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Paul Simon

Paul Simon

Birthday: 13 October 1941, Newark, New Jersey, USA
Birth Name: Paul Frederic Simon
Height: 157 cm

Born on October 13, 1941 in Newark New Jersey, Paul Simon is one of the greatest singer/songwriters ever. In 1957, he and high school pal, Art Garfunkel, wrote and recorded the single, "Hey Schoo ...Show More

Paul Simon
What I'm thinking about now and what I'm talking about is really not for a huge audience. It would b Show more What I'm thinking about now and what I'm talking about is really not for a huge audience. It would be unusual to find anybody at my age who is selling enormous amounts of records to the record-buying public. Hide
I don't see much truth in laurels, period. The forces of habit make you go on. There's an internal e Show more I don't see much truth in laurels, period. The forces of habit make you go on. There's an internal engine that's been running since I was 14; I keep an ear out to see if it's still purring and it is. It chronically purrs. Music making is who you are and it doesn't go away. If you love to play music, you're lucky. Hide
[on recording "Graceland" in South Africa] I did not set out to make a political statement. I was ma Show more [on recording "Graceland" in South Africa] I did not set out to make a political statement. I was making a cultural statement with political implications. Hide
I think "Graceland" was remarkable in two different ways. One, it was a very interesting artistic le Show more I think "Graceland" was remarkable in two different ways. One, it was a very interesting artistic leap that combined cultures in a way that was accessible and gave people great joy and insight into another country. It was very successful as a marriage of different cultures, which is not easy to do. The other thing is it provoked a really interesting political discussion, which really came down to how effective is a cultural boycott if the people that it's affecting most are the people who are being oppressed? And that eventually turned people away from the cultural boycott as a tool of fighting that particular kind of oppression, because it wasn't an efficient tool. It didn't do the job. It did the opposite. "Graceland" was the catalyst that got people into that discussion. It was really Hugh Masekela who focused that discussion and said, "Hey, this is a good thing for South Africa. We want our music out there." Hide
The public will always find the artists it needs. The public will always find the artists it needs.
I really wanted to get off Warner Bros. I didn't think they understood what I was doing on the last Show more I really wanted to get off Warner Bros. I didn't think they understood what I was doing on the last couple of albums. They just wanted me to make hit singles, which is not really possible for me. It would be a fluke if I had a hit single. I don't make that kind of music anymore. Hide
I started to build the albums around rhythms in response to my frustration with the album that prece Show more I started to build the albums around rhythms in response to my frustration with the album that preceded "Graceland", which was "Hearts and Bones". I felt with that album that I had written some songs that were better than the tracks that went on the album. I couldn't get things to fit together, so I ended up changing the songs to fit the tracks and then I thought, "My demo was better than this". So with "Graceland" I thought I'll just make tracks that I really like and then I'll write the songs, the words, and if I don't like what they sound like set to the music I'd throw things out and start again, which on a couple of occasions I did. Hide
Look at what we did to the planet. We ruined the planet. Take away the human beings and all their in Show more Look at what we did to the planet. We ruined the planet. Take away the human beings and all their inventions and all the stuff we've made and the mess we make and you've got a much cleaner planet. It would be a lot healthier than it is right now. Would life be better for a zebra without mankind? Absolutely. Would it be better for the trees? Absolutely. Hide
The public hungers to see talented young people kill themselves. The public hungers to see talented young people kill themselves.
Dylan [Bob Dylan] frequently reinvents himself, and at a very sophisticated level. Nobody ever did i Show more Dylan [Bob Dylan] frequently reinvents himself, and at a very sophisticated level. Nobody ever did it better. That's his real genius. He's still interesting. "Love and Theft" is a fascinating record. Hide
I'm generally enthusiastic when I'm working and when I immediately finish I'm enthusiastic. Shortly Show more I'm generally enthusiastic when I'm working and when I immediately finish I'm enthusiastic. Shortly after that I don't want to hear it. It's always been my way. It's such an intense process for me and the process itself can take so long, and I get into it so completely, that by the time I've finished a piece of work I'm really finished with it. I'm done. What happens then is I don't do anything for usually a year or so. Hide
I like to reinvent the old material, take the songs somewhere they maybe haven't been. I like to reinvent the old material, take the songs somewhere they maybe haven't been.
I think if you have the gift of writing a political song, like those early Bob Dylan songs that were Show more I think if you have the gift of writing a political song, like those early Bob Dylan songs that were political, it's a gift to be able to write that kind of song. Phil Ochs had it, too. But most other people really couldn't. So you get "Eve of Destruction" or other imitations of those really good songs and it makes it seem like it's frivolous. So you stay in your own world. Somebody said, "If I went to South Africa I certainly wouldn't come back and write a song like 'You Can Call Me Al'." But "You Can Call Me Al" was a pretty interesting song. It starts off and it's about somebody who's completely self-involved and travels to a place where he becomes aware of the universe and the whole world from the experience he has. And essentially that was the gift of "Graceland", as opposed to it tearing down the walls of apartheid. It showed people, it was inspiring without being didactic. And the criticism was, "You have a responsibility to be didactic." Hide
If a song lives for a couple of years, it's a pretty good thing. If a song lives for a couple of years, it's a pretty good thing.
I'm just an artist, because that's my personality trait, a characteristic of how my brain works. I c Show more I'm just an artist, because that's my personality trait, a characteristic of how my brain works. I can't figure out a lot of things, I'm not a computer scientist. This is who I am. This is what I do. I make up songs and I try to make them as interesting as possible. Hide
When I listened to what popular music was in South Africa, it wasn't political music. When I listened to what popular music was in South Africa, it wasn't political music.
Brian Wilson is a couple of years younger than I am - but not many - and his stuff is still interest Show more Brian Wilson is a couple of years younger than I am - but not many - and his stuff is still interesting. The same goes for Tom Waits. There are other people doing interesting work, but the people doing it aren't coming from the same history of enormous popular success that I've had. There's a certain expectation that I'm going to reach the level I was at back when I was enormously successful. That may be impossible to do at this point. Hide
Nobody says you should stop painting when you're 60. Nobody says you should stop writing novels when Show more Nobody says you should stop painting when you're 60. Nobody says you should stop writing novels when you're 60. Nobody says that B.B. King should stop playing the blues. So The Rolling Stones go out there and people call them dinosaurs and they say, "What are you talking about? We're reinventing what you can do at our age and if you don't like it, OK, but don't try to stop us." Hide
Paul Simon's FILMOGRAPHY
as Actor (85)
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