April 18, 2015.

Simon appeared during the premiere week of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on September 11, 2015. Simon, who performed "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard" with Colbert for his surprise appearance, had been promoted prior to the show as "Simon & Garfunkel Tribute Band Troubled Waters".[83] Simon's additional performance of "An American Tune" was posted as a bonus on the show's YouTube channel.

In 2015, Dion released the single "New York Is My Home" with Simon.[84]

Simon also wrote and performed the theme song for the comedian Louis C.K.'s show Horace and Pete, which debuted January 30, 2016. The song, which can be heard during the show's opening, intermission and closing credits, features only Simon's voice and an acoustic guitar. Simon made a cameo appearance onscreen in the tenth and final episode of the series.

On June 3, 2016, Simon released his thirteenth solo studio album, Stranger to Stranger via Concord Records.[85] He began writing new material shortly after releasing his twelfth studio album, So Beautiful or So What, in April 2011.

Simon collaborated with the Italian electronic dance music artist Clap! Clap! on three songs: "The Werewolf", "Street Angel" and "Wristband". Simon was introduced to him by his son, Adrian, who was a fan of his work. The two met up in July 2011 when Simon was touring behind So Beautiful or So What in Milan, Italy. He and Clap! Clap! worked together via email over the course of making the album. Simon also worked with longtime friend Roy Halee, who is listed as co-producer on the album. "I always liked working with him more than anyone else," Simon noted.[86] Following the release of the album, Simon noted that "showbiz doesn't hold any interest for me" and discussed future retirement, stating: "I am going to see what happens if I let go".[87][88]

Simon performed "Bridge over Troubled Water" at the 2016 Democratic National Convention on July 25, 2016.[89] He debuted a new version of "Questions for the Angels" with jazz guitarist Bill Frisell on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on May 24, 2017.[90]

On February 5, 2018, Simon announced his retirement from touring in a letter to fans, citing time away from family and the death of longtime guitarist Vincent Nguini as key factors. However, he did not rule out performing live altogether.[91] At the same time, it was announced that he would embark on his farewell concert tour on May 16 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, at Rogers Arena. Homeward Bound – The Farewell Tour encompassed shows across North America and Europe, and Simon played his final concert in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Queens, New York, on September 22, 2018.[92]

On September 7, 2018, Simon released his fourteenth solo studio album, In the Blue Light, consisting of re-recordings of selected lesser-known songs from his catalog (often altering their original arrangements, harmonic structures and lyrics).[93]

Simon announced his return to the live stage to close San Francisco's Outside Lands festival on August 11, 2019. With an appearance at the Golden Gate Park event, he planned to donate his net proceeds to local environmental non-profit organization(s).[94]

American Songwriter magazine honored Dion's "Song for Sam Cooke (Here in America)", featuring Simon, as the "Greatest of the Great 2020 Songs".[95]

Simon sold his music publishing catalog to Sony Music Publishing on March 31, 2021. Simon was previously signed to Universal Music Publishing Group.[96]

Songwriting

In an in-depth interview reprinted in American Songwriter, Simon discusses the craft of songwriting with music journalist Tom Moon. In the interview, Simon explains the basic themes in his songwriting: love, family and social commentary (as well as the overarching messages of religion, spirituality and God in his lyrics). Simon explains the process of how he goes about writing songs in the interview: "The music always precedes the words. The words often come from the sound of the music and eventually evolve into coherent thoughts. Or incoherent thoughts. Rhythm plays a crucial part in the lyric-making as well. It's like a puzzle to find the right words to express what the music is saying."[97]

Projects

Music for Broadway

In the late 1990s, Simon wrote and produced a Broadway musical called The Capeman, which lost $11 million during its 1998 run. In April 2008, the Brooklyn Academy of Music celebrated Paul Simon's works, and dedicated a week to Songs From the Capeman with a good portion of the show's songs performed by a cast of singers and the Spanish Harlem Orchestra. Simon himself appeared during the BAM shows, performing "Trailways Bus" and "Late in the Evening". In August 2010, The Capeman was staged for three nights in the Delacorte Theatre in New York's Central Park. The production was directed by Diane Paulus and produced in conjunction with the Public Theater.[98]

Film and television

Simon has also dabbled in acting. He played music producer Tony Lacey, a supporting character, in the 1977 Woody Allen feature film Annie Hall. He wrote and starred in 1980's One Trick Pony as Jonah Levin, a journeyman rock and roller. Simon also wrote all the songs in the film. He also appeared on The Muppet Show (the only episode to use the songs of one songwriter). In 1990, he played the character of Simple Simon on the Disney Channel TV movie, Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme.

In 1978, Simon made a cameo appearance in the movie, The Rutles: All You Need Is Cash.

He has been the subject of two films by Jeremy Marre, the first on Graceland, the second on The Capeman.

Simon was a guest on The Colbert Report promoting his book Lyrics 1964–2008 on November 18, 2008. After an interview with Stephen Colbert, Simon performed "American Tune".

Simon performed a Stevie Wonder song at The White House in 2009, at an event honoring Wonder's musical career and contributions.

In May 2009, The Library of Congress: Paul Simon and Friends Live Concert was released on DVD, via Shout! Factory. The PBS concert was recorded in 2007.

Simon appeared at the Glastonbury Festival 2011 in England.

Saturday Night Live

Simon has appeared on Saturday Night Live 14 times, both as host and musical guest. He was the host for the second episode, which aired on October 18, 1975, following George Carlin, who hosted the first episode. SNL star Chevy Chase appeared in Simon's video for "You Can Call Me Al" lip syncing the song while Simon looks disgruntled and mimes backing vocals, with the playing of various instruments beside him. Chase also appeared in Simon's 1991 video for the song "Proof", with Steve Martin.

Simon appeared alongside George Harrison as musical guest on the Thanksgiving Day episode of SNL on November 20, 1976. The two performed "Here Comes the Sun" and "Homeward Bound" together, while Simon performed "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" solo earlier in the show. On that episode, Simon opened the show performing "Still Crazy After All These Years" in a turkey outfit, since Thanksgiving was the following week. About halfway through the song, Simon tells the band to stop playing because of his embarrassment. After giving a frustrated speech to the audience, he leaves the stage, backed by applause. Lorne Michaels greets him positively backstage, but Simon is still upset, yelling at him because of the humiliating turkey outfit. This is one of SNL's most played sketches.

In one SNL skit from 1986 (when he was promoting Graceland), Simon plays himself, waiting in line with a friend to get into a movie. He amazes his friend by remembering intricate details about prior meetings with passers-by, but draws a complete blank when approached by Art Garfunkel, despite the latter's numerous memory prompts.[99]

On an appearance in the late 1980s, he worked with the politician who shared his name, Illinois Senator Paul Simon.[100]

On September 29, 2001, Simon made a special appearance on the first SNL to air after the September 11, 2001, attacks. On that show, he performed "The Boxer" to the audience and the NYC firefighters and police officers.

Simon and Lorne Michaels were the subjects of a 2006 episode of the Sundance Channel documentary series, Iconoclasts.

Simon appeared on the March 9, 2013, episode hosted by Justin Timberlake, as a member of the Five-Timers Club.

Simon closed the 40th anniversary SNL show on February 15, 2015, with a performance of "Still Crazy After All These Years". Simon also played a snippet of "I've Just Seen a Face" with Sir Paul McCartney during the special's introductory sequence. Much of the Thanksgiving episode from 1976 was shown during the prime-time special.

His most recent SNL appearance was on the October 13, 2018, episode hosted by Seth Meyers. He was the musical guest and it was his 77th birthday.[101]

Awards and honors

 
Reverse of the 2007 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song medal awarded to Paul Simon

Simon has won 12 Grammy Awards (one of them a Lifetime Achievement Award) and five Album of the Year Grammy nominations (the most recent for You're the One in 2001). He is one of only six artists to have won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year more than once as the main credited artist. In 1998, he was entered in the Grammy Hall of Fame for the Simon & Garfunkel album Bridge over Troubled Water. He received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song for the song "Father and Daughter" in 2002. He is also a two-time inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as half of Simon & Garfunkel in 1990 and as a solo artist in 2001.

Brit Awards
Grammy Awards
Year Nominee / work Award Result
1969 Bookends Album of the Year Nominated
"Mrs. Robinson" Record of the Year Won
Song of the Year Nominated
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Won
The Graduate Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media Won
1971 Bridge over Troubled Water Album of the Year Won
Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Nominated
"Bridge over Troubled Water" Record of the Year Won
Song of the Year Won
Best Arrangement, Instrumental and Vocals Won
Best Contemporary Song Won
1974 There Goes Rhymin' Simon Album of the Year Nominated
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated
1976 Still Crazy After All These Years Album of the Year Won
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Won
"My Little Town" Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Nominated
1977 "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" Record of the Year Nominated
1981 "Late in the Evening" Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated
One-Trick Pony Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media Nominated
1987 Graceland Album of the Year Won
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated
Himself Producer of the Year, Non-Classical Nominated
"Graceland" Song of the Year Nominated
1988 Record of the Year Won
1992 The Rhythm of the Saints Album of the Year Nominated
Himself Producer of the Year, Non-Classical Nominated
2001 You're the One Album of the Year Nominated
2006 Surprise Album of the Year Nominated
 
Simon wearing the Kennedy Center Honors ribbon in 2002

In 2001, Simon was honored as MusiCares Person of the Year. The following year, he was one of the five recipients of the annual Kennedy Center Honors, the nation's highest tribute to performing and cultural artists.

