Paul Simon is one of the most successful and respected songwriters of the second half of the 20th century. Rising to fame in the mid-'60s,
Simon's songs were mature and literate, but also melodically engaging, and spoke to the concerns and uncertainties of a generation. As the 1960s gave way to the '70s and '80s,
Simon's work tended to focus on the personal rather than the larger world, but he also expanded his musical palette, and helped introduce many rock and pop fans to world music.
Paul Frederic Simon was born in Newark, New Jersey on October 13, 1941. His father, Louis Simon, was an educator who also led a small jazz combo, while his mother, Belle Simon, taught English; when
Paul was a few months old, they moved from Newark to Queens, New York.
Paul grew up with a passion for baseball and music, particularly jazz and folk, and as he entered his teens, he developed a taste for the doo wop and R&B; sounds that were a staple of
Alan Freed's radio broadcasts, as well as first-generation rockabillies such as
Elvis Presley,
Jerry Lee Lewis, and
Carl Perkins. When
Simon was 11 years old, he met
Art Garfunkel, and the two became fast friends who discovered they shared an interest in music.
Paul and
Art formed a harmony duo in the style of their heroes
the Everly Brothers, and made their stage debut at a junior-high talent show. By the time they were enrolled at Forest Hills High School, the two were calling themselves
Tom & Jerry (
Art was
Tom Graph,
Paul was
Jerry Landis), and they filled their spare time playing teen dances and parties. In 1955, the two wrote a song together, "The Girl for Me," which
Simon registered for copyright with the Library of Congress. In 1957,
Tom & Jerry were cutting a demo acetate of
Simon's song "Hey Schoolgirl" when the president of a small record company (ironically named Big Records) happened by the studio. The label head liked what he heard, and "Hey Schoolgirl" b/w "Dancin' Wild" was released in the fall of 1957. The record rose to number 52 on the Billboard pop singles charts, and scored
Tom & Jerry an appearance on
American Bandstand, but while they would cut a number of follow-up releases, "Hey Schoolgirl" was destined to be
Tom & Jerry's only hit.
By March 1958,
Simon was already looking toward a solo career, cutting a single, "True or False" b/w "Teen Age Fool," under the name
True Taylor.
Jerry Landis also landed his own record deal, releasing his debut single, "Anna Belle" b/w "Loneliness," in 1959, while
Simon also worked with a studio group called the Cosines, who specialized in cutting demos for songwriters. (Another member of the combo was
Carole Klein, who would soon enjoy a successful career of her own as
Carole King.) By the end of the decade,
Paul and
Art were both enrolled in college, and
Tom & Jerry took a back seat to academics, though
Simon would record occasional sessions and wrote songs for others. In 1961,
Simon teamed up with a handful of vocalists to form a group called
Tico & the Triumphs; the group cut a single, "Motorcycle" b/w "I Don't Believe Them," which barely broke into the Billboard singles charts, making Number 99 for one week, but received extensive airplay in Baltimore and became a local hit in the Charm City. "Motorcycle" was released by Amy Records, who soon turned to
Simon to write and produce material for several of their artists, including
Ritchie Cordell, the Fashions, Dottie Daniels, and Jay Walker & the Pedestrians.
Simon also found time to cut another
Jerry Landis single, and "The Lone Teen Ranger" spent three weeks on the Billboard charts in early 1963, peaking at number 97.
In the early '60s, the folk revival swept New York City, and a new breed of singers and songwriters introduced a new approach to the craft of creating tunes.
Simon, who had been studying English literature, was influenced and encouraged by the new breed of folkies, and in 1963 he re-teamed with
Art Garfunkel, this time using their real names and performing the more topical songs
Simon was writing.
Simon & Garfunkel started playing Greenwich Village folk clubs, and they scored a deal with Columbia Records, releasing their first album,
Wednesday Morning, 3 AM, in the fall of 1964. The album was initially a flop, and
Simon headed to England, where he made the rounds of folk clubs, recorded some BBC sessions, and even cut a solo album,
The Paul Simon Songbook, which was released only in the UK.
Simon also co-wrote a few pop tunes with
Bruce Woodley of
the Seekers, one of which, "Red Rubber Ball," would become a big hit for
the Cyrkle. In late 1965,
Tom Wilson, who produced the
Wednesday Morning, 3 AM album, learned that one of the songs from the LP, "The Sound of Silence," was getting scattered radio airplay, and he struck upon the idea of dubbing a rock & roll rhythm section over the acoustic track and issuing it as a single. The strategy worked: the new version of "The Sound of Silence" was a big hit, and
Simon & Garfunkel quickly re-formed, cutting the album
Sounds of Silence, which was released in 1966 and spawned the singles "I Am a Rock" and "Kathy's Song."
