Paul Simon: A Life

Hardcover
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Author: Marc Eliot

ISBN-10: 0470433639

ISBN-13: 9780470433638

Category: Pop, Rock, & Soul Musicians - Biography

The definitive biography of legendary singer-songwriter Paul Simon\ In this definitive biography, Paul Simon's glamorous and brilliant life is set against the backdrop of five decades of rock 'n' roll history. New York Times bestselling biographer Marc Eliot draws on extensive research and original interviews to pull back the curtain on one of the world's modern musical masters and cultural icons and shares:\ \ How a shoe store stockboy rose to the top of the music industry\ How young Paul...

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The definitive biography of legendary singer-songwriter Paul SimonIn this definitive biography, Paul Simon's glamorous and brilliant life is set against the backdrop of five decades of rock 'n' roll history. New York Times bestselling biographer Marc Eliot draws on extensive research and original interviews to pull back the curtain on one of the world's modern musical masters and cultural icons and shares:How a shoe store stockboy rose to the top of the music industryHow young Paul Simon struggled to emerge from the powerful shadow of his idol, Bob DylanStories from Paul's inner circle about the creatively brilliant but often troubled partnership with Art GarfunkelThe first and best chronicle of Paul's early, influential years in London, prior to "The Sound of Silence"Paul's women, his marriages, his girfriends, his difficult divorceHow Paul pushed rock 'n' roll forward by going back to his roots, finding inspiration and redemption in Africa, and creating his masterpiece, GracelandThe real story of the stormy saga of The CapemanTales of Paul's rock 'n' roll road, from the '50s to the present Publishers Weekly "If Dylan was the undisputed poet of the sixties, Paul was its resident diarist" offers Eliot (American Rebel), biographer of cultural icons, as he turns his spotlight on Simon. While younger audiences may know him mostly as a solo artist, fans of Simon & Garfunkel will appreciate the attention Eliot gives to the early years. A child of musicians, Simon began singing with Garfunkel as a young man; the two have performed together, off and on, for most of their lives, and Eliot details their numerous songs, concerts, and breakups while never neglecting Simon's private life. Readers will lean about the music industry, the inspiration behind many of Simon's songs, and his musical friends and rivals as Eliot follows Simon from schoolboy to musical innovator. From efforts that came before "The Sounds of Silence" to the failed stage production of The Capeman and beyond, Eliot almost obsessively chronicles aspects of every song with prose that is smooth and lively, if at times slipping toward purple. Fans of any era of Simon's long career will appreciate the attention to detail. (Oct.)

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Acknowledgments. Introduction. Part One. Tom & Jerry. Chapter One. Two Princes From Queens. Chapter Two. Paul’s Mystic Journey. Chapter Three. “Kathy’s Song”. Chapter Four. Part Two. “Simon & Garfunkel”. Chapter Five. The Sound of Simon. Chapter Six. A Gathering of the Tribes. Chapter Seven. The Graduate. Chapter Eight. A Time It Was. Part Three. “Simon Without Garfunkel”. Chapter Nine. So Lonf Frank Lloyd Wright. Chapter Ten. On Top And Alone. Chapter Eleven. Still Crazy. Chapter Twelve. Where Have You Gone, Mr. Simon? Chapter Thirteen. The Prince and the Princess and the Pony. Chapter Fourteen. Saturday in the Park with Paul and Artie…And Carrie. Part Four. Going to Graceland. Chapter Fifteen. Redemption’s First Finale. Chapter Sixteen. Saintly Rhythms. Chapter Seventeen. New Bohemian. Chapter Eighteen. The Singing Capeman. Part Five. Making Plans for the Past with Simon and Garfunkel and Joe. Chapter Nineteen. Ladies and Gentlemen, Simon And Garfunkel. Appendix: Discography. Notes. References. Index.