In 2005, Simon was saluted as a BMI Icon at the 53rd Annual BMI Pop Awards. Simon's songwriting catalog has earned 39 BMI Awards including multiple citations for "Bridge over Troubled Water", "Mrs. Robinson", "Scarborough Fair" and "The Sound of Silence". As of 2005, he has amassed nearly 75 million broadcast airplays, according to BMI surveys.[102]

In 2006, Simon was selected by Time Magazine as one of the "100 People Who Shaped the World".[103]

In 2007, Simon received the first annual Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. Named in honor of George and Ira Gershwin, this award recognizes the profound and positive effect of popular music on the world's culture. On being notified of the honor, Simon said, "I am grateful to be the recipient of the Gershwin Prize and doubly honored to be the first. I look forward to spending an evening in the company of artists I admire at the award ceremony in May. I can think of a few who have expressed my words and music far better than I. I'm excited at the prospect of that happening again. It's a songwriter's dream come true." Among the performers who paid tribute to Simon were Stevie Wonder, Alison Krauss, Jerry Douglas, Lyle Lovett, James Taylor, Dianne Reeves, Marc Anthony, Yolanda Adams and Ladysmith Black Mambazo. The event was professionally filmed and broadcast and is now available as Paul Simon and Friends.

In 2010, Simon received an honorary degree from Brandeis University, where he performed "The Boxer" at the main commencement ceremony.

In October 2011, Simon was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. At the induction ceremony, he performed "American Tune".

In 2012, Simon was awarded the Polar Music Prize.[104]

Personal life

When Simon moved to England in 1964, he met Kathleen Mary "Kathy" Chitty (born 1947) on April 12 at the first English folk club he played, the Railway Inn Folk Club in Brentwood, Essex (where Chitty worked part-time selling tickets). She was 16 and he was 22 when they began a relationship. Later that year, they visited the U.S. together, touring mainly by bus.[105]

Kathy returned to England on her own, with Simon returning to her some weeks later. When Simon returned to the U.S. with the growing success of "The Sounds of Silence", Kathy, who was quite shy,[106] wanted no part of the success and fame that awaited Simon so they ended their relationship.[107] She is mentioned by name in at least two of his songs: "Kathy's Song" and "America". She is also referred to in "Homeward Bound" and "The Late Great Johnny Ace". There is a photo of Simon and Kathy on the cover of Simon's 1965 album The Paul Simon Songbook.[108]

Simon has been married three times, first to Peggy Harper in 1969. They had a son, Harper Simon, in 1972, and divorced in 1975, inspiring the song 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover. Simon wrote about this relationship in the song "Train in the Distance" from his 1983 album Hearts and Bones.[109]

In the late 1970s, Simon lived in New York City next door to Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels, who has been described as Simon's "best friend" during the period.[110]

He and Shelley Duvall lived together as a couple for two years until she introduced him to her friend Carrie Fisher; Simon and Fisher then became a couple.[110] Simon's second marriage, from 1983 to 1984, was to Fisher. He proposed to her after a New York Yankees game.[109] The song "Hearts and Bones" was written about their time together, and the song "Graceland" is believed to be about seeking solace from the end of the relationship by taking a road trip.[111] A year after divorcing, Simon and Fisher resumed their relationship, which lasted for several years, and Simon found 51 Ways to Leave Your Lover.

Simon married singer Edie Brickell on May 30, 1992. They have three children: Adrian, Lulu, and Gabriel.[112]

Simon and his younger brother, Eddie Simon, founded the Guitar Study Center sometime before 1973.[113] The Guitar Study Center became part of The New School in New York City, sometime before 2002.[114]

Simon is an avid fan of the New York Rangers ice hockey team, the New York Knicks basketball team and the New York Yankees baseball team.[115][116][117]

Philanthropy

Simon is a proponent of music education for children. In 1970, after recording his "Bridge Over Troubled Water", at the invitation of the NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, Simon held auditions for a young songwriters' workshop. Advertised in The Village Voice, the auditions brought hundreds of hopefuls to perform for Simon. Among the six teenage songwriters Simon selected for tutelage were Melissa Manchester, Tommy Mandel and rock/beat poet Joe Linus, with Maggie and Terre Roche (the Roche Sisters), who later sang back-up for Simon, joining the workshop in progress through an impromptu appearance.

Simon invited the six teens to experience recording at Columbia studios with engineer Roy Halee. During these sessions, Bob Dylan was downstairs recording the album Self-Portrait, which included a version of Simon's "The Boxer". Violinist Isaac Stern also visited the group with a CBS film crew, speaking to the young musicians about lyrics and music after Joe Linus performed his song "Circus Lion" for Stern.

Manchester later paid homage to Simon with her recorded song "Ode to Paul". Other musicians Simon has mentored include Nick Laird-Clowes, who co-founded the band The Dream Academy. Laird-Clowes has credited Simon with helping to shape the band's biggest hit, "Life in a Northern Town".[118]

In 2003, Simon signed on as a supporter of Little Kids Rock, a nonprofit organization that provides free musical instruments and free lessons to children in public schools in the U.S. He sits on the organization's board of directors as an honorary member.

Simon is also a major benefactor and one of the co-founders, with Irwin Redlener, of the Children's Health Project and The Children's Health Fund[119][120] which started by creating specially equipped "buses" to take medical care to children in medically under-served areas, urban and rural. Their first bus was in the impoverished South Bronx of New York City, but they now operate in 12 states including on the Gulf Coast. It has expanded greatly, partnering with major hospitals, local public schools and medical schools and advocating policy for children's health and medical care.

In May 2012, Paul Simon performed at a benefit dinner for the Turkana Basin Institute in New York City, raising more than $2 million for Richard Leakey's research institute in Africa.[121]

For his 2019 performance at San Francisco's Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival, Simon donated his appearance fee to the San Francisco Parks Alliance and Friends of the Urban Forest.[122]

Discography

This discography does not include compilation albums, concert albums or work with Simon & Garfunkel. Simon's solo concert albums often have songs he originally recorded with Simon & Garfunkel, and many Simon & Garfunkel concert albums contain songs Simon first recorded on solo albums.[123][124]

Simon has a few songs that appear on compilation albums and nowhere else, such as "Slip Slidin' Away" which first appeared on the compilation album Greatest Hits, Etc. (1977) and has since been included in subsequent compilations such as Negotiations and Love Songs (1988).[125]

Solo studio albums

Filmography

Year Title Credit(s) Role Notes
1967 The Graduate Songs by With Art Garfunkel
1975 Shampoo Composer
1975–2018 Saturday Night Live Performer Himself / Various 18 episodes
1977 Annie Hall Actor Tony Lacey Acting debut
1978 All You Need Is Cash Actor Paul Simon Television film
1980 One-Trick Pony Actor, writer, composer Jonah
1985 The Statue of Liberty Composer
1990 Mother Goose Rock 'n' Rhyme Actor Simple Simon Television film
1996 Mother Composer Mrs. Robinson – Movie Theme Song
1999 Millennium Actor John Dryden Episode: "Via Dolorosa"
2002 The Wild Thornberrys Movie Composer Wrote and Performed: "Father and Daughter"
2008 The Great Buck Howard Actor Grateful Old Performer Actor
2008 The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg Deluxe Set Composer Documentary
2014 Henry & Me Actor Thurman Munson (voice)
2015 Portlandia Actor Paul Simon Episode: "You Can Call Me Al"
2015 Welcome To Sweden Actor Paul Simon Episode: "American Club"
2015 Saturday Night Live 40th Anniversary Special Himself Paul Simon Performed: "Still Crazy After All These Years"
2016 Horace and Pete Composer, Actor Customer Composed show's opening theme music

Broadway

Bibliography

  • Kingston, Victoria (1996). Simon and Garfunkel: the definitive biography. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 308. ISBN 9780283062674.
  • Bronson, Fred (2003). The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits. Billboard Books. ISBN 0-8230-7677-6.

See also

References

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  122. ^ Nastia Voynovskaya. "Toro y Moi Shows Oakland Love, Paul Simon Dazzles: Outside Lands Day 3 Highlights". KQED. Retrieved August 12, 2019.
  123. ^ Simon & Garfunkel. "Simon & Garfunkel Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More". AllMusic. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  124. ^ "Paul Simon Albums and Discography". AllMusic. October 13, 1941. Retrieved March 22, 2022.
  125. ^ "Paul Simon Best Songs List: Top, New, & Old". AllMusic. October 13, 1941. Retrieved March 22, 2022.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Paul Simon at IMDb
  • "Paul Simon - 2013 Richard Ellmann Lectures" (Videos). YouTube. September 2013.
    • Williams, Kimber (September 25, 2013). "Songwriter Paul Simon brings a new verse to the Ellmann Lectures". Emory University.