Simon & Garfunkel would enjoy impressive success over the next several years, and were one of the few acts from the early-'60s folk revival that would enjoy success with acoustic-based music during the psychedelic era, thanks in large part to
Simon's songwriting. But while 1970's
Bridge Over Troubled Water was a massive commercial and critical success (and a superb reflection of the end-of-the-decade Zeitgeist of the day), long-simmering creative differences between
Simon and
Garfunkel came to a head while making the album, and a hiatus from collaborating became a proper breakup when
Simon released his self-titled solo album in 1972.
Paul Simon featured two hit singles, "Mother and Child Reunion" and "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard," and found
Simon experimenting with reggae and Latin music, as well as polished soft rock.
Released in 1973,
There Goes Rhymin' Simon was a more ambitious follow-up, sounding largely optimistic and dipping its toes into gospel and New Orleans jazz as well as R&B-based; rock and pop. In 1975,
Simon released
Still Crazy After All These Years, an album informed by his divorce from his first wife, Peggy Harper.
Still Crazy included the song "My Little Town," which reunited
Simon with
Art Garfunkel for the first time since
Bridge Over Troubled Water.
Simon's next project proved to have a long gestation period; he wrote a screenplay about a musician struggling to save his marriage and his career, and penned a set of songs to accompany it.
Simon also starred in the subsequent film, and while
One Trick Pony wasn't his first bit of film acting (he played a small but memorable role in
Woody Allen's
Annie Hall), he didn't fare well alongside a cast of seasoned professionals when the movie debuted in 1980.
One Trick Pony's soundtrack album (his first album for Warner Bros. after a long working relationship with Columbia) spawned the hit single "Late in the Evening," but otherwise proved to be a disappointment in terms of sales.
In September 1981,
Simon & Garfunkel played a massive reunion concert in New York's Central Park, which led to a brief reunion tour. The Central Park show was released as a live album that was a major commercial success, and the duo made plans to record a new album. But
Simon and
Garfunkel found themselves at odds in the studio, and
Simon's next album, 1983's
Hearts and Bones, featured no contributions from
Garfunkel. The album sold poorly, and by
Simon's own admission he was running short on inspiration when he heard an album of "township jive" by the South African group
the Boyoyo Boys. Fascinated by the eclectic blend of creative elements,
Simon began creating an album inspired by South African pop, recorded primarily in Johannesburg with a band of South African musicians. The result was 1986's
Graceland, which became an unexpected smash hit, spawning several hits singles, introducing an international audience to South African rhythms, and prompting a renewed dialogue about the nation's repressive apartheid regime. (The album also generated a certain amount of controversy, as some believed the recording sessions violated a United Nations-led cultural boycott against South Africa; also, several members of the group
Los Lobos, who appeared on the album, claimed
Simon lifted their melody for the tune "All Around the World, or the Myth of Fingerprints" without giving them songwriting credit.)
Simon turned to Brazilian music for inspiration on his next album, 1990's
The Rhythm of the Saints, which also incorporated a number of the South African players who contributed to
Graceland. If not as successful as
Graceland,
The Rhythm of the Saints still fared quite well with fans and critics, and the two albums reestablished
Simon as a vital, contemporary artist.
After releasing a live album from the tour in support of
The Rhythm of the Saints,
Simon retreated to work on another unusual project, a Broadway musical called
The Capeman, which was based on the true story of Salvador Agron, a Latino gang member and convicted murderer turned poet and activist.
Simon wrote the book for
The Capeman in collaboration with
Derek Walcott, and composed a set of new songs for the show. However, the production proved difficult and the play, which opened in 1998, received poor reviews and closed after just 68 performances due to slow ticket sales. (A revised version of the show was staged in 2010, and received significantly better notices.) An album of
Simon's interpretations of the show's songs was issued, but was only a modest success; the original cast recording received a belated digital release in 2006.
Stung by the disappointing response to
The Capeman,
Simon returned to the studio in 2000 to record
You're the One, an album that suggested a compromise between the African and Latin sounds he'd embraced and the more intimate approach of his early work. Two years later,
Simon once again reunited with
Art Garfunkel for a concert tour, and a live album,
Old Friends: Live on Stage, was released in 2004.
Simon returned in 2006 with
Surprise, which found him working with an unlikely producer,
Brian Eno. Released in 2011,
So Beautiful or So What captured
Simon returning to a more organic songwriting style than he'd employed since
Graceland, though the tenor of the lyrics confirmed he was still keenly aware of the sounds and ideas of the present day. The album was also his first release for Hear Music; the same label released 2012's
Live in New York City, taken from a special intimate hometown concert from the tour in support of
So Beautiful.