Yes.i love their work. voted the![]()
Art wrote it - which might be why you thought it was a cover, Paul wrote 90% of their hits.My favorite S&G song could well be whichever one I happen to be listening to, but I came into this thread looking for Scarborough Fair as a selection so voted 'other'. Actually don't believe they even wrote that one (?)
Americans used to pretend to be more pretentious.Chose "Homeward Bound" but they had a ton of songs I like. Simon's writing could be a little (ok, a lot) pretentious & English-Lit-cute, but the singing makes up for it on their best records.
Americans used to pretend to be more pretentious.Chose "Homeward Bound" but they had a ton of songs I like. Simon's writing could be a little (ok, a lot) pretentious & English-Lit-cute, but the singing makes up for it on their best records.
at Simon's writing being pretentious. Don't let Uruk ever hear Shostakovich, prog, or God forbid, Miles. Not everything has to be the Ramones playing three chords and singing about jerking off. Which is great and all, but there are other things people can do creatively.I think Simon's written a lot of perfect songs. With Art and solo. But with Art I think even among the perfect songs that Bridge Over Troubled Water and The Boxer stand out. They rank up with the best of any genre. It's a dead heat with those two. And if you've never seen the version of the Boxer that opened the first SNL after 9/11, you should check it out.Scarborough Fair is an old English ballad. Not sure if it's just really old or Middle Ages old, but it goes back a long way.Art wrote it - which might be why you thought it was a cover, Paul wrote 90% of their hits.My favorite S&G song could well be whichever one I happen to be listening to, but I came into this thread looking for Scarborough Fair as a selection so voted 'other'. Actually don't believe they even wrote that one (?)
Thanks, indeed it is (good wiki on the evolution). My silly mp3/phone said it was Art's work.http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarborough_Fair_(ballad)Scarborough Fair is an old English ballad. Not sure if it's just really old or Middle Ages old, but it goes back a long way.Art wrote it - which might be why you thought it was a cover, Paul wrote 90% of their hits.My favorite S&G song could well be whichever one I happen to be listening to, but I came into this thread looking for Scarborough Fair as a selection so voted 'other'. Actually don't believe they even wrote that one (?)
:greatposting: and it's even better with the music"And the train is gone suddenlyOn wheels spinning silentlyLike a gently tapping litanyAnd he hold his crayon rosaryTighter in his grasp"For me it's "other" - a toss up between this and "The Dangling Conversation"But they've got so many great songs that you could easily argue a dozen others that didn't make the poll list. Simon & Garfunkel getsPoem on the underground wall, def. my favorite. "And his heart is laughing, screaming, poundingThe poem across the tracks reboundingShadowed by the exit lightHis legs take their ascending flightTo seek the breast of darkness and be suckled by the night."
This was the song I chose for my 8th grade lyrical poetry project. Amazing song. And immediately followed by Bookends makes it even better.Old Friends
Probably this. Or America. Or the Boxer. Or Bridge. Or....The Only Living Boy in New York
That documentary was Songs of America.Love me some S&G. There's a pretty good documentary I've seen a couple times on them back in the day, including the making of Bridge OTW and the first time they sang it live before it was released. I couldn't imagine sitting in the crowd and hearing that. One of the most powerful vocal performances ever by AG on that song. To answer the question, if I had to choose, probably America.
Surprised it was not listed. But I had to go with Bridge.Funny when I saw this thread again the first song that started playing in my mind was Scarborough Fair but it really is impossible to pick a favorite.