paul, simon, other, people, named, disambiguation, paul, frederic, simon, born, october, 1941, american, musician, singer, songwriter, actor, whose, career, spanned, decades, most, acclaimed, songwriters, popular, music, both, solo, artist, half, folk, rock, s. For other people named Paul Simon see Paul Simon disambiguation Paul Frederic Simon born October 13 1941 is an American musician singer songwriter and actor whose career has spanned six decades 1 He is one of the most acclaimed songwriters in popular music 2 3 both as a solo artist and as half of folk rock duo Simon amp Garfunkel with Art Garfunkel Paul SimonSimon performing at the 9 30 Club in 2011Background informationBirth namePaul Frederic SimonBorn 1941 10 13 October 13 1941 age 81 Newark New Jersey U S OriginNew York City U S GenresFolk rock pop worldOccupation s Musician singer songwriter actorInstrument s Vocals guitarYears active1956 presentLabelsColumbia Warner Bros ConcordFormerly ofSimon amp GarfunkelSpouse s Peggy Harper m 1969 div 1975 wbr Carrie Fisher m 1983 div 1984 wbr Edie Brickell m 1992 wbr Websitepaulsimon wbr com Simon was born in Newark New Jersey and grew up in the borough of Queens in New York City He began performing with his schoolfriend Art Garfunkel in 1956 when they were still in their early teens After limited success the pair reunited after an electrified version of their song The Sound of Silence became a hit in 1966 Simon amp Garfunkel recorded five albums together featuring songs mostly written by Simon including the hits Mrs Robinson America Bridge over Troubled Water and The Boxer 4 After Simon amp Garfunkel split in 1970 Simon recorded three acclaimed albums over the following five years 5 all of which charted in the Top 5 on the Billboard 200 His 1972 self titled album contained the hit songs Mother and Child Reunion and Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard The 1975 album Still Crazy After All These Years which featured guest vocals from Garfunkel was his first number one solo album It featured the number 1 hit single 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover among other Top 40 songs such as Still Crazy After All These Years Gone at Last and My Little Town Simon reunited with Garfunkel for a performance in New York Central Park in 1981 drawing half a million spectators followed by a world tour with Garfunkel After a career slump Simon released Graceland in 1986 an album inspired by South African township music It sold 14 million copies worldwide and remains his most popular and acclaimed solo work 6 A number of hit singles were released from the album including You Can Call Me Al The Boy in the Bubble and Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes It won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in 1987 Simon continued to tour throughout the 1990s He wrote a Broadway musical The Capeman and recorded a companion album Songs from The Capeman which was released in 1997 His 2000 album You re the One was nominated again for Album of the Year honors He followed that album with several years of touring including another reunion tour with Garfunkel He then released Surprise 2006 his last album of the decade In 2016 he released Stranger to Stranger which debuted at number 3 on the Billboard Album Chart and number 1 the UK Albums Chart It marked his greatest commercial and critical success in thirty years His most recent album is In the Blue Light 2018 which contains re arrangements of lesser known songs from his prior albums Simon has earned sixteen Grammy Awards for his solo and collaborative work including three for Album of the Year Bridge Over Troubled Water Still Crazy After All These Years and Graceland and a Lifetime Achievement Award 7 He is a two time inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame first in 1990 as a member of Simon amp Garfunkel and again in 2001 for his solo career 8 In 2006 he was selected as one of the 100 People Who Shaped the World by Time 9 In 2011 Rolling Stone named Simon one of the 100 greatest guitarists 10 and in 2015 he was ranked 8th in their list of the 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time 11 Simon was the first recipient of the Library of Congress s Gershwin Prize for Popular Song in 2007 12 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 1960s Simon amp Garfunkel 2 2 1970 1976 Solo and Still Crazy After All These Years 2 3 1977 1985 One Trick Pony and Hearts and Bones 2 4 1986 1992 Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints 2 5 1993 1998 Paul Simon 1964 1993 and The Capeman 2 6 1999 2007 You re the One and Surprise 2 7 2008 2013 So Beautiful or So What and touring 2 8 2014 2021 Stranger to Stranger and In the Blue Light 3 Songwriting 4 Projects 4 1 Music for Broadway 4 2 Film and television 4 3 Saturday Night Live 5 Awards and honors 6 Personal life 7 Philanthropy 8 Discography 9 Filmography 10 Broadway 11 Bibliography 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksEarly life EditSimon was born on October 13 1941 in Newark New Jersey to Hungarian Jewish parents 13 14 15 16 His father Louis 1916 1995 was a college professor double bass player and dance bandleader who performed under the name Lee Sims His mother Belle 1910 2007 was an elementary school teacher In 1945 his family moved to the Kew Gardens Hills section of Flushing Queens in New York City 17 The musician Donald Fagen described Simon s childhood as that of a certain kind of New York Jew almost a stereotype really to whom music and baseball are very important I think it has to do with the parents The parents are either immigrants or first generation Americans who felt like outsiders and assimilation was the key thought they gravitated to black music and baseball looking for an alternative culture 18 Simon upon hearing Fagen s description said it isn t far from the truth 18 Simon played baseball and stickball as a child He described his father as funny and smart but said he worked late and did not see his children much 18 Simon met Art Garfunkel when they were both 11 They performed in a production of Alice in Wonderland for their sixth grade graduation and began singing together when they were 13 19 occasionally performing at school dances At the age of 12 or 13 Simon wrote his first song The Girl for Me for him and Art Garfunkel According to Simon it became the neighborhood hit His father wrote the words and chords on paper for the boys to use That paper became the first officially copyrighted Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel song and is now in the Library of Congress In 1957 in their mid teens they recorded the song Hey Schoolgirl under the name Tom amp Jerry a name that was given to them by their label Big Records The single reached number 49 on the pop charts After graduating from Forest Hills High School Simon majored in English at Queens College and graduated in 1963 while Garfunkel studied mathematics education at Columbia University in Manhattan 20 18 Simon was a brother in the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity 21 and went on to attend Brooklyn Law School for one semester in 1963 22 23 Career Edit Simon in 1966 Between 1957 and 1964 Simon wrote recorded and released more than 30 songs He occasionally reunited with Garfunkel as Tom amp Jerry for some singles including Our Song and That s My Story Most of the songs Simon recorded during that time were performed alone or with musicians other than Garfunkel They were released on minor record labels including Amy Big Hunt King Tribute and Madison He used several pseudonyms for these recordings usually Jerry Landis but also Paul Kane and True Taylor By 1962 working as Jerry Landis he was a frequent writer producer for several Amy Records artists overseeing material released by Dotty Daniels The Vels and Ritchie Cordell Simon enjoyed moderate success with singles as part of the group Tico and the Triumphs including Motorcycle which reached number 99 on the Billboard charts in 1962 Tico and the Triumphs released four 45s Marty Cooper known as Tico sang lead on several of these releases but Motorcycle featured Simon s vocal Also in 1962 Simon reached number 97 on the pop charts as Jerry Landis with the novelty song The Lone Teen Ranger Both chart singles were released on Amy Records 1960s Simon amp Garfunkel Edit Main article Simon amp Garfunkel In early 1964 Simon and Garfunkel auditioned for Columbia Records whose executive Clive Davis signed them to produce an album Columbia decided that the two would be called Simon amp Garfunkel instead of Tom amp Jerry according to Simon this was the first time artists surnames had been used in pop music without their first names 24 Simon and Garfunkel s first LP Wednesday Morning 3 A M was released on October 19 1964 It consisted of 12 songs five of which were written by Simon The album initially flopped 25 Garfunkel left with Paul Simon right performing outside at a concert in Dublin as Simon amp Garfunkel After the album release Simon moved to England 26 and performed in folk clubs Simon enjoyed his time there He said in 1970 I had a lot of friends there and a girlfriend there I could play music there There was no place to play in New York City They wouldn t have me 25 In England he produced Jackson C Frank s first and only album and co wrote several songs with Bruce Woodley of the Australian pop group the Seekers including I Wish You Could Be Here Cloudy and Red Rubber Ball Simon also contributed to the Seekers catalog with Someday One Day which was released in March 1966 charting around the same time as Simon and Garfunkel s Homeward Bound The song was a Top 10 27 hit from their second UK album Sounds of Silence and later included on their third U S album Parsley Sage Rosemary and Thyme Back on the American East Coast radio stations began receiving requests for the Wednesday Morning 3 A M track The Sound of Silence Simon amp Garfunkel s producer Tom Wilson overdubbed the track with electric guitar bass guitar and drums It was released as a single eventually reaching number 1 on the US pop charts 28 Wilson did not inform the duo of his plan and Simon was horrified when he first heard it 29 The success drew Simon back to the US to reunite with Garfunkel and they recorded the albums Sounds of Silence 1966 Parsley Sage Rosemary and Thyme 1966 and Bookends 1968 Their final album Bridge over Troubled Water 1970 became at that time the bestselling album of all time 30 Simon amp Garfunkel also contributed to the soundtrack of the Mike Nichols film The Graduate 1967 starring Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft While writing Mrs Robinson Simon toyed with the title Mrs Roosevelt When Garfunkel reported this indecision over the song s name to the director Nichols replied Don t be ridiculous We re making a movie here It s Mrs Robinson 31 Simon and Garfunkel s relationship became strained and they split in 1970 32 At the urging of his wife Peggy Harper Simon called Davis to confirm the duo s