1968. still meaningful. I was 14, 70 in 3 weeks. Time flies, girl.
@davidpost4287 ай бұрын
For me, this song in the sixties IS America.
@matthewteague6237 ай бұрын
"Kathy, I'm lost", I said, though I knew she was sleeping. "I'm empty and aching, and I _Don't Know Why..."_ That lyric always gets me. Holding up a facade in the daytime, lowering shields long enough to confess the existential doubts in the quiet of the night.
@gerardbyrnes57807 ай бұрын
This song means so much to me. Bittersweet memories for this old traveling man. Glad you enjoyed it.
@pamagnolia7 ай бұрын
Gorgeous song!! I recommend The Boxer!! Wonderful song too😅
@gerardbyrnes57807 ай бұрын
You might enjoy Paul's American Tune, too.
@akabkcaj7 ай бұрын
Great, great song. America a little further down the road.
@chrisjenkins61207 ай бұрын
🎼This song gives me goosebumps. The lyrics are beautiful. “Counting the cars on the New Jersey Turnpike…”❤️
@PeterOConnell-pq6io7 ай бұрын
Every family here walked off from someplace else to look for America. One of these days, we may actually find it.
@DrStrangelove38917 ай бұрын
And the moon rose over an open field
@kenvarnold36592 ай бұрын
I've for many years I have been privileged to grow up in this country and traveled to many countries...American blemishes and imperfections...it is still a beacon to others...
@edwardhubschman36107 ай бұрын
For me, like all of Paul Simon’s work, this song is a gift. And Sarah, so are you.
@RoadDoug7 ай бұрын
I just retired, this month I’m driving across America East West North and South. I’ll pretend you’re sitting next to me. It really is a beautiful country filled with beautiful people. Fasten your seatbelt and let’s go!
@fuzzypoet10187 ай бұрын
Very thankful for this post. That is some of the best music ever made. No computers, no autotune; you just wrote and played it properly. Friendly Fact: My dad worked on One Trick Pony. I was 10 years old when I met Paul Simon and I said to him: "You used to work with a guy named Art." Paul laughed with a big smile, nodded his head and said "yes". For the entire shoot I was hanging with Paul, Harper simon, Steve Gadd, Richard Tee, Ralph MacDonald, Tony Levin, Eric Gale. It's no wonder I became a musician :)
@EricRoss577 ай бұрын
Ihre Aufnahmen waren in der Tat Perfektion! Beide hatte schon seit Ende der 50'er Jahre Erfahrung in Aufnahmestudios und zusammen mit Ingenieur/Mitproduzent Roy Halee, sind solche Lieder entstanden. Danke für das Posten!
@christopherhill75457 ай бұрын
Sarah, The only living boy in New York is also so beautiful. Same album. Bookends 😊
@jpmnewyork7 ай бұрын
Actually, "The Only Living Boy in New York" is on the "Bridge Over Troubled Water" album.
@Royal_BLT7 ай бұрын
🇨🇦 There are a couple of their songs you must react to ! "The Boxer" or "The Sound of Silence" or "Scarborough Fair" ! Good Luck ! 🇨🇦
@1Imonk7 ай бұрын
As one of the wandering souls out on the American road in the 70s, this song always triggers cascades of memories and feelings-the raw joy, emptiness, and yearning for a time of settling.
@janetlawson44827 ай бұрын
Somehow I haven’t ever heard this song before, thank you for sharing Sarah.
@SarahDengler7 ай бұрын
Hey Janet 😅
@samuellord85767 ай бұрын
Hey Sarah, thank you! Here’s great one: listen to “el Condor Pasa.” It’s a century-old Peruvian tune, adapted with S&G’s blessed lyrics.
@roevega99027 ай бұрын
Paul Simon’s American Tune..
@jerrypost96517 ай бұрын
Another wonderful reaction from you, sweet Sarah! ❤ This is from their 1968 album, "Bookends," on which every track is exquisite. "Save the Life of My Child," is a powerfully-moving opener on the LP. I think you would be touched by it. 👍
@jimmeltonbradley14977 ай бұрын
This and always has been my favourite S&G song. The Bookends album, from which it is taken, is my favourite S&G album
@kevinwalsh97887 ай бұрын
I'm from NJ and always waited for " Counting the Cars on the NJ Turnpike." I was around 10 years old. I still appreciate music from Simon and Garfunkel, even solo.
