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Duncan (Paul Simon song)

"Duncan"
Duncan cover.jpeg
Single by Paul Simon
from the album Paul Simon
B-side "Run That Body Down"
Released July 1972
Format 7"
Recorded 1971
Genre
Length 4:34
Label Columbia
Songwriter(s) Paul Simon
Producer(s)
Paul Simon singles chronology
"Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard"
(1972)
"Duncan"
(1972)
"Kodachrome"
(1973)
"Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard"
(1972)
"Duncan"
(1972)
"Kodachrome"
(1973)

"Duncan" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Paul Simon. It was the third and final single from his second self-titled studio album (1972), released on Columbia Records. The song was also released as a single in July 1972 as "Duncan" b/w "Run That Body Down".

A ballad in E-minor, "Duncan" tells the story of Lincoln Duncan, a fisherman's son. An inability to fall asleep in a cheap motel due to the loud sex that a couple is having next door sends Duncan off on a long reverie. He recalls his decision to leave "the boredom and the chowder" of his hometown in the Canadian Maritime Provinces and head towards New England. He recalls running out of money, losing his confidence and faith in himself, and gaining them back after losing his virginity to a young female street preacher – "just like a dog I was befriended". In the last stanza he is lying on the ground at night playing his guitar and thanking God for his fingers. Between the stanzas, the song features instrumental interludes, played on 2 flutes, by Los Incas, an Andean group which had previously collaborated with Simon & Garfunkel on "El Condor Pasa (If I Could)" in 1970.

"Duncan" peaked at #52 on the Billboard Pop Singles chart in 1972.

A concert rendition featuring Urubamba performing the interludes was included on the 1974 album Paul Simon in Concert: Live Rhymin'. It gained radio airplay itself, and has gone on to become a semi-regular on satellite radio's Deep Tracks station. Simon has included the song in his set lists for some subsequent tours as well.

A demo version of the song appears as a bonus on the 2004 CD rerelease of the album. This version is shorter and faster, and has very different lyrics, yet displays the same melancholy tone as the released version.

The song was used in the 2006 film 10 Items or Less.


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