breakup 33 For the next several years they spoke only two or three times a year 34 1970 1976 Solo and Still Crazy After All These Years Edit In 1970 Simon taught songwriting at New York University He said he had wanted to teach for a while and hoped to help people avoid some of the mistakes he had made You can teach somebody about writing songs You can t teach someone how to write a song I don t think I d go to a course if the Beatles would talk about how they made records because I m sure I could learn something 25 Simon pursued solo projects reuniting occasionally with Garfunkel for various projects Actor Warren Beatty brought Simon into a solo performance at the Cleveland Arena in April 1972 35 a benefit concert for the George McGovern 1972 presidential campaign After that Beatty obtained the duo s agreement to reunite in mid June at Madison Square Garden another political concert called Together for McGovern 36 Garfunkel joined Simon again on the 1975 Top 10 single My Little Town Simon wrote it for Garfunkel whose solo output Simon felt lacked bite The song was included on Simon s album Still Crazy After All These Years and Garfunkel s album Breakaway Contrary to popular belief the song is not autobiographical of Simon s early life in New York City 37 Simon also provided guitar on Garfunkel s 1973 album Angel Clare and added backing vocals to the song Down in the Willow Garden 38 Simon s album Paul Simon was released in January 1972 preceded by his first experiment with world music the Jamaican inspired Mother and Child Reunion It reached both the American and British Top 5 The album received universal acclaim with critics praising the variety of styles and the confessional lyrics reaching number 4 in the U S and number 1 in the UK and Japan It later spawned another Top 30 hit with Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard Simon s next project was the pop folk album There Goes Rhymin Simon released in May 1973 It contained some of his most popular and polished recordings The lead single Kodachrome was a number 2 hit in America The follow up the gospel flavored Loves Me Like a Rock was even bigger topping the Cashbox charts Other songs like the weary American Tune or the melancholic Something So Right a tribute to Simon s first wife Peggy became standards in the musician s catalog Critical and commercial reception for this second album was even stronger than for his debut The album reached number 1 on the Cashbox album charts As a souvenir for the tour that came next it was released as a live album titled Live Rhymin 1974 The album was moderately successful and displayed some changes in Simon s music style adopting world and religious music Highly anticipated Still Crazy After All These Years was his next album Released in October 1975 and produced by Simon and Phil Ramone it marked another departure The mood of the album was darker as he wrote and recorded it in the wake of his divorce Preceded by the feel good duet with Phoebe Snow Gone at Last a Top 25 hit and the Simon amp Garfunkel reunion track My Little Town a number 9 on Billboard the album was his only number 1 on the Billboard charts to date The 18th Grammy Awards named it the Album of the Year and Simon s performance the year s Best Male Pop Vocal With Simon in the forefront of popular music the third single from the album 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover reached the top spot of the Billboard charts his only single to reach number 1 on this list Simon put together a benefit show at Madison Square Garden to raise money for the New York Public Library on May 3 1976 Phoebe Snow Jimmy Cliff and the Brecker Brothers also performed The concert produced over 30 000 for the Library 1977 1985 One Trick Pony and Hearts and Bones Edit After three successful studio albums Simon became less productive during the second half of the 1970s He dabbled in various projects including writing music for the film Shampoo which became the music for the song Silent Eyes on the Still Crazy album and acting he was cast as Tony Lacey in Woody Allen s film Annie Hall He achieved another hit in this decade with the lead single of his 1977 compilation Greatest Hits Etc called Slip Slidin Away which reached number 5 in the United States In 1980 Simon released One Trick Pony his debut album with Warner Bros Records and his first in almost five years It was paired with the motion picture of the same name which Simon wrote and starred in Although it produced his last Top 10 hit with the upbeat Late in the Evening also a number 1 hit on the Radio amp Records American charts the album did not sell well Simon amp Garfunkel included eight songs from Simon s solo career on the set list for their September 19 1981 concert in Central Park Five of those were rearranged as duets Simon performed the other three songs solo The resulting live album TV special and videocassette later DVD releases were all major hits Simon released Hearts and Bones in 1983 without Garfunkel This was a polished and confessional album that was eventually viewed as one of his best works but achieved the lowest sales of Simon s career 39 Hearts and Bones included The Late Great Johnny Ace a song partly about Johnny Ace an American R amp B singer and partly about slain Beatle John Lennon In January 1985 Simon lent his talent to USA for Africa and performed on the relief fundraising single We Are the World 40 1986 1992 Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints Edit Miriam Makeba and Paul Simon 1986 In 1986 Simon was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Music degree from Berklee College of Music where he has served on the board of trustees 41 42 After Simon was given a bootlegged tape of mbaqanga South African street music 43 he decided to record an album of South African music Simon traveled to Johannesburg where he recorded with African musicians in early 1986 Additional sessions were held in April in New York 44 The sessions featured many South African acts particularly Ladysmith Black Mambazo Simon also collaborated with several American artists singing a duet with Linda Ronstadt in Under African Skies and playing with Los Lobos in All Around the World or The Myth of Fingerprints 45 Before leaving for Johannesburg Simon contributed to We Are the World a charity single benefiting African famine relief 45 Graceland became Simon s most successful studio album and his highest charting album in over a decade It is estimated to have sold more than 16 million copies worldwide 46 Graceland won the 1987 Grammy for Album of the Year In 2006 the album was added to the United States National Recording Registry as culturally historically or aesthetically important 47 Following the success Simon faced accusations that he had broken the cultural boycott imposed by the rest of the world against the apartheid regime in South Africa 48 by organizations such as Artists United Against Apartheid 49 anti apartheid musicians including Billy Bragg Paul Weller and Jerry Dammers 50 as well as James Victor Gbeho then Ghanaian Ambassador to the United Nations 51 Simon denied that he had gone to South Africa to take money out of the country noting that he paid the black artists and split royalties with them and was not paid to play to a white audience 43 The United Nations Anti Apartheid Committee supported Graceland as it showcased black South African musicians and offered no support to the South African government but the African National Congress protested it as a violation of the boycott 49 The Congress voted to ban Simon from South Africa and he was also added to the United Nations blacklist 52 He was removed from the blacklist in January 1987 53 Dion s song Written on the Subway Wall Little Star from Yo Frankie 1989 featuring Simon peaked at number 97 in October 1990 54 55 After Graceland Simon extended his roots with the Brazilian music flavored The Rhythm of the Saints Sessions for the album began in December 1989 and took place in Rio de Janeiro and New York It featured guitarist J J Cale as well as many Brazilian and African musicians The tone of the album was more introspective and relatively low key compared to the mostly upbeat numbers of Graceland Released in October 1990 the album received excellent critical reviews and achieved very respectable sales peaking at number 4 in the U S and number 1 in the UK The lead single The Obvious Child featuring the Grupo Cultural Olodum became his last Top 20 hit in the UK and appeared near the bottom of the Billboard Hot 100 Although not as successful as Graceland The Rhythm of the Saints received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year Simon s ex wife Carrie Fisher said in her autobiography Wishful Drinking that the song She Moves On is about her It s one of several she claimed followed by the line If you can get Paul Simon to write a song about you do it Because he is so brilliant at it 56 The success of both albums allowed Simon to stage another New York concert On August 15 1991 almost a decade after his concert with Garfunkel Simon staged a second concert in Central Park with African and South American bands The success of the concert surpassed all expectations and reportedly over 750 000 people attended one of the largest concert audiences in history He later remembered the concert as the most memorable moment in my career The success of the show led to both a live album and an Emmy winning TV special In the middle Simon embarked on the successful Born at the Right Time Tour and promoted the album with further singles including Proof accompanied with a humorous video that featured Chevy Chase and Steve Martin On March 4 1992 he appeared on his own episode of MTV Unplugged offering renditions of many of his most famous compositions Simon and Garfunkel were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990 8 1993 1998 Paul Simon 1964 1993 and The Capeman Edit After Unplugged Simon s place in the forefront of popular music dropped notably A Simon amp Garfunkel reunion took place in September 1993 and in another attempt to capitalize on the occasion Columbia released Paul Simon 1964 1993 in September A three disc compilation it received a reduced version on the two disc album The Paul Simon Anthology one month later In 1995 he made news for appearing on The Oprah Winfrey Show where he performed the song Ten Years which he composed specially for the tenth anniversary of the show Also that year he was featured on the Annie Lennox version of his 1973 song Something So Right which appeared briefly on the UK Top 50 once it was released as a single in November 57 Since the early stages of the 1990s Simon was fully involved in The Capeman a musical that eventually opened on January 29 1998 Simon worked enthusiastically on the project for many years and described it as a New York Puerto Rican story based on events that happened in 1959 events that I remembered 58 The musical tells the story of real life Puerto Rican youth Salvador Agron who