@donnazasgoat22747 ай бұрын
Yeah, me too only it was on The Parkway that I counted cars.
@rainydaydreamawy7 ай бұрын
So glad you really dug it. I think it's one of the greatest songs ever written.
@chrisnicol16447 ай бұрын
One of the best songs Paul Simon ever wrote...
@stevehole27477 ай бұрын
Beautiful, just beautiful. They also did this for the live Concert In Central Park
@octobris317 ай бұрын
" Sound of Silence "
@dcoleman21917 ай бұрын
you should listen to "American Tune" by Paul Simon...Live in Central Park
@martinstubbs79747 ай бұрын
Wonderful reaction as always Sarah!! Paul Simon is one of the greatest songwriters of all time. Someone has already suggested “the boxer” which is actually my personal favourite. Another one that showcases Art Garfunkel’s voice is the live version of “for Emily wherever I may find her”. Thank you, take care and warmest wishes from the UK.
@shemanic17 ай бұрын
"Homeward Bound" would be good to follow up with. Love & Light.
@mlgk-nj5 ай бұрын
Sarah, I am so pleased that you have discovered Simon and Garfunkel. I must move you forward in time, to the mid 90s. Paul Simon introduced African music to his album. This will blow your mind. The songs are all so good, it's hard to pick one. But since I was pregnant with my son while listening to this, I have to say Born at The Right Time. The album is The Rhythm of The Saints. I promise you will absolutely love this album
@pzpete7 ай бұрын
An album full of good tracks.
@mpemberton77607 ай бұрын
S & G represented that America of the 60s...the longing, the searching, the aching to find the dream of America, and discovering that it couldn't be found, because America had become an empty void of commercialism and arificial constructs. This song is about being lost in that kind of unreal, unfulfilling world. But now....the American dream has become a surreal nightmare, and there's no shred of hope that we'll wake up from it.
@scoot-f5y6 ай бұрын
I remember when Paul Simon announced that he and Art were going to get together for a few songs at Central Park in NYC, and half a million people showed up for a listen. Wasn't there (unfortunately a full continent away on the west coast) but what a time that must have been.
@MarkChappell17 ай бұрын
So understand that Paul Simon was the song writer and main singer on most songs, but no question their voices together are amazing. At some point during their last album together Art Garfunkel chose to pursue an acting career, and Paul decided after to go it alone. Paul went on to create much more great music, and Art had some solo success as well. When you're done exploring the S&G music you need to look into their solo music.
@socialpostingbuzz7 ай бұрын
Check out "Homeward Bound" and "I am a Rock" - two of their early ones.
@RobynHurley-zp9sh6 ай бұрын
I was born in 1967 and heard Simon and garfunkel from the time i was just a little little girl of 3..the 8 track my parents played
@guidosarducci7 ай бұрын
I live 20 miles outside of Pittsburgh, PA, also worked there. I remember the Greyhound Bus Station well, so these lyrics always hit home: "Kathy, I said, as we boarded a Greyhound in Pittsburgh..."
@hanshaag22247 ай бұрын
One of my Favorites from S&G. ❤❤
@MajorDenisBloodnok2 ай бұрын
In this song, Paul Simon told the journey he did with his British girlfriend Kathy when she came in the US to visit him. Kathy appears in other songs: Homeward Bound and Kathy's song, maybe one of the most beautiful love songs ever written.
@waynemcdonald96007 ай бұрын
Simon and Garfunkel always transport me back in time to about 1968. I was installing speakers and an 8 track tape drive in my 1963 Chevy 2. I will be 72 in a couple of months. I have several S&G tunes on my playlist....think I'll add this one!
@brentlund22727 ай бұрын
Can hear this song again and again and a.... !
@rk41gator7 ай бұрын
Such a marvelous song on so many levels. Harmony, surprising storytelling, multiple levels of meaning, plus heavenly voices. What is not to like? The NJ Turnpike? Maybe, being so lost.
