Wow! Where did this week go??? I can’t believe it’s the last day of Simon & Garfunkel Week already. Still so many I had hoped to play! As I did on the final day of Van Morrison Week, I will play a few more today with just a snippet of trivia and sans lyrics so that you can get a final burst of enjoyment from the duo and their music.
♫ Homeward Bound ♫
Paul Simon lived in Brentwood, Essex, England when he wrote this song. When traveling back from Wigan, where he was playing, he got stuck at the train station and wrote this. The song has a double meaning: literally, wanting for a ticket home to Brentwood, but on the other hand, yearning to go to his home in the US. Says Simon …
“That was written in Liverpool when I was traveling. What I like about that is that it has a very clear memory of Liverpool station and the streets of Liverpool and the club I played at and me at age 22. It’s like a snapshot, a photograph of a long time ago. I like that about it but I don’t like the song that much. First of all, it’s not an original title. That’s one of the main problems with it. It’s been around forever. No, the early songs I can’t say I really like them. But there’s something naive and sweet-natured and I must say I like that about it. They’re not angry. And that means that I wasn’t angry or unhappy. And that’s my memory of that time: it was just about idyllic. It was just the best time of my life, I think, up until recently, these last five years or so, six years… This has been the best time of my life. But before that, I would say that that was.”
♫ The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin’ Groovy) ♫
The 59th Street bridge (officially the Queensboro Bridge), goes over the East River in New York City, connecting Queens to Manhattan. Simon & Garfunkel are from New York, which has a very hectic pace. In this song they remind us to slow down and appreciate the simple pleasures in life, like cobblestones and flowers.
When he performed at Tufts University in 1966, Simon said of this song:
“I spent most of the year 1965 living in England, and at the end of that year in December, I came back to the United States, ‘The Sound Of Silence’ had become a big hit, and I had to make this adjustment from being relatively unknown in England to being semi-famous here, and I didn’t really swing with it. It was a very difficult scene to make, and I was writing very depressed-type songs until around June of last year. I started to swing out of it, I was getting into a good mood, and I remember coming home in the morning about 6 o’clock over the 59th Street Bridge in New York, and it was such a groovy day really, a good one, and it was one of those times when you know you won’t be tired for about an hour, a sort of a good hanging time, so I started to write a song that later became the 59th Street Bridge Song or Feelin’ Groovy.”
♫ I Am A Rock ♫
I Am a Rock is a song written by Paul Simon. It was first performed by Simon alone as the opening track on his album The Paul Simon Songbook which he originally recorded and released in August 1965, only in the United Kingdom. Simon & Garfunkel re-recorded it on December 14, 1965, and included as the final track on their album Sounds of Silence, which they released on January 17, 1966. It was released as a single in 1966, and subsequently included as the B-side of the 1971 A-side reissue of The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin’ Groovy). Confused yet?
♫ El Condor Pasa (If I Could) ♫
This song started out as an Andean folk melody that Paul Simon came across in 1969 when he played a week-long engagement at a theater in Paris along with the South American group Los Incas, who played an instrumental version of the song called Paso Del Condor. Said Simon: “I used to hang around every night to hear them play that. I loved it and I would play it all the time, and then I thought, Let’s put words to it.”
The Peruvian songwriter Daniel Robles recorded this song in 1913, and copyrighted it in the United States in 1933 during his travels in America. When Simon recorded it with his added lyrics, he thought it was a traditional song, as that’s what Los Incas told him. When Robles’ son filed a lawsuit, Simon had to give Robles a composer credit on the song, with his estate getting those royalties.
♫ Cecilia ♫
Not too much should be read into the lyrics of this song. As Paul Simon explained in an interview with Rolling Stone: “Every day I’d come back from the studio, working on whatever we were working on, and I’d play this pounding thing. So then I said, ‘Let’s make a record out of that.’ So we copied it over and extended it double the amount, so now we have three minutes of track, and the track is great. So now I pick up the guitar and I start to go, ‘Well, this will be like the guitar part’ – dung chicka dung chicka dung, and lyrics were virtually the first lines I said: ‘You’re breakin’ my heart, I’m down on my knees.’ They’re not lines at all, but it was right for that song, and I like that. It was like a little piece of magical fluff, but it works.”
