Paul Simon - Surprise
Facts
| Artist(s) | Paul Simon |
| Studio | Warner Bros / Wea |
| Release Date | May 9, 2006 |
| UPC Code | 093624998228 |
Tracks
- How Can You Live In the Northeast
- Everything About It Is A Love Song
- Outrageous
- Sure Don't Feel Like Love
- Wartime Prayers
- Beautiful
- I Don't Believe
- Another Galaxy
- Once Upon A Time There Was An Ocean
- That's Me
- Father And Daughter
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User Reviews
Average user review:| An Album that Should Endure |
| only for true Paul Simon afficionados |
November 1, 2008
| Don't listen to the naysayers...This is a great album! |
| Buy another Paul Simon title, ANY other Paul Simon title |
Paul Simon the singer and musician is lost to electronica and apparently silly attempts to sound modern.
This is not magical Paul Simon. Almost any other PS album is!
Sigh. June 3, 2008
| Highly worthwhile, even if for one song... |
Overall I find it highly interesting, strong, with moments of brilliance, poetry, beauty - though as well as embarrassments (Outrageous, Beautiful). Brian Eno's production (that is, Eno circa Deep Blue Day and An Ending) in its best moments merges seamlessly with, mostly complements and sometimes elevates Simon's lovely, thin, earnest voice and occasionally substantial lyrics.
While That's Me, I Don't Believe, Wartime Prayers and Everything About it is a Love Song all have marvellous moments as well as strength and unexpected turns in both songwriting and production, it's Once There was an Ocean that makes this CD worth owning. It is arguably the most incisive, mature song in Simon's entire body of work.
This song is about transcendence and personal redemption without being "religious" at all (despite the subtle church/synagogue imagery). In this song, a spiritual sense emerges which needs not be tied to any organised religion. Here, Simon brilliantly fuses his folk-song talents of long-ago (in a tale about a young man who leaves home to renounce all that meant 'home' to him) with a deeper, more spiritual maturity obviously brought on by advancing years and experience. It is about getting in touch with that which is infinitely grander than us.
To me, it tells the tale of a man unhappy about his lot and searching for more, in an attempt to be larger, to find meaning. He has at least partially blamed his parents for much of his own endless wandering and unhappiness, and finds temporary fulfillment once he leaves home, the place he's defined as the source of his troubles.
But upon receiving news of the death of one of his parents and
returning home for the funeral finally gets in touch with that
'something unstoppable' that transcends him and connects him with the
timeless, the infinite (and infinitely more meaningful than the search
for temporary pleasures).
The lyrics which describe - indeed allude - to all this are penned so subtly, so finely, seemingly so effortless, one hardly notices their depth and intricacy in the first few listens. It's so rare when a song succeeds in speaking volumes in just a few lines. It's because we listeners have become totally unused to finding true poetry in our songs' lyrics.
Brian Eno's delicacy here really elevates the song and perfectly underscores the lyrics which fuse the very personal with that which transcends it, the individual with the truly universal. The crystal, almost glass sounds during the song's final verse not only echo the stained glass imagery but also the sudden enlightenment of the main character, as the death of a parent was what was needed for him to align himself with what truly matters in life, and with the very movement of the universe itself. Here Simon speaks of the lifting of the veil, where you suddenly 'understand' something about life of great significance, and how afterwards there's a feeling of nothing being different but of everything having changed. May 10, 2008
More reviews at Amazon.com ...
