First listen to The Sound of Silence - Simon and Garfunkel (REACTION)

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  • čas přidán 27. 10. 2020
  • Original Video: • Simon & Garfunkel - Th...
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Komentáře • 540

  • @andreasglantz2294
    @andreasglantz2294 Před 3 lety +137

    Paul Simon is truly one of the greatest lyricists of our time.

    • @tao4mike
      @tao4mike Před 3 lety +1

      Speaking of raindrops... Check out Kathy's Song. I think you might be able to appreciate it. I see you've already done America... Mmmm

  • @michellelamar8965
    @michellelamar8965 Před 3 lety +18

    Simon and Garfunkel had the best harmonizing ever

  • @purplehead9157
    @purplehead9157 Před 3 lety +51

    I am a Rock...... is another song of theirs that has meaningful lyrics, worth a listen...

  • @fidge54
    @fidge54 Před 3 lety +19

    Yes, Paul Simon was the originator of the line "Hello darkness my old friend". As for Shakespeare, you're probably thinking of, "Bop bopa-a-lu a whop bam boo!" which was a lyric he wrote, only to have it stolen by Little Richard as the opening line to his hit, Tutti Frutti

    • @fidge54
      @fidge54 Před 3 lety

      czcams.com/video/F13JNjpNW6c/video.html

  • @sorrystaunton
    @sorrystaunton Před 3 lety +116

    Paul Simon wrote this as a teenager sitting on the floor in his bathroom. He wrote it shortly after the assassination of John Kennedy....Paul’s lyrics are really poems set to music...my personal favorite by him is “The Dangling Conversation”....Sound Of Silence was originally an acoustic song which was not a hit. The producer added electric guitar and drums, without permission....it was a hit.

    • @dumdumbush
      @dumdumbush Před 3 lety +9

      OMG! The Dangling Conversion is my favorite, too! I thought I was the only one.

    • @sorrystaunton
      @sorrystaunton Před 3 lety +6

      @@dumdumbush The strange thing is I met Simon and his brother in an upper Eastside bar and we were talking music. I asked him if in retrospect is there any song he wrote that he doesn’t sing anymore...he said Dangling Conversation because he thinks it was too pompous and intellectual. In my mind all I could think was....what a moron it’s the best thing you ever wrote...I smiled....nodded....and left the bar!!!

    • @merlinscat
      @merlinscat Před 3 lety +2

      @@dumdumbush me too

    • @sharonm6262
      @sharonm6262 Před 3 lety +4

      I agree with you but I can see why he'd say that - it is a nice way of saying "too many stupid people don't understand it." Because (for all he knew) you might've been one of them... So this is a way to say it where he takes the blame...

    • @sorrystaunton
      @sorrystaunton Před 3 lety +2

      @@sharonm6262 LOL....thanks Sharon for that vote of intellectual confidence....

  • @robertcobras8320
    @robertcobras8320 Před 3 lety +11

    Simon and Garfunkel were one of the most successful folk performers of all time. Their songs stand up so well 50+ years later. So much so that they are regularly covered by other bands to this day

  • @Yosef1952
    @Yosef1952 Před 3 lety +34

    Oh, DS9, you're goin' WAY back. A rich field of S & G work awaits you. As I said before, "The Boxer" would give you a lot to think about. In addition "America" would change your perspective, and "Bridge Over Troubled Water" would move a kind-hearted person like you very deeply.

  • @carolyncostner9619
    @carolyncostner9619 Před 3 lety +106

    Who remembers "Cecilia" by S&G? It was removed from radio play because it was to sexual.....lol! What a more innocent time it was.

    • @ms.chuckfu1088
      @ms.chuckfu1088 Před 3 lety +6

      "Time it was, and what a time it was, it was a time of innocence."

    • @georgewodicka4839
      @georgewodicka4839 Před 3 lety +1

      She broke my ❤.

    • @ms.chuckfu1088
      @ms.chuckfu1088 Před 3 lety

      @@georgewodicka4839 😟

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Před 3 lety +2

      “I got up to wash my face”. That lyric was over the line. 😄Columbia knew it when they released Cecilia as a single. A real conflict over Free speech v Obscenity laws was happening on every level.

    • @submandave1125
      @submandave1125 Před 3 lety +2

      I always saw "Cecilia" as almost an answer to the real innocence of "Wake Up Little Suzie."

  • @kerrywolfert5095
    @kerrywolfert5095 Před rokem +1

    Paul Simon is more than just a great lyricist, he's a true poet. His lyrics are taught as poetry in almost every English speaking university. He was taught in my 3rd year of English composition right along with Yeats and wordsmiths of that ilk.

  • @cristallecromey2663
    @cristallecromey2663 Před 3 lety +22

    Daniel, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Simon & Garfunkel a beautiful song.

    • @kellylaflash1016
      @kellylaflash1016 Před 3 lety +1

      By far, my favorite S&G song. I still have that original album - borrowed it from my mom when I was a kid in the late 70's, never gave it back.