And that’s it for Simon & Garfunkel Week! I hope you all enjoyed it as much as I did!
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I think ‘Homeward Bound’ was their best and most complete song. It can resonate with anyone.
Best wishes, Pete.
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One of my favourites, but I think “Bridge Over Troubled Water” is still my #1. Maybe …
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What a wonderful way to end! Had forgotten about the song Cecilia. It is a fun, fluff song. Homeward Bound is another favorite from these. 🙂
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I’m glad you enjoyed S&G Week, dear friend! I never cared that much for “Cecilia”, but it is one that tends to get stuck in my head! 🤣
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Yes, it’s an earworm!
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This has been a great musical week here, Jill-thank you!
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I’m so glad you’ve enjoyed it!!!
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🥁🥁🥁
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Jill, you went out with a bang. Great selections. Keith
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Awww … thank you so much, Keith!!! I’m glad you enjoyed S&G Week!!!
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This has been a lovely week, with some wonderful songs. Thank you!
Not that I needed it, as I know the song very well, but Homeward Bound wasn’t available here. A little ironic, given that it was written here about his experience in our fair land!
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That was me! It didn’t give me an option to sign in before posting it!
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I was pretty sure it was you. WP is at their games again … sigh.
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It was odd. I finished typing the comment and before I could be given the sign-in link it was gone!
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That’s happened to me before. And a few times, I’ve re-typed the comment, only to have WP tell me “You’ve already said that!” 🙄
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I’ve had that one too, but in my case I rarely remember the exact words so the other blog ends up with two nearly identical comments 🤣
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If mine are of any length at all, I ‘copy’ before even trying to post … just in case. Not, mind you, that I don’t trust WordPress! 🤣
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I’m so glad you have enjoyed S&G Week!!! So did I!!!
Awwww … I’m sorry, Clive … but hopefully you can find it elsewhere, or just sing it to yourself!
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really wonderful music!
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Thank you!!!
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I know I’n not always supportive of your music choices but this has been inspired and inspiring. Great memories thank you. Xxxx
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I’m glad you enjoyed it! Actually, for the most part you do like much of my music, and I don’t expect us to always like the exact same things. Cwtch
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WOW!!! Thank you, Richard … awesome fireworks!
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Hey, Jill, thanks for playing some of my suggestions. But since you left this one out I thought I would add it, because it was such a happy tune. There is one line in it I do not like, but I will excuse it because Paul may have had an alternate meaning for the word. Elephants are not silent, but maybe they don’t speak with their mouths. I truly don’t know, but I hope that is what he means…
https://youtu.be/WL0W-YHDci8?feature=shared
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Awwww … sorry, rg … I don’t recall you requesting “At the Zoo”, else I would have played it instead of Cecilia! Glad you mostly enjoyed S&G Week, though!
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It was all good, just some better than others for me.
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Also many thanks from me. It’s always a pleasure getting introduced to songs from the past, Jill! I hope you had a wonderful start of the pre-festive time! Best wishes, Michael
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I’m really glad you enjoyed Simon & Garfunkel Week and the music, dear friend! Shhhhhh … do not mention the holidays … I’m trying to ignore the whole thing!!! xx
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Pingback: ♫ Simon & Garfunkel Week Grand Finale ♫ | Filosofa’s Word | Ned Hamson's Second Line View of the News
Thanks, Ned!!!
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Thanks so much for your series of musical celebrations. BTW, Simon and Garfunkel’s Greatest Hits was the very first LP I ever bought with my hard earned $5 at the time… every song a revelation to working class teenager Frank trying to figure things out.
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I’m so glad you’ve been enjoying it, Frank! Wow … $5 … the good ol’ days!
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Music is always a soothing way to enjoy a Sunday. This week just flew by and Christmas Eve in three weeks! 🙏
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Shhhhhhhh … don’t remind me!!!
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