wore a cape while committing two murders in 1959 New York and went on to become a writer in prison Featuring Marc Anthony as the young Agron and Ruben Blades as the older Agron the play received terrible reviews and poor box office receipts Simon recorded an album of songs from the show which was released in November 1997 It was received with very mixed reviews though many critics praised the combination of doo wop rockabilly and Caribbean music that the album reflected In commercial terms Songs from The Capeman was a failure Simon missed the Top 40 of the Billboard charts for the first time in his career The cast album was never released on CD but eventually became available online 1999 2007 You re the One and Surprise Edit After The Capeman Simon s career was again in an unexpected crisis However entering the new millennium he maintained a respectable reputation offering critically acclaimed new material and receiving commercial attention Simon embarked on a North American tour with Bob Dylan in 1999 with each alternating as the headline act with a middle section where they performed together starting on the first of June and ending September 18 The collaboration was generally well received with just one critic Seth Rogovoy from the Berkshire Eagle questioning the collaboration 59 In an attempt to return successfully to the music market Simon wrote and recorded a new album very quickly with You re the One arriving in October 2000 The album consisted mostly of folk pop writing combined with foreign musical sounds particularly grooves from North Africa While not reaching the commercial heights of previous albums it managed to reach both the British and American Top 20 It received favorable reviews and received a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year He toured extensively for the album and one performance in Paris was released to home video In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks Simon sang Bridge Over Troubled Water on America A Tribute to Heroes a multi network broadcast to benefit the September 11 Telethon Fund and performed The Boxer at the opening of the first episode of Saturday Night Live after September 11 In 2002 he wrote and recorded Father and Daughter the theme song for the animated family film The Wild Thornberrys Movie The track was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Song In 2003 Simon and Garfunkel reunited once again when they received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award This reunion led to a US tour the acclaimed Old Friends concert series followed by a 2004 international encore that culminated in a free concert at the Colosseum in Rome that drew 600 000 people 60 In 2005 the pair sang Mrs Robinson and Homeward Bound plus Bridge Over Troubled Water with Aaron Neville in the benefit concert From the Big Apple to The Big Easy The Concert for New Orleans eventually released as a DVD for Hurricane Katrina victims In 2004 Simon s studio albums were re released both individually and together in a limited edition nine CD boxed set Paul Simon The Studio Recordings 1972 2000 At the time Simon was already working on a new album with Brian Eno called Surprise which was released in May 2006 Most of the album was inspired by the September 11 terrorist attacks the Iraq invasion and the war that followed In personal terms Simon was also inspired by turning 60 in 2001 which he humorously referred to on Old from You re the One Surprise was a commercial hit reaching number 14 on the Billboard 200 and number 4 in the UK Most critics also praised the album and many of them called it a comeback Stephen Thomas Erlewine from AllMusic wrote that Simon doesn t achieve his comeback by reconnecting with the sound and spirit of his classic work he has achieved it by being as restless and ambitious as he was at his popular and creative peak which makes Surprise all the more remarkable The album was supported with the successful Surprise Tour from May to November 2006 In March 2004 Walter Yetnikoff published a book called Howling at the Moon in which he criticized Simon personally and for his tenuous business partnership with Columbia Records in the past 61 In 2007 Simon was the inaugural recipient of the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song awarded by the Library of Congress and later performed as part of a gala of his work 62 63 2008 2013 So Beautiful or So What and touring Edit Simon performing live in Mainz Germany July 25 2008 After living in Montauk New York for many years Simon relocated to New Canaan Connecticut 64 Simon is one of a small number of performers who are named as the copyright owner on their recordings most records have the recording company as the named owner of the recording This noteworthy development was spearheaded by the Bee Gees after their successful 200 million lawsuit against RSO Records which remains the largest successful lawsuit against a record company by an artist or group All of Simon s solo recordings including those originally issued by Columbia Records are currently distributed by Sony Records Legacy Recordings unit His albums were issued by Warner Music Group until mid 2010 In mid 2010 Simon moved his catalog of solo work from Warner Bros Records to Sony Columbia Records where Simon amp Garfunkel s catalog is In February 2009 Simon performed back to back shows in New York City at the Beacon Theatre which had recently been renovated Simon was reunited with Art Garfunkel at the first show as well as with the cast of The Capeman Also playing in the band was Graceland bassist Bakithi Kumalo In May 2009 Simon toured with Garfunkel in Australia New Zealand and Japan In October 2009 they appeared together at the 25th anniversary of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City In October 2009 Dion performed The Wanderer with Simon at the 25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Concert 65 In April 2010 Simon amp Garfunkel performed again in New Orleans at the New Orleans Jazz amp Heritage Festival 66 Simon released a new song called Getting Ready for Christmas Day on November 10 2010 It premiered on National Public Radio 67 and was included on the album So Beautiful or So What The song samples a 1941 sermon by the Rev J M Gates also entitled Getting Ready for Christmas Day 68 Simon performed the song live on The Colbert Report on December 16 2010 69 The first video featured J M Gates giving the sermon and his church in 2010 with its display board showing many of Simon s lyrics The second video illustrates the song with cartoon images In the premiere show of the final season of The Oprah Winfrey Show on September 10 2010 Simon surprised Oprah and the audience with a song dedicated to her show lasting 25 years an update of a song he did for her show s 10th anniversary 70 Simon s album So Beautiful or So What 71 was released on the Concord Music Group label on April 12 2011 72 The album received high marks from the artist It s the best work I ve done in 20 years It was reported that Simon attempted to have Bob Dylan featured on the album Rounding off his 2011 World Tour which included the United States the UK the Netherlands Switzerland and Germany Simon appeared at Ramat Gan Stadium in Israel in July 2011 making his first concert appearance in Israel since 1983 73 On the 10th anniversary of the September 11 attacks September 11 2011 Paul Simon performed The Sound of Silence at the National September 11 Memorial amp Museum site of the World Trade Center Simon paying tribute to musicians Leonard Cohen and Chuck Berry the recipients of the first annual PEN Awards for songwriting excellence at the John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum on February 26 2012 On February 26 2012 Simon paid tribute to fellow musicians Chuck Berry and Leonard Cohen who were the recipients of the first annual PEN Awards for songwriting excellence at the JFK Presidential Library in Boston Massachusetts 74 Simon released a 25th anniversary box set of Graceland on June 5 2012 It included a remastered edition of the original album the 2012 documentary film Under African Skies the original 1987 African Concert from Zimbabwe an audio narrative The Story of Graceland told by Paul Simon as well as other interviews and paraphernalia 75 He played a few concerts in Europe with the original musicians to commemorate the anniversary 76 On December 19 2012 Simon performed at the funeral of Victoria Leigh Soto a teacher killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting 77 On June 14 2013 at Sting s Back to Bass Tour Simon performed his song The Boxer and Sting s Fields of Gold with Sting 78 In September 2013 Simon delivered the Richard Ellmann Lecture in Modern Literature at Emory University 2014 2021 Stranger to Stranger and In the Blue Light Edit In February 2014 Simon embarked on a joint concert tour titled On Stage Together with English musician Sting playing 21 concerts in North America 79 The tour continued in early 2015 with ten shows in Australia and New Zealand 80 81 and 23 concerts in Europe 82 ending on April 18 2015 Simon appeared during the premiere week of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on September 11 2015 Simon who performed Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard with Colbert for his surprise appearance had been promoted prior to the show as Simon amp Garfunkel Tribute Band Troubled Waters 83 Simon s additional performance of An American Tune was posted as a bonus on the show s YouTube channel In 2015 Dion released the single New York Is My Home with Simon 84 Simon also wrote and performed the theme song for the comedian Louis C K s show Horace and Pete which debuted January 30 2016 The song which can be heard during the show s opening intermission and closing credits features only Simon s voice and an acoustic guitar Simon made a cameo appearance onscreen in the tenth and final episode of the series On June 3 2016 Simon released his thirteenth solo studio album Stranger to Stranger via Concord Records 85 He began writing new material shortly after releasing his twelfth studio album So Beautiful or So What in April 2011 Simon collaborated with the Italian electronic dance music artist Clap Clap on three songs The Werewolf Street Angel and Wristband Simon was introduced to him by his son Adrian who was a fan of his work The two met up in July 2011 when Simon was touring behind So Beautiful or So What in Milan Italy He and Clap Clap worked together via email over the course of making the album Simon also worked with longtime friend Roy Halee who is listed as co producer on the album I always liked working with him more than anyone else Simon noted 86 Following the release of the album Simon noted that showbiz doesn t hold any interest for me and discussed future retirement stating I am going to see what happens if I let go 87 88 Simon performed Bridge over Troubled Water at the 2016 Democratic National Convention on July 25 2016 89 He debuted a new version of