"I don't have a friend who feels at ease."
Granted, with Art Garfunkel, he demonstrated the non-confinement possible with the employment of two voices and two guitars. Together, they created a sonic landscape which was the aural equivalent of form poetry. By placing limitations on the instrumentation, they found ways to strengthen what was inside those walls.
During his solo career, though, Simon has never displayed any inclination to stick in one particular style or sound. He's explored everything he can discover on his own fret board, toying with dynamics, tempos, and keys; teetering between each with carefully considered abandon. He's surrounded himself with musicianship which has lifted him up to its level and allowed him to fit into the figurative clothes of a jazz player, a pop star, a world music composer, a folkie, and even occasionally a rock and roller.
Earlier this year, he released So Beautiful or So What - an album at once accessible and profound. So, considering he seems to have reached a point in his career where he's figured out how to channel and direct his sharpest songwriting skills (instead of focusing on exploring sounds and landing on brilliant moments in the process), it makes some sense that someone decided to collect his finest, most imaginative songwriting moments into one collection.
An Exploration of the Mostly Obscure
The disc starts with a string of live performances, featuring newer arrangements of songs like "Sound of Silence" (purchase/download) and "The Boxer" (purchase/download). Immediately, you're asked to let go of what you thought you know of Paul Simon and listen to the whole song, in the whole moment. By the time you get to "Graceland," arguably Simon's biggest pop hit, you suddenly notice his slight and subtle guitar fillings, the hand claps, the bass line, and even the fact that the song is more than just catchy. It's profoundly regretful and lonesome; profoundly heartbroken:
She comes back to tell me she's gone
As if I didn't know that
As if I didn't know my own bed
As if I'd never noticed the way she brushed her hair from her forehead
She says losing love is like a window in your heart
Everyone can see you're torn apart
Everyone can see the wind blow
...Or So What
It's also notable that the second disc ends with the title track from this year's So Beautiful or So What - a song which wrestles with the very meaningfulness of meaning itself. It's a self-conscious tune which could be used as an answer to the question: "Why make art?" or "Why live at all?" It seeks to strike a balance between caring deeply and not caring so much that it inhibits anything; using freedom and confinement without sacrificing beauty; rhyme scheme and rhythm without sacrificing the music. Like so much of Simon's finest work, it won't be a radio hit simply because it can't be digested in the three minutes it takes for a DJ to play it before s/he moves on to the next three-minute track.
Indeed, Paul Simon is an artist best taken time with. This collection proves he's more than a hit machine with staying power. The man's a songwriter.




