The Hamilton Spectator

Simon re-records, reimagines and revisits musical oddities

- DAVID BAUDER

Weeks from the end of his farewell concert tour, Paul Simon has released a disc that feels like a valedictor­y itself.

The concept of “In the Blue Light” is intriguing, with Simon re-recording and reimaginin­g 10 songs he originally released between 1973 and 2011. None were hits; they’re songs he felt were overlooked as oddities, or that he didn’t get quite right the first time. While some of this material was obscure for good reason, most of the second looks reward listeners.

The revisits speak to the musical adventurou­sness that has marked Simon’s later years. Many of the originals were at least grounded in the folk-rock style he was primarily known for. Now Simon moves beyond: Wynton Marsalis’s trumpet replaces the acoustic guitar on “How the Heart Approaches What it Yearns,” and the 1970s electric piano gives way to Sullivan Fortner’s real thing on “Some Folks’ Lives Roll Easy.” The jauntiness of “One Man’s Ceiling Is Another Man’s Floor” is smoothed into a loping, jazz feel. With Dixieland jazz, Spanish-style guitar and orchestral arrangemen­ts, the music is worldly and complex. He’s not kicking down the cobbleston­es.

Simon rewrites some lyrics, some to subtly modernize. Most affecting is a rewritten conclusion to 2000’s “Love,” which is both more specific and more universal than the original.

Simon’s age (he’s 76) gives the material a grace not always present the first time. A song like “Some Folks’ Lives Roll Easy” now feels lived in, not observed by a young reporter.

“Darling Lorraine,” the fourth song revamped from 2000’s “You’re the One” disc, is the new album’s centrepiec­e, in large part because you can feel the tenderness, comedy and sadness more acutely through Simon’s weathered voice.

The idea here is so interestin­g that you’d love to see other artists try it, if only to know the overlooked songs that have stuck with them.

“In the Blue Light” is neither nostalgia nor a rescue mission. It’s a challengin­g new work.

 ??  ?? Paul Simon, “In the Blue Light” (Legacy)
Paul Simon, “In the Blue Light” (Legacy)

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