Paul Simon | ||||
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Studio album by Paul Simon | ||||
Released | January 24, 1972 | |||
Recorded | January to March 1971 at CBS Studios, San Francisco and NYC, Western Recorders, Los Angeles, Dynamic Sound Studios, Kingston and CBE Studios, Paris | |||
Genre | Pop, Folk rock | |||
Length | 34:03 | |||
Label | Columbia, Warner Bros. | |||
Producer | Roy Halee, Paul Simon | |||
Paul Simon chronology | ||||
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Singles from Paul Simon | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Rolling Stone | (favorable) |
The Village Voice | A+ |
Paul Simon is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Paul Simon as a solo artist. It was released in January 1972, nearly two years after he split up with longtime musical partner Art Garfunkel. His first solo album was recorded in England in 1965 but remained unreleased in the U.S. (except for a brief period in 1969) until 1981, when it appeared in the 5-LP Collected Works boxed set. Originally released on Columbia Records, Paul Simon was then issued under the Warner Bros. label and is now back with Columbia through Sony. The album topped the charts in the United Kingdom, Japan and Norway and reached No. 4 on the U.S. Billboard Pop Albums. In 1986 it was certified platinum.
Simon taught songwriting classes at New York University during the summer of 1971. Among the students he taught were two of the Roche sisters, Maggie and Terre, and singer-songwriter Melissa Manchester who remembers that Simon was nervous, listened to the students' songs and offered suggestions and criticism, often dissecting the lyrics and drawing comparisons with his own work while offering insights into his own work and sources of inspiration.
Simon traveled to San Francisco to record some demos and began to work with different musical styles for a proposed solo album, including Latin music, jazz, blues and reggae with the song "Mother and Child Reunion", recorded in Kingston, Jamaica). Guest musicians on the record included Stephane Grappelli, Ron Carter, and Airto Moreira. The music reflects Simon's interest in world music.
Several songs on the album, such as "Run That Body Down" (in which both "Paul" and "Peg" are mentioned by name) and "Congratulations", make reference directly or indirectly to his rocky marriage to Peggy (née Harper), which ended in divorce in 1975. Other themes include drugs and adolescence.