Los Angeles Times

5 reasons to praise Paul Simon

- By Randy Lewis randy.lewis@latimes.com

In conjunctio­n with the publicatio­n of his new book, ”Paul Simon: The Life,” on Tuesday, former Times pop music critic Robert Hilburn was asked to single out five favorite songs by the veteran singer-songwriter and to explain why he chose each.

Here are his choices, listed chronologi­cally: “The Sound of Silence” (1965): I find it so amazing because it has stood up all this time. What a great song — and knowing the story behind it: He’s sitting in his bathroom at night, with the lights all off, and he’s trying to find his own voice [as a songwriter]. He’s sad [about the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy] and writes, “Hello darkness my old friend.” Then he starts thinking about how people don’t listen. To write that at only 23 or 24 and [at that point] he hadn’t written a great song in his life, and he writes that song. It’s a bold moment. “The Boxer” (1969): I would rate that against any of Dylan’s songs. It’s an incredible way of talking about his own struggles and triumphs: the struggles of getting attention as a songwriter, of getting over feeling that he was too short, about growing up in unhip Queens [N.Y.], playing folk music, not rock ’n’ roll. "American Tune” (1973): How could anybody have written a song like that? It is staggering. But that was written back in the ’60s and ’70s when songwriter­s ruled. He refers to it as “my Nixon impeachmen­t song,” but it applies just as much today. “Graceland” (1986): I just love having him tell the story of how it came about. He goes and visits Graceland, and he sees all these people coming, because Elvis meant all this to them. They’re all coming to feel this redemption, and he feels that in his own life — he was going through a divorce, he is seeking redemption, everybody’s seeking redemption, and he thinks, “We all will be received in Graceland.” He discovers that; he didn’t start off thinking, “I’m going to write a song about redemption.” Simon thinks: You can’t limit yourself to what you can think of. “Questions for the Angels” (2011): It’s just an incredible song. It summarizes what he thinks about the planet, about ecology, about people living together. It has one of my favorite lines ever written: “If every human on the planet and all the buildings should disappear, would a zebra grazing in the African Savanna care enough to shed a single zebra tear?” How can you write that? It’s fantastic.

 ?? Michael Ochs Archives ?? SINGER-songwriter Paul Simon circa 1970.
Michael Ochs Archives SINGER-songwriter Paul Simon circa 1970.

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