Questions for the Angels with jazz guitarist Bill Frisell on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on May 24 2017 90 On February 5 2018 Simon announced his retirement from touring in a letter to fans citing time away from family and the death of longtime guitarist Vincent Nguini as key factors However he did not rule out performing live altogether 91 At the same time it was announced that he would embark on his farewell concert tour on May 16 in Vancouver British Columbia Canada at Rogers Arena Homeward Bound The Farewell Tour encompassed shows across North America and Europe and Simon played his final concert in Flushing Meadows Corona Park Queens New York on September 22 2018 92 On September 7 2018 Simon released his fourteenth solo studio album In the Blue Light consisting of re recordings of selected lesser known songs from his catalog often altering their original arrangements harmonic structures and lyrics 93 Simon announced his return to the live stage to close San Francisco s Outside Lands festival on August 11 2019 With an appearance at the Golden Gate Park event he planned to donate his net proceeds to local environmental non profit organization s 94 American Songwriter magazine honored Dion s Song for Sam Cooke Here in America featuring Simon as the Greatest of the Great 2020 Songs 95 Simon sold his music publishing catalog to Sony Music Publishing on March 31 2021 Simon was previously signed to Universal Music Publishing Group 96 Songwriting EditIn an in depth interview reprinted in American Songwriter Simon discusses the craft of songwriting with music journalist Tom Moon In the interview Simon explains the basic themes in his songwriting love family and social commentary as well as the overarching messages of religion spirituality and God in his lyrics Simon explains the process of how he goes about writing songs in the interview The music always precedes the words The words often come from the sound of the music and eventually evolve into coherent thoughts Or incoherent thoughts Rhythm plays a crucial part in the lyric making as well It s like a puzzle to find the right words to express what the music is saying 97 Projects EditMusic for Broadway Edit In the late 1990s Simon wrote and produced a Broadway musical called The Capeman which lost 11 million during its 1998 run In April 2008 the Brooklyn Academy of Music celebrated Paul Simon s works and dedicated a week to Songs From the Capeman with a good portion of the show s songs performed by a cast of singers and the Spanish Harlem Orchestra Simon himself appeared during the BAM shows performing Trailways Bus and Late in the Evening In August 2010 The Capeman was staged for three nights in the Delacorte Theatre in New York s Central Park The production was directed by Diane Paulus and produced in conjunction with the Public Theater 98 Film and television Edit Simon has also dabbled in acting He played music producer Tony Lacey a supporting character in the 1977 Woody Allen feature film Annie Hall He wrote and starred in 1980 s One Trick Pony as Jonah Levin a journeyman rock and roller Simon also wrote all the songs in the film He also appeared on The Muppet Show the only episode to use the songs of one songwriter In 1990 he played the character of Simple Simon on the Disney Channel TV movie Mother Goose Rock n Rhyme In 1978 Simon made a cameo appearance in the movie The Rutles All You Need Is Cash He has been the subject of two films by Jeremy Marre the first on Graceland the second on The Capeman Simon was a guest on The Colbert Report promoting his book Lyrics 1964 2008 on November 18 2008 After an interview with Stephen Colbert Simon performed American Tune Simon performed a Stevie Wonder song at The White House in 2009 at an event honoring Wonder s musical career and contributions In May 2009 The Library of Congress Paul Simon and Friends Live Concert was released on DVD via Shout Factory The PBS concert was recorded in 2007 Simon appeared at the Glastonbury Festival 2011 in England Saturday Night Live Edit Simon has appeared on Saturday Night Live 14 times both as host and musical guest He was the host for the second episode which aired on October 18 1975 following George Carlin who hosted the first episode SNL star Chevy Chase appeared in Simon s video for You Can Call Me Al lip syncing the song while Simon looks disgruntled and mimes backing vocals with the playing of various instruments beside him Chase also appeared in Simon s 1991 video for the song Proof with Steve Martin Simon appeared alongside George Harrison as musical guest on the Thanksgiving Day episode of SNL on November 20 1976 The two performed Here Comes the Sun and Homeward Bound together while Simon performed 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover solo earlier in the show On that episode Simon opened the show performing Still Crazy After All These Years in a turkey outfit since Thanksgiving was the following week About halfway through the song Simon tells the band to stop playing because of his embarrassment After giving a frustrated speech to the audience he leaves the stage backed by applause Lorne Michaels greets him positively backstage but Simon is still upset yelling at him because of the humiliating turkey outfit This is one of SNL s most played sketches In one SNL skit from 1986 when he was promoting Graceland Simon plays himself waiting in line with a friend to get into a movie He amazes his friend by remembering intricate details about prior meetings with passers by but draws a complete blank when approached by Art Garfunkel despite the latter s numerous memory prompts 99 On an appearance in the late 1980s he worked with the politician who shared his name Illinois Senator Paul Simon 100 On September 29 2001 Simon made a special appearance on the first SNL to air after the September 11 2001 attacks On that show he performed The Boxer to the audience and the NYC firefighters and police officers Simon and Lorne Michaels were the subjects of a 2006 episode of the Sundance Channel documentary series Iconoclasts Simon appeared on the March 9 2013 episode hosted by Justin Timberlake as a member of the Five Timers Club Simon closed the 40th anniversary SNL show on February 15 2015 with a performance of Still Crazy After All These Years Simon also played a snippet of I ve Just Seen a Face with Sir Paul McCartney during the special s introductory sequence Much of the Thanksgiving episode from 1976 was shown during the prime time special His most recent SNL appearance was on the October 13 2018 episode hosted by Seth Meyers He was the musical guest and it was his 77th birthday 101 Awards and honors Edit Reverse of the 2007 Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song medal awarded to Paul Simon Simon has won 12 Grammy Awards one of them a Lifetime Achievement Award and five Album of the Year Grammy nominations the most recent for You re the One in 2001 He is one of only six artists to have won the Grammy Award for Album of the Year more than once as the main credited artist In 1998 he was entered in the Grammy Hall of Fame for the Simon amp Garfunkel album Bridge over Troubled Water He received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song for the song Father and Daughter in 2002 He is also a two time inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as half of Simon amp Garfunkel in 1990 and as a solo artist in 2001 Brit AwardsYear Nominee work Award Result1977 Bridge over Troubled Water International Album Won1987 Paul Simon International Solo Artist Won1991 International Male Solo Artist NominatedGrammy AwardsYear Nominee work Award Result1969 Bookends Album of the Year Nominated Mrs Robinson Record of the Year WonSong of the Year NominatedBest Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals WonThe Graduate Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media Won1971 Bridge over Troubled Water Album of the Year WonBest Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Nominated Bridge over Troubled Water Record of the Year WonSong of the Year WonBest Arrangement Instrumental and Vocals WonBest Contemporary Song Won1974 There Goes Rhymin Simon Album of the Year NominatedBest Male Pop Vocal Performance Nominated1976 Still Crazy After All These Years Album of the Year WonBest Male Pop Vocal Performance Won My Little Town Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals Nominated1977 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover Record of the Year Nominated1981 Late in the Evening Best Male Pop Vocal Performance NominatedOne Trick Pony Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media Nominated1987 Graceland Album of the Year WonBest Male Pop Vocal Performance NominatedHimself Producer of the Year Non Classical Nominated Graceland Song of the Year Nominated1988 Record of the Year Won1992 The Rhythm of the Saints Album of the Year NominatedHimself Producer of the Year Non Classical Nominated2001 You re the One Album of the Year Nominated2006 Surprise Album of the Year Nominated Simon wearing the Kennedy Center Honors ribbon in 2002 In 2001 Simon was honored as MusiCares Person of the Year The following year he was one of the five recipients of the annual Kennedy Center Honors the nation s highest tribute to performing and cultural artists In 2005 Simon was saluted as a BMI Icon at the 53rd Annual BMI Pop Awards Simon s songwriting catalog has earned 39 BMI Awards including multiple citations for Bridge over Troubled Water Mrs Robinson Scarborough Fair and The Sound of Silence As of 2005 he has amassed nearly 75 million broadcast airplays according to BMI surveys 102 In 2006 Simon was selected by Time Magazine as one of the 100 People Who Shaped the World 103 In 2007 Simon received the first annual Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song Named in honor of George and Ira Gershwin this award recognizes the profound and positive effect of popular music on the world s culture On being notified of the honor Simon said I am grateful to be the recipient of the Gershwin Prize and doubly honored to be the first I look forward to spending an evening in the company of artists I admire at the award ceremony in May I can think of a few who have expressed my words and music far better than I I m excited at the prospect of that happening again It s a songwriter s dream come true Among the performers who paid tribute to Simon were Stevie Wonder Alison Krauss Jerry Douglas Lyle Lovett James Taylor Dianne Reeves Marc Anthony Yolanda Adams and Ladysmith Black Mambazo The event was professionally filmed and broadcast and is now available as Paul Simon and Friends In 2010 Simon received an honorary degree from Brandeis University where he performed The Boxer at the main commencement ceremony In October 2011 Simon was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences At the induction ceremony he performed American Tune In 2012 Simon was awarded the Polar Music Prize 104 Personal life EditWhen Simon moved