@scottrbloom7 ай бұрын
The Bookends album is a continuous journey through growing up and growing older. Wonderful through every song.
@PaulSaether7 ай бұрын
Young lady! You can't imagine what it was like to hear this album when it first came out.
@christianmarler22536 ай бұрын
This album is 35 minutes of sheer bliss. (Oops, only thirty minutes...well, you can't expect sheer bliss to go on forever.)
@thedealer7773 ай бұрын
When I was young, we rode Harley soft-tails across the country, back in the 70s, to find America, ...but nobody was home.
@ozanpress7 ай бұрын
I discovered them first back in the early 00s while I was a student abroad. I am so glad that the timing was perfect. Now, when I listen to them it brings back all those memories of me getting on the bus and listening to Simon & Garfunkel in my one ear as an 18 year old lonely boy abroad.
@SpiroFleecy7 ай бұрын
Beautiful
@derekkannemeyer23757 ай бұрын
Sarah, this is part of a song suite. The first side of "Bookends" opens and closes with the "Bookends" theme, and the tracks run into each other and build on each other. I wish more people would react to it that way, as a suite, the way that many try to do with "Dark Side of the Moon," for instance. To my mind (minority opinion probably!) side one of "Bookends" is still Paul Simon's best work ever.
@lesblatnyak59477 ай бұрын
Nice Sarah. You should listen to YES'S cover of America from the Keys To Ascension live album. Its magnificent in that special YES way ✨️🎶✨️
@dantallman53457 ай бұрын
Young Americans finding themselves, searching to find their place in America. A Greyhound bus ride is still a great way to start. Leave the head phones in your bag, put down the cell phone, engage a bit with fellow passengers and let the scenery leave its imprint.
@olgawindler95067 ай бұрын
I had the same reaction when I was 16 and heard this song 50 years ago.
@davidspinney20237 ай бұрын
Hi Sarah I love this song and all the other songs those guys made. I would encourage you to listen to the lps these songs came from every song to me is excellent they only made 5 albums of all original material I would highly recommend all of them
@lisafayepranger85617 ай бұрын
a fave of mine.
@robertm70717 ай бұрын
Music from a different age. A far better age. I am blessed to have lived through it but saddened I have to live through this one.
@louisspeciale7 ай бұрын
This lady is very easily amused and cries very easily also. Very emotional lady. But then again music makes you do that!
@allanboyer27697 ай бұрын
Try The Sound of Silence.
@ianmcmillan55907 ай бұрын
One of my favourites ❤
@tbmike236 ай бұрын
Kathy's Song. Live. It is so tender and sweet. It is impossible.
@sdewijk60347 ай бұрын
Do Living Colour with the song: "Solace Of You" --> Beautiful and happy music!
@lindadesanto65937 ай бұрын
Yes does a really good version of this song. Great pick!
@Frankincensedjb1237 ай бұрын
This was back when songwriting was epic and classic: Simon, Lennon and McCartney, Stevie Wonder, Elton John ... Nothing like it
@JD_Cool7 ай бұрын
Sarah, when you listen to Paul Simon's solo stuff, you'll have your answer as to why they split. Paul's songwriting ambitions were too genius to be confined to the folk genre. Art is a masterful vocalist, but shoehorning him into Paul's African, Peruvian, Brazilian, jazz and gospel explorations would have been clumsy.
@roberthanford13887 ай бұрын
I have a CD of Simon & Garfunkel Greatest Hits. I listen to a lot.
@ChirumboloFilm7 ай бұрын
I was born in 1966, and though my parents didn’t have any of their albums, they were still always a part of my life thanks to radio. I sort of “rediscovered” them my senior year in high school and played their records in my room constantly. One day when I had one of their records playing my dad came into my room and said “ I never thought I would say this, but could you please stop playing Simon and Garfunkel?” I had no idea that I had been that obsessive about their music.
@CarolBlanchard17 ай бұрын
Garfunkel has a beautiful voice, but Paul Simon is the genius, and in my opinion, the greatest song writer this country has ever produced, and that includes a country of Gershwin and Berlin, and Joel. Paul Simon’s songs are timeless.