\ Publishers Weekly"If Dylan was the undisputed poet of the sixties, Paul was its resident diarist" offers Eliot (American Rebel), biographer of cultural icons, as he turns his spotlight on Simon. While younger audiences may know him mostly as a solo artist, fans of Simon & Garfunkel will appreciate the attention Eliot gives to the early years. A child of musicians, Simon began singing with Garfunkel as a young man; the two have performed together, off and on, for most of their lives, and Eliot details their numerous songs, concerts, and breakups while never neglecting Simon's private life. Readers will lean about the music industry, the inspiration behind many of Simon's songs, and his musical friends and rivals as Eliot follows Simon from schoolboy to musical innovator. From efforts that came before "The Sounds of Silence" to the failed stage production of The Capeman and beyond, Eliot almost obsessively chronicles aspects of every song with prose that is smooth and lively, if at times slipping toward purple. Fans of any era of Simon's long career will appreciate the attention to detail. (Oct.)\ \ \ \ \ From the Publisher"If Dylan was the undisputed poet of the sixties, Paul was its resident diarist" offers Eliot (American Rebel), biographer of cultural icons, as he turns his spotlight on Simon. While younger audiences may know him mostly as a solo artist, fans of Simon & Garfunkel will appreciate the attention Eliot gives to the early years. A child of musicians, Simon began singing with Garfunkel as a young man; the two have performed together, off and on, for most of their lives, and Eliot details their numerous songs, concerts, and breakups while never neglecting Simon's private life. Readers will lean about the music industry, the inspiration behind many of Simon's songs, and his musical friends and rivals as Eliot follows Simon from schoolboy to musical innovator. From efforts that came before "The Sounds of Silence" to the failed stage production of The Capeman and beyond, Eliot almost obsessively chronicles aspects of every song with prose that is smooth and lively, if at times slipping toward purple. Fans of any era of Simon's long career will appreciate the attention to detail. (Publishers Weekly, November 8, 2010)\ "Were Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel lovers? No, but Marc Eliot's serviceable biography of the duo's more prolific, more successful, shorter half gets kudos for raising that question about two folk superstars who loved the sound of bickering more than the sound of silence.\ "'Several of the songs on [the album "Bridge Over Troubled Water"] explicitly point the accusatory finger of abandonment at Artie,' writes Eliot, who has also published books about the Eagles and Bruce Springsteen. 'To some, the finished album had a whiff of homoeroticism about it, as much of it seemed to be about the romantic breakup of a couple.' But if Garfunkel spent too much time away from music dabbling in film, perhaps it was only because Simon had been trying to go solo since at least 1957, when as teenagers the pair scored the hit 'Hey Schoolgirl' under the pseudonyms 'Tom & Jerry.'\ "Simon, of course, got the last laugh, composing and writing the quintuple-platinum masterpiece 'Graceland' (1986) not long after Garfunkel's acting career had gone from 'Catch-22' to B-movies like 'Bad Timing: A Sensual Obsession.'\ "Eliot is less than convincing when he criticizes 'the sociopolitically correct media lions forever waiting for celebrities at the arrival gates of every politically incorrect airport' who dared question Simon's decision to write 'Graceland' in apartheid South Africa. But the author does pin down the source of his subject's notorious crankiness: 'Paul was, and always would be, self-conscious about his height.' Maybe all it takes to sell 5 million records is a robust Napoleon complex and a tall partner." (Washington Post Review)\ If Dylan was the undisputed poet of the sixties, Paul was its resident diarist" offers Eliot (American Rebel), biographer of cultural icons, as he turns his spotlight on Simon. While younger audiences may know him mostly as a solo artist, fans of Simon & Garfunkel will appreciate the attention Eliot gives to the early years. A child of musicians, Simon began singing with Garfunkel as a young man; the two have performed together, off and on, for most of their lives, and Eliot details their numerous songs, concerts, and breakups while never neglecting Simon's private life. Readers will lean about the music industry, the inspiration behind many of Simon's songs, and his musical friends and rivals as Eliot follows Simon from schoolboy to musical innovator. From efforts that came before "The Sounds of Silence" to the failed stage production of The Capeman and beyond, Eliot almost obsessively chronicles aspects of every song with prose that is smooth and lively, if at times slipping toward purple. Fans of any era of Simon's long career will appreciate the attention to detail. (Publishers Weekly Review, October 2010)"\ \ \ \ Library JournalIn his new biography of Paul Simon, Eliot (To the Limit: The Untold Story of the Eagles) relies on secondary sources for his information and, apart from filling in the last decade, doesn't break significant ground that wasn't covered in biographies by Patrick Humphies and Laura Jackson or Joseph Morella and Patricia Barey's Simon and Garfunkel, all of which are cited in Eliot's extensive bibliography. Eliot is heavy on detail but gets many of them wrong. For example, "What a Wonderful World" was not a remake of the Louis Armstrong song but the Sam Cooke tune, and it was Rigo Star who played guitar on "Rhythm of the Saints," not Beatle drummer Ringo Starr. While Eliot covers the high points of both Simon's professional output and his personal relationships, the reader feels the distance between author and subject.Verdict Nearing 70, Simon has been making music since the Fifties, and plans are in the works for an upcoming tour with erstwhile partner Art Garfunkel. We've neither heard the last of him nor yet seen the definitive biography.—Bill Baars, Lake Oswego P.L., OR\ \