to England in 1964 he met Kathleen Mary Kathy Chitty born 1947 on April 12 at the first English folk club he played the Railway Inn Folk Club in Brentwood Essex where Chitty worked part time selling tickets She was 16 and he was 22 when they began a relationship Later that year they visited the U S together touring mainly by bus 105 Kathy returned to England on her own with Simon returning to her some weeks later When Simon returned to the U S with the growing success of The Sounds of Silence Kathy who was quite shy 106 wanted no part of the success and fame that awaited Simon so they ended their relationship 107 She is mentioned by name in at least two of his songs Kathy s Song and America She is also referred to in Homeward Bound and The Late Great Johnny Ace There is a photo of Simon and Kathy on the cover of Simon s 1965 album The Paul Simon Songbook 108 Simon has been married three times first to Peggy Harper in 1969 They had a son Harper Simon in 1972 and divorced in 1975 inspiring the song 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover Simon wrote about this relationship in the song Train in the Distance from his 1983 album Hearts and Bones 109 In the late 1970s Simon lived in New York City next door to Saturday Night Live creator Lorne Michaels who has been described as Simon s best friend during the period 110 He and Shelley Duvall lived together as a couple for two years until she introduced him to her friend Carrie Fisher Simon and Fisher then became a couple 110 Simon s second marriage from 1983 to 1984 was to Fisher He proposed to her after a New York Yankees game 109 The song Hearts and Bones was written about their time together and the song Graceland is believed to be about seeking solace from the end of the relationship by taking a road trip 111 A year after divorcing Simon and Fisher resumed their relationship which lasted for several years and Simon found 51 Ways to Leave Your Lover Simon married singer Edie Brickell on May 30 1992 They have three children Adrian Lulu and Gabriel 112 Simon and his younger brother Eddie Simon founded the Guitar Study Center sometime before 1973 113 The Guitar Study Center became part of The New School in New York City sometime before 2002 114 Simon is an avid fan of the New York Rangers ice hockey team the New York Knicks basketball team and the New York Yankees baseball team 115 116 117 Philanthropy EditSimon is a proponent of music education for children In 1970 after recording his Bridge Over Troubled Water at the invitation of the NYU s Tisch School of the Arts Simon held auditions for a young songwriters workshop Advertised in The Village Voice the auditions brought hundreds of hopefuls to perform for Simon Among the six teenage songwriters Simon selected for tutelage were Melissa Manchester Tommy Mandel and rock beat poet Joe Linus with Maggie and Terre Roche the Roche Sisters who later sang back up for Simon joining the workshop in progress through an impromptu appearance Simon invited the six teens to experience recording at Columbia studios with engineer Roy Halee During these sessions Bob Dylan was downstairs recording the album Self Portrait which included a version of Simon s The Boxer Violinist Isaac Stern also visited the group with a CBS film crew speaking to the young musicians about lyrics and music after Joe Linus performed his song Circus Lion for Stern Manchester later paid homage to Simon with her recorded song Ode to Paul Other musicians Simon has mentored include Nick Laird Clowes who co founded the band The Dream Academy Laird Clowes has credited Simon with helping to shape the band s biggest hit Life in a Northern Town 118 In 2003 Simon signed on as a supporter of Little Kids Rock a nonprofit organization that provides free musical instruments and free lessons to children in public schools in the U S He sits on the organization s board of directors as an honorary member Simon is also a major benefactor and one of the co founders with Irwin Redlener of the Children s Health Project and The Children s Health Fund 119 120 which started by creating specially equipped buses to take medical care to children in medically under served areas urban and rural Their first bus was in the impoverished South Bronx of New York City but they now operate in 12 states including on the Gulf Coast It has expanded greatly partnering with major hospitals local public schools and medical schools and advocating policy for children s health and medical care In May 2012 Paul Simon performed at a benefit dinner for the Turkana Basin Institute in New York City raising more than 2 million for Richard Leakey s research institute in Africa 121 For his 2019 performance at San Francisco s Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival Simon donated his appearance fee to the San Francisco Parks Alliance and Friends of the Urban Forest 122 Discography EditMain article Paul Simon discography See also Simon amp Garfunkel discography This discography does not include compilation albums concert albums or work with Simon amp Garfunkel Simon s solo concert albums often have songs he originally recorded with Simon amp Garfunkel and many Simon amp Garfunkel concert albums contain songs Simon first recorded on solo albums 123 124 Simon has a few songs that appear on compilation albums and nowhere else such as Slip Slidin Away which first appeared on the compilation album Greatest Hits Etc 1977 and has since been included in subsequent compilations such as Negotiations and Love Songs 1988 125 Solo studio albums The Paul Simon Songbook 1965 Paul Simon 1972 There Goes Rhymin Simon 1973 Still Crazy After All These Years 1975 One Trick Pony 1980 Hearts and Bones 1983 Graceland 1986 The Rhythm of the Saints 1990 Songs from The Capeman 1997 You re the One 2000 Surprise 2006 So Beautiful or So What 2011 Stranger to Stranger 2016 In the Blue Light 2018 Filmography EditYear Title Credit s Role Notes1967 The Graduate Songs by With Art Garfunkel1975 Shampoo Composer 1975 2018 Saturday Night Live Performer Himself Various 18 episodes1977 Annie Hall Actor Tony Lacey Acting debut1978 All You Need Is Cash Actor Paul Simon Television film1980 One Trick Pony Actor writer composer Jonah1985 The Statue of Liberty Composer 1990 Mother Goose Rock n Rhyme Actor Simple Simon Television film1996 Mother Composer Mrs Robinson Movie Theme Song1999 Millennium Actor John Dryden Episode Via Dolorosa 2002 The Wild Thornberrys Movie Composer Wrote and Performed Father and Daughter 2008 The Great Buck Howard Actor Grateful Old Performer Actor2008 The Life and Times of Allen Ginsberg Deluxe Set Composer Documentary2014 Henry amp Me Actor Thurman Munson voice 2015 Portlandia Actor Paul Simon Episode You Can Call Me Al 2015 Welcome To Sweden Actor Paul Simon Episode American Club 2015 Saturday Night Live 40th Anniversary Special Himself Paul Simon Performed Still Crazy After All These Years 2016 Horace and Pete Composer Actor Customer Composed show s opening theme musicBroadway EditRock n Roll The First 5 000 Years 1982 revue featured songwriter for Mrs Robinson Asinamali 1987 play co producer Mike Nichols and Elaine May Together Again on Broadway 1992 concert performer The Capeman 1998 composer co lyricist and music arranger Tony Nomination for Best Original Score The Graduate 2002 play featured songwriterBibliography EditKingston Victoria 1996 Simon and Garfunkel the definitive biography London Sidgwick amp Jackson p 308 ISBN 9780283062674 Bronson Fred 2003 The Billboard Book of Number 1 Hits Billboard Books ISBN 0 8230 7677 6 See also EditList of songs written by Paul SimonReferences Edit Paul Simon stops writing new music after 60 years admitting I m finished Daily Mirror September 8 2018 Paul Simon MTV Flashback Willie Nelson Paul Simon Sing Graceland for Willie s 60th Birthday Bronson p 428 Episodes Paul Simon American Masters PBS February 26 2001 Retrieved December 6 2009 Denselow Robin March 16 2012 Paul Simon brings Graceland back to London 25 years after apartheid boycott row The Guardian London Retrieved November 12 2016 Grammy Award Winners National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences Archived from the original on December 9 2009 Retrieved December 6 2009 a b Biography and Timeline Paul Simon Inductees Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Tyrangiel Josh May 8 2006 Paul Simon Time Archived from the original on September 3 2010 Retrieved April 4 2011 100 Greatest Guitarists 93 Paul Simon Rolling Stone November 23 2011 Retrieved December 6 2021 8 Paul Simon Rolling Stone August 2015 Paul Simon The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song PBS Retrieved December 6 2009 Torok Ryan April 26 2017 Here s to you Paul Simon Skirball showcases his Words amp Music Jewish Journal Retrieved June 22 2018 Monitor Entertainment Weekly No 1176 1177 October 14 21 2011 p 34 jewornotjew Paul Simon March 19 2008 Retrieved August 30 2013 The open Paul Simon biography paul simon info October 29 2012 Kingston 1996 p 1 a b c d Dawidoff Nicholas Paul Simons Restless Journey Rolling Stone May 12 2011 pp 54 63 Old Friends Live on Stage live concert DVD and CD the spoken introduction to Hey Schoolgirl PhD is new hit for Paul Simon Daily News New York Retrieved March 19 2018 Notable Alumni Alpha Epsilon Pi Retrieved January 23 2014 Celebrating Seniors Paul Simon Turns 75 50 Plus World seniorcitylocal com Retrieved March 19 2018 Bonca Cornel October 10 2014 Paul Simon An American Tune Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780810884823 Retrieved March 19 2018 via Google Books Paul Simon Speech given upon induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Cleveland 2003 a b c Alterman Lorraine May 28 1970 Paul Simon the Rolling Stone interview Rolling Stone Retrieved January 15 2022 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint url status link Marc Eliot 2010 Paul Simon A Life John Wiley amp Sons p 53 ISBN 978 0 470 43363 8 homeward bound full Official Chart History Official Charts Company www officialcharts com Retrieved January 18 2023 Himes Geoffrey How The Sound of Silence Became a Surprise Hit Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved February 23 2018 Marc Eliot 2010 Paul Simon A Life John Wiley amp Sons p 65 ISBN 978 0 470 43363 8 Roswitha Ebel 2004 Paul Simon seine Musik sein Leben Paul Simon His Music His Life in German epubli p 68 ISBN 978 3 937729 00 8 David Fricke in the leaflet accompaniment to the Simon and Garfunkel 1997 album Old Friends Marc Eliot 2010 Paul Simon A Life John Wiley amp Sons p 111 ISBN 978 0 470 43363 8 Marc Eliot 2010 Paul Simon A Life John Wiley amp Sons p 114 ISBN 978 0 470 43363 8 Stephen Holden March 18 1982 Class Reunion It Looks Like a Lasting Thing Rolling Stone No 365 New York City pp 26 28 ISSN 0035 791X Candidate s Day McGovern Fund Gala Is Sold Out The New York Times April 29 1972 Phillips McCandlish June 15 1972 Rock n Rhetoric Rally in the Garden Aids McGovern The New York Times Humphries Patrick The Boy in