@Brandi66667 ай бұрын
New jersey turnpike is an awesome highway
@evanhume37067 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@soltemple3897 ай бұрын
Strange that I never heard this one before. I feel as though Sound of Silence is by far their best!
@chrisnicol16447 ай бұрын
You'll be coming to America now...
@janefletcher95932 ай бұрын
They are geniuses in their own right,Art wanted to try other things,Paul wanted to stick to music.
@dougca70867 ай бұрын
If you haven't react to Sound of Silence and Bridge Over Troubled Waters as well as the boxer Live in Central Park New York in front of over half million people
@david-j1r9m7 ай бұрын
It seems, I believe, that they broke up because Garfunkel had an opportunity to break into movies. He did well there and Paul Simon went on to be bigger than ever. So, it worked out well for them both.
@williamowen24227 ай бұрын
Simon and Garfunkel / Bookends ! Sarah
@dennisdare2127 ай бұрын
One of the few popular songs that is prose and not poetry.
@romanazzitube7 ай бұрын
❤
@nelsonmoody46867 ай бұрын
The real reason they broke y is because Garfunkel was offered a art in a movie and he wanted to put the music hold and Simon was not willing to wait for him
@tonysperrin9166Ай бұрын
A song where the lyrics never rhyme. And still brilliant
@ChuckRagland7 ай бұрын
Contrary to what some red hat wearing people say, America is still awesome!!
@Electro-sportDe7 ай бұрын
Please listen to "cigarettes after sex - apocalypse" ❤
@hadrenspicer90357 ай бұрын
Bookends is their best album
@HewanaBayu7 ай бұрын
Hi ❤❤
@deborahpaley217 ай бұрын
similar vibe but different style to "Going to California" by led Zep.
@yoseffeigenbaum96397 ай бұрын
Please do Kathy's song.
@sueme19547 ай бұрын
This song in its time was not appreciated. Much much later it was. Only a few loved this song in its time. That generation now tears up out loud to this song.
@kenennis62877 ай бұрын
? Where were you in 1968?
@derekkannemeyer23757 ай бұрын
What? That was not my experience at all! Bookends (the album this was on-and for most serious music fans back then albums mattered way more than singles) was #1 in both the US and the UK. To me at the time-and still-this was clearly the best song on it.
@brians28697 ай бұрын
Will sound douchey, but used to listen to these albums, doing homework, at school
12 күн бұрын
paul simon and his music are unbelievable to people who have heard nothing but vulgar rap and hip-hop. paul is the best lyricist of the last 60 years. bar none.!!
@gerlieannmanuel72837 ай бұрын
Sarah please react to Karen Carpenter
@mariorossetto94645 ай бұрын
and MRS ROBINSON? CECILIA? EL CONDOR PASA?
@31carrier7 ай бұрын
292 likes 1599 views posted 4 hours ago
@YvesFey7 ай бұрын
Bernie Sanders used this song when he ran for President.
@frankbolger3969Ай бұрын
You are amazing because nobody gets Simon and Garfunkel like you do. To answer your question, they broke up because of egos, mostly because of Simon's massive ego (he wasn't entirely wrong. He wrote the music and lyrics to all of their songs, but Garfunkel's contribution was not insignificant.) I think also Simon wanted to strike out in different directions musically. He was very commercially successful, even though I believe the product was inferior; not bad, just inferior.
@johnh5393 ай бұрын
Why did they brake up I'm still asking myself that Art's artistry was more than a good voice he sculpted his part above and around Paul's.
@DrStrangelove38917 ай бұрын
Notice how there isn't a single rhyme in the entire song.
@thomastimlin17247 ай бұрын
It saddens me they don't wrote songs like this anymorne, and possibly if they do, they get censesored like hell by the coroate owned radio chans like CLear Channel because the owners idsagree with the content. Today you hear songs with Do do do, dah dah dah, Nah Nah Nah, baby lyrics to fill in the writers lack of poetry skills and the algorithms required to make a song "sell." Nothing but crappy ideas for lyrics at gutter level that do not tell a story that provokes thoughfulness....just cheap thrills....
@christiandengler66897 ай бұрын
You really think this is possible? The whole human experience lost all of its talent in a generation? Or is it maybe that literally every generation thinks the new one sucks?