  • @daveofarrell7795
    @daveofarrell7795 Před 3 lety +51

    Paul Simons lyrics and Art Garfunkels voice, a match made in heaven! Dive into their catalogue of hits, you won't be disappointed

    • @keithjones6023
      @keithjones6023 Před 3 lety +3

      First ever album l bought nearly 50 years ago was S & G Greatest Hits, one of the best albums I've bought, and that's hundreds later.

  • @joelliebler5690
    @joelliebler5690 Před 3 lety +15

    The brilliance of Paul’s writing and the balance of their harmony!As good as it gets!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻❤️☮️

  • @traceyb9443
    @traceyb9443 Před 3 lety +18

    Love Simon & Garfunkel! Bright Eyes, El Condor Pasa, The Boxer, Bridge Over Troubled Water ❤

  • @zebulon8819
    @zebulon8819 Před 3 lety +5

    Every time I see people at work looking down at their phones I hear this verse in my head ( and the people bowed and prayed to the neon gods they made) ✌️♥️

  • @lynette.
    @lynette. Před 3 lety +26

    All of their songs are evocative so beautifully written.

  • @georgewodicka4839
    @georgewodicka4839 Před 3 lety +16

    Hard to listen to something as beautiful as this, and realize the turmoil between them over time.

  • @RicoBurghFan
    @RicoBurghFan Před 3 lety +38

    So many amazing S&G songs but I think you'd really like Hazy Shade of Winter, Wednesday Morning 3 AM and Mrs Robinson.

    • @joconnell8145
      @joconnell8145 Před 3 lety +1

      Hazy Shade Of Winter is an awesome tune!

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Před 3 lety +1

      Kathy's Song, Scarborough Fair, BOTW, Homeward Bound and AMERICA which as an Englishman I really enjoyed :)

    • @madkow007
      @madkow007 Před 3 lety

      and the cover by the Bangles...Hazy shade of winter...more content for ya Mr DS 9

    • @timothyparsons8327
      @timothyparsons8327 Před 3 lety +1

      America...which takes you on a long distance bus journey.

  • @realityfuze2817
    @realityfuze2817 Před 3 lety +11

    Rhymin' Paul Simon is one of the great poets of our time (along with Bob Dylan, Neil Young and others). I remember seeing an interview in the 80s where they questioned his success post Simon and Garfunkel. His response was something along the lines of "I wrote Sound of Silence - if I never did anything else, I have accomplished a lot"
    It is worth checking out a live version with just the two of them with Simon on acoustic guitar. To me, that is the way it is meant to be.
    Other S&G songs? I am a Rock, Homewark Bound, Bridge Over Troubled Water, Scarborough Fair (all best live with just them)

  • @mysterychuck
    @mysterychuck Před 3 lety +10

    Paul titled the song "The Sounds of Silence" originally but later changed it. You need to keep in mind the massive impact the movie "The Graduate" had on the popularity of the duo and there music.

  • @stevejacobson2906
    @stevejacobson2906 Před 3 lety +12

    The Boxer, Bridge Over Troubled Waters, American Tune, America. You could literally do hour after hour on Paul Simon and/or Garfunkel songs.

  • @paulagwhyte1720
    @paulagwhyte1720 Před 3 lety

    This was the best song ever written. The symbolism, connotation, personification, all of the devices that are used to get the message across are amazing. It makes you feel so much with words so well. And it's beautiful. So beautiful. "His eyes were stabbed..."

  • @3ScotsInk
    @3ScotsInk Před 3 lety +8

    My fave is "Homeward Bound." It was in the top 10 when a pro hockey player who taught me to speed skate was murdered (long story). I tear up still every time I hear it. Listened to it over and over as a little kid, thinking of Butch, missing him. Simon & Garfunkel's version is THE best, period. Might as well have been Shakespeare-- Paul Simon is a true poet, and musician, and Art Garfunkel sings like an angel. Thanks for doing this. Please consider doing "Homeward Bound." Another great one is "America." Oh, they're all great.

  • @pierrevaillancourt1803
    @pierrevaillancourt1803 Před 3 lety +9

    Silence is deafening What a powerful song

  • @dogstar7
    @dogstar7 Před 3 lety

    I'm really getting into the story of the great recording sessions behind the great records of pop music. Glad that this information is now available in a few keystrokes on sites like Wikipedia
    Glen Campbell's iconic guitar and Hal Blaine's drumming on so many Hits
    Paul Simon - lead vocals, guitar
    Art Garfunkel - lead vocals
    Fred Carter Jr., Glen Campbell, Joe South - guitar
    Larry Knechtel - keyboards
    Joe Osborn - bass guitar
    Hal Blaine - drums
    Bob Johnston - producer
    Sounds of Silence was recorded in April, June and December 1965 at CBS Studios in New York City, New York and Los Angeles, California.
    "The Sound of Silence" (electric overdubs) personnel:
    Al Gorgoni, Vinnie Bell - guitar
    Joe Mack - bass guitar
    Bobby Gregg - drums
    "The Sound of Silence" overdubs were recorded at Columbia's "Studio A" at 799 Seventh Avenue near 52nd Street by Columbia Records staff producer Tom Wilson on June 15, 1965.