the Bubble p 96 Angel Clare album credits Columbia Records 1973 Eliot 2010 p 186 sfn error no target CITEREFEliot2010 help Edwards Gavin March 6 2020 We Are the World A Minute by Minute Breakdown Rolling Stone Retrieved July 26 2022 Hochschild Rob Honorary Degree Recipients Retrieved May 17 2012 Berklee Board of Trustees Archived from the original on May 11 2012 Retrieved May 17 2012 a b Runtagh Jordan August 25 2016 Paul Simon s Graceland 10 Things You Didn t Know Rolling Stone Richard Buskin September 2008 Paul Simon You Can Call Me Al Classic Tracks Sound on Sound Retrieved November 21 2014 a b Stephen Holden August 24 1986 Paul Simon Brings Home the Music of Black South Africa The New York Times Retrieved November 22 2014 Ethan Zuckerman November 29 2014 The internet is not enough Paul Simon s Graceland Malcolm Gladwell and the importance of real connections Salon Retrieved February 4 2015 Complete National Recording Registry Listing Library of Congress Retrieved May 16 2020 Robin Denselow April 19 2012 Paul Simon s Graceland the acclaim and the outrage The Guardian Retrieved November 21 2014 a b Jones Lucy May 31 2012 Should Paul Simon have defied a UN boycott to make Graceland in South Africa under apartheid telegraph co uk Archived from the original on June 1 2012 Retrieved September 28 2013 Denselow Robin March 16 2012 Paul Simon brings Graceland back to London 25 years after apartheid boycott row theguardian com Retrieved September 28 2013 100 Best Albums of the Eighties Paul Simon Graceland rollingstone com November 16 1989 Retrieved September 28 2013 Eliot 2010 p 190 sfn error no target CITEREFEliot2010 help Eliot 2010 p 195 sfn error no target CITEREFEliot2010 help written on the subway wall little star ep full Official Chart History Official Charts Company Officialcharts com Retrieved March 24 2022 Written on the Subway Wall Dion Music Video MTV January 1 1989 Archived from the original on August 21 2014 Retrieved August 20 2014 Fisher Carrie September 8 2009 Wishful Drinking ISBN 9781439153710 Retrieved July 15 2011 via Google Books something so right full Official Chart History Official Charts Company www officialcharts com Retrieved January 18 2023 whizzo ca whizzo ca Archived from the original on September 24 2010 Retrieved October 15 2011 Bob Dylan and Paul Simon A mismatch made in heaven by Seth Rogovoy Berkshireweb com Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 Paul Simon News on Yahoo Music Yahoo Music July 31 2004 Archived from the original on April 4 2005 Retrieved July 15 2011 Lola Ogunnaike March 4 2004 Sex Drugs and Ego A Music Mogul s Swath of Destruction A Deposed President of CBS Records Chronicles His Debauchery and Detox The New York Times Retrieved October 27 2015 Public Affairs Office July 2 2007 Paul Simon To Be Awarded First Annual Gershwin Prize for Popular Song by Library of Congress Library of Congress Retrieved March 2 2007 Public Affairs Office April 23 2007 Star Studded Lineup Confirmed for Library of Congress Concert Honoring Gershwin Prize Recipient Paul Simon Library of Congress Retrieved July 2 2007 Lorentzen Amy Simon campaigns in Iowa for Dodd Associated Press news article as printed in The Advocate of Stamford Connecticut with the words Simon who lives in New Canaan added by editors at The Advocate The words are not found in other versions of the article printed elsewhere July 7 2007 The 25th Anniversary Rock amp Roll Hall of Fame Concerts 4CD Amazon Retrieved November 25 2011 McCusker John The sun shined at New Orleans Jazz Fest even if Simon and Garfunkel s harmonies didn t The Times Picayune NOLA com Archived from the original on April 28 2010 Retrieved July 15 2011 Boilen Bob November 16 2010 Premiere New Music From Paul Simon All Songs Considered Blog NPR Retrieved July 15 2011 Includes complete recording of Getting Ready for Christmas Day Oldweirdamerica wordpress com November 6 2010 Retrieved July 15 2011 The Colbert Report Amy Sedaris Paul Simon Comedy Central December 16 2010 Retrieved December 6 2021 Paul Simon Surprise Oprah with a Special Performance Video Oprah com September 13 2010 Retrieved December 6 2021 Simon Paul October 27 2010 Book Review Finishing The Hat By Stephen Sondheim The New York Times Paul Simon catalog and track list Concordmusicgroup com April 12 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 Paul Simon Concert Tour Starts April 15th The Official Paul Simon Site Paulsimon com April 14 2011 Retrieved June 5 2012 Shanahan Mark Goldstein Beth February 26 2012 Leonard Cohen and Chuck Berry celebrated at the JFK Library The Boston Globe Archived from the original on February 29 2012 Retrieved March 1 2012 Paul Simon s Graceland official website Retrieved February 9 2013 Paul Simon looks back on the anniversary of the amazing Graceland Retrieved February 9 2013 Paddock Barry Marcius Chelsia Rose Siemaszko Corky December 19 2012 Paul Simon sings at funeral of Sandy Hook heroine teacher Victoria Leigh Soto as Newtown lays to rest another hero school staffer and four slain students Daily News New York Retrieved December 19 2012 Simon sang The Sound of Silence the favorite song of Soto who was the teacher who shielded students from Adam Lanza s bullets Paul Simon Surprise Guest at Sting s Atlantic City Concert June 26 2013 Retrieved June 26 2013 Graff Gary February 10 2014 Paul Simon and Sting Q amp A Tour Mates on Shared Music DNA and Future Writing Billboard Retrieved December 6 2021 Sting amp Paul Simon On Stage Together Second amp Final Perth Show Added Sting com July 10 2014 Retrieved November 24 2014 Sting amp Paul Simon On Stage Together Final New Zealand Show Confirmed Sting com August 25 2014 Retrieved November 24 2014 Belfast date added for Paul Simon amp Sting On stage together 2015 European toue PaulSimon com November 13 2014 Retrieved November 24 2014 Kreps Daniel September 12 2015 Watch Stephen Colbert Paul Simon Perform as Troubled Waters Rolling Stone Retrieved December 6 2021 Grow Kory November 12 2015 Hear Dion Paul Simon Duet on Heartfelt New York Is My Home Rolling Stone Retrieved February 28 2016 Greene Andy February 22 2016 Paul Simon Plots Expansive Tour Ahead of New Album Stranger to Stranger Rolling Stone Retrieved December 6 2021 Greene Andy April 7 2016 Inside Paul Simon s Genre Bending New Album Stranger to Stranger Rolling Stone Retrieved December 6 2021 Brandle Lars June 30 2016 Paul Simon Hints at Retirement I Am Going to See What Happens If I let Go Billboard Retrieved December 6 2021 Dwyer Jim June 28 2016 Could This Be the End of Paul Simon s Rhymin The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 21 2016 Johnson Ted July 25 2016 Paul Simon Demi Lovato to Perform on Opening Night of Democratic Convention Retrieved July 26 2016 Paul Simon amp Stephen Colbert update The 59th Street Bridge Song Feelin Groovy for 2017 ABC Radio May 25 2017 Archived from the original on May 27 2017 Retrieved May 25 2017 Statement from Paul Simon paulsimon com February 5 2018 Retrieved February 5 2018 Simon Without Garfunkel Says Goodbye Next Avenue February 16 2018 Retrieved March 19 2018 Kreps Daniel July 12 2018 Paul Simon Reworks Old Favorites on New Album In the Blue Light Rolling Stone Retrieved July 12 2018 Paul Simon To Return to Stage for August s Outside Lands Fest Music News Net Greatest of the Great 2020 Songs Dion with Paul Simon Song for Sam Cooke Here In America Americansongwriter com November 22 2020 Retrieved March 18 2022 Paul Simon Sells Song Catalog to Sony Music Publishing Billboard Retrieved December 6 2021 Interview Paul Simon Discusses Songwriter And Songwriting American Songwriter Archived from the original on October 22 2012 Retrieved June 1 2012 Brantley Ben August 18 2010 Capeman Outdoors Starring the City The New York Times Retrieved November 24 2014 Greene Andy October 7 2014 Flashback Paul Simon Forgets Art Garfunkel on SNL Rolling Stone Retrieved June 29 2022 Former Sen Paul Simon Dies Archived August 31 2006 at the Wayback Machine Fox News Channel Kreps Daniel October 14 2018 Paul Simon Performs Can t Run But Bridge Over Troubled Water for SNL Send Off Rolling Stone Retrieved June 29 2022 3 Doors Down Lil Jon EMI Top BMI Pop Awards Paul Simon Honored as Icon bmi com May 17 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Tyrangiel Josh May 8 2006 The 2006 Time 100 Paul Simon Time Retrieved October 6 2017 Paul Simon Polar Music Prize Polar Music Prize Retrieved January 3 2014 Jackson Laura Paul Simon The Definitive Biography Citadel Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 8065 2539 6 p 65 Jackson Laura Paul Simon The Definitive Biography p 58 Jackson Laura Paul Simon The Definitive Biography p 95 Scoppa Bud March 29 2004 The Paul Simon Songbook Rolling Stone Retrieved May 17 2022 a b The Paul Simon biography paul simon info Retrieved March 19 2018 a b Weller Sheila November 12 2019 When Carrie Fisher Hung with the SNL Crowd Retrieved November 13 2019 Miller Michael April 13 2012 Carrie Fisher Self acceptance run wild Toledo Free Press Archived from the original on October 22 2012 Retrieved May 16 2012 Celebrity daddies 2010 Today MSNBC January 3 2011 Archived from the original on October 2 2012 The Guitar Study Center New York September 17 1973 Guitar Study Center Contract Guarantees Union s Health Plan Allegro magazine Volume CII No November 11 2002 Local 802 American Federation of Musicians VIDEO Let s go Islanders chant breaks out as Billy Joel closes out Nassau Coliseum TheScore com August 5 2015 Kate Upton And Paul Simon Were Much More Behaved At The New York Knicks Game uproxx com January 10 2014 Songs Open Doors to the Inner Sanctum The New York Times September 21 2015 at Theacf com Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved July 15 2011 CHF The Children s Health Fund Childrenshealthfund org Retrieved July 15 2011 Mobile health units bring medical care to homeless Lubbockonline com Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved July 15 2011 Eltman Frank May 26 2012 Scientist Evolution debate will soon be history Yahoo News Retrieved June 5 2012 Nastia Voynovskaya Toro y Moi Shows Oakland Love Paul Simon Dazzles Outside Lands Day 3 Highlights KQED Retrieved August 12 2019 Simon amp Garfunkel Simon amp Garfunkel Songs Albums Reviews Bio amp More AllMusic Retrieved March 22 2022 Paul Simon Albums and Discography AllMusic October 13 1941 Retrieved March 22 2022 Paul Simon Best Songs List Top New amp Old AllMusic October 13 1941 Retrieved March 22 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Paul Simon Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Simon Official website Paul Simon at IMDb Paul Simon 2013 Richard Ellmann Lectures Videos YouTube September 2013 Williams Kimber September 25 2013 Songwriter Paul Simon brings a new verse to the Ellmann Lectures Emory University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Simon amp oldid 1149085470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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