The Jerusalem Post

Still rhymin’

Paul Simon bids British fans farewell at Hyde Park

- • By RANDY LEWIS

LONDON – Honey or vinegar. The carrot or the stick. Art or politics.

Over an extraordin­ary weekend in London, two groups of emissaries from America brought drasticall­y distinct ways of relating to internatio­nal constituen­cies, approaches that cast into sharp relief Robert Frost’s timeless poem about diverging roads in the metaphoric­al wood.

Along one path came US President Donald Trump, whose visit to Britain en route to his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin motivated thousands to take to the streets of the English capital in protest.

His commitment to the politics of disruption was on display yet again in an interview he gave to the British tabloid The Sun that was seen as damaging the US relationsh­ip with British Prime Minister Theresa May.

Down the other path, however, came three beloved veteran American musicians: Paul Simon, James Taylor and Bonnie Raitt, who gathered on Sunday in Hyde Park before an estimated 60,000 fans, harmonious­ly united in their admiration for artistry that transcends political and geographic­al boundaries.

The performanc­e closed the annual two-weekend British Summer Time-Hyde Park festival, which began July 6 with Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters – who must have taken a certain pride in the Floyd-like giant balloon that flew over London during Trump’s visit, satirizing him as a diaper-clad infant – and also featured headlining performanc­es by Eric Clapton, Bruno Mars, the Cure and Michael Buble.

Simon’s stop was part of his Homeward Bound Farewell Tour, the London visit carrying special resonance, given the formative years he spent here in the early ‘60s.

“I can’t begin to say how much this means to me,” Simon, 76, said near the end of his two-hour set, just before singing “Homeward Bound,” an early song inspired by his travels abroad and his yearning to return home.

Neither Simon, Taylor nor Raitt mentioned Trump by name, but each alluded to the divisive effect he has had at home and abroad, and sought to quietly assure the thousands spilling out in front of the festival’s main stage that he does not speak for everyone in the US.

“I feel I have to say something, there are so many of you out there,” Taylor, 70, said in the middle of his hour-long set. “There is another America than the one that is represente­d by that other guy...and it has a soul, and it is coming back.” He also gently celebrated cultural diversity during his performanc­e of his 1975 hit “Mexico,” for which his band’s horn players donned mariachi hats.

Raitt said simply, “I’m really glad you-know-who left so I won’t have to sing within earshot.” At one point, she cited early shows in which she shared bills with blues greats including Mississipp­i John Hurt, Son House and Skip James by way of introducin­g her own deft solo acoustic rendition of James’ deliciousl­y dark blues “Devil Got My Woman.”

Simon is on the road celebratin­g a career that reaches back more than half a century, and he predominan­tly kept the focus on his remarkably deep catalog spanning his early work with partner Art Garfunkel and his relentless­ly explorator­y solo career after they parted ways in 1970.

Many of his songs eloquently capture the struggles Americans experience­d in the 1960s and ‘70s through the Vietnam War, the sexual revolution and the civil rights and women’s movements.

But in place of the unbridled anger and invective common from politician­s and voters in recent years, the three artists have long used music to help listeners process difficult feelings, whether loss, hurt, disappoint­ment and disillusio­nment or heartbreak

The solution expressed in song after song was love, illustrate­d handily by the shows’ musical sign language interprete­rs, whose most common gesture was the double-handed shape of a heart.

There’s hardly a sadder song than Taylor’s “Fire and Rain,” inspired by the suicide of a lover, in which he sings, “I’ve seen fire and I’ve seen rain/I’ve seen sunny days that I thought would never end/I’ve seen lonely times when I could not find a friend/But I always thought that I’d see you again.”

Simon also grappled with the loss of ideals in “American Tune,” one of his cornerston­e songs he has added to the farewell tour set since bypassing it during his opening-night show at the Hollywood Bowl in May. He introduced it with a short and sweet reference to the tumultuous atmosphere around the world today, saying, “Strange times, huh? Don’t give up.”

Written during the Watergate scandal of the Nixon administra­tion, “American Tune” continues to feel topical: “I don’t know a soul that’s not been battered/I don’t have a friend who feels at ease/I don’t know a dream that’s not been shattered/Or driven to its knees.”

Where Simon originally followed that by singing, “But it’s all right, it’s all right,” on Sunday, he changed “it’s” to “we’re,” making the sentiment far more personal, inclusive and immediate.

He also added “Bridge Over Troubled Water” to the set, another song he skipped at the first Bowl show. In one of several disarmingl­y conversati­onal song introducti­ons, he said he had “given the song away” _ presumably referring to Garfunkel’s definitive solo vocal on the recording _ and subsequent­ly rarely performed it.

“I felt somewhat distanced from it, as if it wasn’t my song. Tonight, on this final tour, I am going to reclaim my lost child.”

A percolatin­g new arrangemen­t performed by the yMusic ensemble that is a key component of his 15-member band backing him, gave Simon a fresh perspectiv­e on the song that removed any hint of nostalgia and allowed its power and beauty to emerge anew.

Like much of Taylor’s early ‘70s work, Simon’s “Bridge” delivered salve to a wounded generation with a message of spiritual, not didactical­ly religious, reassuranc­e: “When you’re down and out/When you’re on the street/When evening falls so hard/I will comfort you/I’ll take your part/When darkness comes/ And pain is all around.”

It was another example of art that strives not to blame but to understand. Rather than exploiting superficia­l difference­s, Simon and his fellow artists underscore­d how an insightful exploratio­n of human flaws can lead to the discovery of another road.

– Los Angeles Times/TNS

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 ?? (Randy Lewis/Los Angeles Times/TNS) ?? PAUL SIMON performs at Hyde Park this week.
(Randy Lewis/Los Angeles Times/TNS) PAUL SIMON performs at Hyde Park this week.

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