Simon & Garfunkel - Bookends (Hybrid SACD) - Audiophile

Simon & Garfunkel - Bookends (Hybrid SACD)

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Vocals, guitar - Paul Simon [click here to see more products featuring Paul Simon]

Vocals, tapes, percussion - Art Garfunkel [click here to see more products featuring Art Garfunkel]

Drums, percussion - Hal Blaine

Bass, guitar - Joe Osborn

Piano, keyboards, bass guitar - Larry Knechtel

Synthesizer - John Simon

Arranged by Jimmie Haskell

Written by Paul Simon,  Art Garfunkel 

 

1 Hybrid SACD

Limited numbered edition

Original analog Master tape : YES

Stereo

Studio

Label : MOFI

Original Label : Columbia

Recorded in September 1966, January, June and October 1967, February 1968 at Columbia Studio 52nd Street, New York City

Recorded and engineered by Roy Halee

Produced by Paul Simon, Art Garfunkel, Roy Halee

Cover Photography by Richard Avedon

Originally released in April 1968

Reissued in 2024

 

Tracks:

1. Bookends Theme

2. Save the Life of My Child

3. America

4. Overs

5. Voices of Old People

6. Old Friends

7. Bookends Theme

8. Fakin’ It

9. Punky’s Dilemma

10. Mrs. Robinson

11. A Hazy Shade of Winter

12. At the Zoo

 

Awards:

11th Annual Grammy Awards (1969):

  • Record of the Year for "Mrs. Robinson"
  • Best Contemporary Pop Performance by a Duo or Group
  • Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television Special for The Graduate soundtrack

Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time – Ranked 234

Rolling Stone magazine's Top 25 Rock & Roll Albums of the '60s – Ranked 21

Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums – Ranked 338

 

Reviews:

“Simon & Garfunkel quietly slipped Bookends, their fourth album, into the bins with a whisper in March 1968. They are equal collaborators with producer/engineer Roy Halee in a multivalently layered song cycle observing the confusion of those seeking an elusive American Dream, wistfully reflecting on innocence lost forever to the cold winds of change. Bookends opens with an acoustic guitar stating a theme, slowly and plaintively. It erupts into the musical dissonance that introduces "Save the Life of My Child." Its uneasy rock & roll frames highly metaphorical and ironic lyrics and a nursery rhyme bridge. "America" is a folk song with a lilting soprano saxophone in its refrain as a small pipe organ paints acoustic guitars, framed by the ghostly traces of classic American Songbook pop structures. Two people travel the landscape by bus searching for the track's subject, eventually discovering that everyone else on the freeway is too. Its sophisticated harmonic invention is toppled by its message; "America" becomes an ellipsis, a cipher, an unanswerable question. "Overs," a study about the end of a relationship, contains Halee's ingenious use of sound: lighting a cigarette and inhaling and exhaling its smoke underscore the story told by the melody and lyrics. In a two-minute field recording of the voices of old people collected from nursing homes by Garfunkel, disembodied voices reveal entire lifetimes in a few seconds. "Old Friends" carries the message deeper. Simon's image of two old men sitting on a park bench sharing memories and their fears of the changes surrounding them is indelible. A horn section threatens to interrupt their reverie, reflecting the chaos they perceive, but is warded off as the gentle melody returns and fades into the album's opening theme. In "Fakin' It," Simon reveals the falsity inherent in modern life -- it's better to appear to have it together than reflect the struggle of not being able to: "This feeling of fakin' it/I still haven't shaken it/I know I'm fakin' it/I'm not really makin' it." The album's final three tracks, "Mrs. Robinson" (the iconic theme song from the film The Graduate), "A Hazy Shade of Winter," and the album's concluding track, "At the Zoo," offer a tremblingly bleak vision of the future rooted in the lives of everyday people who "fake it," living an illusory dream publicly while trembling with confusion and fear in private (no matter one's generation), subverting the Madison Avenue notion of the "generation gap" simply and honestly. Bookends' problematic, disillusioned themes, sometimes disguised in wry humor, striking arrangements, and augmented orchestral instrumentation, portray the sounds of people in an American life that they no longer understand, or understands them. Simon & Garfunkel never overstate; instead they observe, almost journalistically, enormous life and cultural questions in the process of them being asked. In just over 29 minutes, Bookends is stunning in its vision of a bewildered America in search of itself.” Allmusic Review by Thom Jurek

 

 

Ratings :

AllMusic : 5 / 5 , Discogs : 4.19 / 5

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