The Scotsman

Slip slidin’ away: Paul Simon says he’s ready to call time on touring

The singersong­writer tells Andrew Arthur about his new album of old tracks

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It’s hard to imagine one of the most celebrated singersong­writers in the history of pop music being starstruck.

As a flattered Paul Simon thanks me after I explain how surreal it feels to speak to him, he quickly blows that perception out of the water.

“Yeah, that is kind of a mind-blowing thing,” the 76-year-old acknowledg­es down the phone from his home in New York, where he is looking out across the Atlantic from the tip of Long Island.

“I had the same feeling when Artie and I performed with the Everly Brothers. We kept saying, ‘Can you believe it? The Everly Brothers are in our show!’ They were our childhood idols. It’s a funny feeling.”

He adds: “I just saw Don Everly when I played in Nashville. He came up and we sang Bye Bye Love together, which was kind of touching for me, you know?”

That song seems poignant as Simon prepares to close his farewell tour with a run of US shows this month. In February, he announced he would stop touring following his latest global jaunt, which took in London’s Hyde Park in July.

There’s a sense of relief in Simon’s voice as he explains his reasoning for hanging up his gigging hat.

“I keep trying to introduce a couple of new songs every time I play. I feel like I have to play the well-known songs because people come out and they want to hear them.

“The show I do is kind of locked into a certain repertoire. And it’s a good one too. It’s just... I’ve done it now. It’s a good time to stop because nothing is broken.

“My voice is still good, my energy is good, the band is great. I don’t want to be the last one at the party.

“I’d like to perform again in a while. I want to really stop and clear my mind of 60 years of performing, so that will take a while.

“Then when I perform again, if I do, I’d like to do

0 Paul Simon: ‘I haven’t written for a couple of years now’

it in smaller places that are acoustical­ly right and give the money to causes I support.

“I don’t feel I need to work for money anymore, I’d rather be giving it. I could see myself coming back to the UK and playing for something that is of value.

“But I’m not going to go on a long trek and be away from my family on the road anymore.”

Drawing up a set list that accommodat­es You Can Call Me Al and lesser known gems from Simon’s solo career must be difficult.

It’s the latter that Simon has turned his attention to for his latest studio album. He has re-recorded 10 of his personal favourites that he feels didn’t have an impact when they were first released.

“I really approached it like a new album. I was using new musicians and totally different arrangemen­ts. It was the first time for me playing with all jazz players.

“These songs are actually as good as anything that I am writing now. I haven’t written for a couple of years now. I don’t know if I’ll do it again or not.

“I have to stop in order to make something that’s really interestin­g. It’s not like I’m writing hits anymore, nor is it important.

“Really what’s important for me as an artist is to revitalise my thinking. What’s important for me as a person is to just stop.

“Maybe look at the planet for a while and just get the picture of who I am and what we are as a planet. I’d like to travel to places that I haven’t been to.

“I’m curious to stop for the pleasure of it and what, if anything, comes from breaking the mode of how I create.”

Simon reveals the lyrics he has revisited still speak to the divisive atmosphere in Donald Trump’s America. A vocal environmen­talist, the decision to withdraw the US from the Paris Agreement on climate change clearly troubles Simon.

“It’s absolutely criminal what they’re doing here, rolling back on clean air acts. It makes absolutely no sense in the world today to allow more pollution so that somebody can profit from it.

“It makes you just wonder, ‘What’s wrong with these people?’

“It’s very tense here and people are very angry. They seem to be that way all around the globe. The anger is exacting a toll on people’s health I’m sure.

“Racism, sexism, the LGBTQ community, these are all human issues. But if there is no planet here to sustain the species, all these issues become moot. I turn my attention and I say, ‘Let’s try and fix this planet’.

“I don’t feel I need to work for money anymore, I’d rather be giving it”

● Paul Simon’s new album In The Blue Light is out now

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