  • @nealpierson9072
    @nealpierson9072 Před 3 lety +23

    These guys have a ton of great songs, then Paul Simon went solo and had a whole new career with that. I recommend "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)," "Cecilia," "The Only Living Boy in New York," and "I Am a Rock" for S&G.

    • @ValerieBoyco
      @ValerieBoyco Před 3 lety

      Yes! Love You Can Call Me AL, the video is lots of fun.

    • @mmay2669
      @mmay2669 Před 3 lety +1

      Scarborough Fair yes!

    • @MarkMcLT
      @MarkMcLT Před 3 lety +1

      And Garfunkel went solo too... In the late 70's Bright Eyes from the movie Watership Down was a pretty big hit in Europe and Australasia, making #1 in the UK for 6 weeks.

    • @firebird7479
      @firebird7479 Před 3 lety

      "Bridge Over Troubled Water". When Harry Kalas, the late broadcaster of the Philadelphia Phillies/NFL Films died in 2009, it was among his final requests that this song be played at his funeral, which they did, at Citizens Bank Park in front of around 10,000 mourners.

  • @papaverweg
    @papaverweg Před 3 lety +27

    Although the song is called: ‘The Sound of Silence’, the album was named: ‘The Sounds of Silence’ (Pluriforme).
    Although you can’t hear anything Neon lights are shouting their messages ‘buy me’ and prophets you: ‘you need to have me to became happy’, but you’ll be not.
    Also: while thousands US soldiers are dying in an oversea war, the Americans at home live their life in luxury ignoring the other world reality.
    These homecoming veterans no longer fit in their homecountry. The USA’s way of living isn’t theirs anymore, cause they experienced the real struggles of live.

    • @gsparkman
      @gsparkman Před 3 lety

      Album: "Sounds of Silence" (no "The")

  • @daleturman9522
    @daleturman9522 Před 2 lety +2

    Great music, grew up listening to Simon and Garfunkel through the walls of my sister next door. Like your style, you would have fit in to the sixties and seventies. Wish you well.

  • @shannonwhite3721
    @shannonwhite3721 Před 3 lety +4

    Ahhhh their voices just harmonize so beautifully

  • @famat161
    @famat161 Před 3 lety

    From S&G's Concert in Central Park, audition "American Tune". It is as weighty as "Sound of Silence" and the harmonies are astounding. It was originally a Paul Simon solo song. Here, with Garfunkel adding his voice, I find it just wonderful.

  • @lesliesylvan
    @lesliesylvan Před 3 lety +39

    The covers of this great tune will be hard-pressed to equal the original.
    You be the judge!

    • @RicoBurghFan
      @RicoBurghFan Před 3 lety +10

      Disturbed did a pretty awesome one.

    • @lesliesylvan
      @lesliesylvan Před 3 lety +4

      @@RicoBurghFan Agreed! Plenty of talent out there, fer sure. I'm just clinging onto my past; lol (1950) 😍

    • @mikephalen3162
      @mikephalen3162 Před 3 lety +3

      @@RicoBurghFan Disturbed's cover more than does justice to this song. You have to hear it. I embrace my past (1954) and recognize it when it inspires the present, which is the case for the Disturbed cover.

    • @DanloRingess
      @DanloRingess Před 3 lety +2

      And yet, both Disturbed and Pentatonix have at least equalled, and in the case of Disturbed, exceeded the original, I think.

    • @joconnell8145
      @joconnell8145 Před 3 lety +5

      I agree Leslie. I tried to listen to Disturb's version and did not like it at all. This original version is something with which to not be messed, it's perfectly fine the way it is.

  • @crestenify
    @crestenify Před 3 lety +38

    Do "Scarborough Fair" by them

    • @chrishickey7502
      @chrishickey7502 Před 3 lety +1

      There’s a version of Scarborough Fair with Andy Williams when they appeared on his show.
      czcams.com/video/pWyPhQkZNLw/video.html&feature=share

    • @chrishickey7502
      @chrishickey7502 Před 3 lety

      X

    • @pflynn581
      @pflynn581 Před 3 lety

      @@chrishickey7502 Yes that performance is superb and is actually enhanced by Williams.

    • @lindanicholson950
      @lindanicholson950 Před 3 lety

      The studio version has two songs being sung at one time. Only recently have I read the lyrics of both and understood them separately. They don't always do that complicated version.

  • @zq9m3xh8
    @zq9m3xh8 Před 3 lety +14

    Possibly their most iconic song, and that's from a list of MANY iconic songs that they can boast, although BRIDGE OVER TROUBLED WATER may edge this one out. I'm not speaking personal preference here, just commenting from the standpoint of what may be universal acknowledgement.

  • @johnallen869
    @johnallen869 Před 3 lety +12

    I was a teenager when this came out. It's one of my all time favorite songs. The Disturbed version is great and different from the original. I love them both. It just depends on your taste. Bridge Over Troubled Water is a masterpiece! Check out the live version in Central Park.

  • @itsgleneaton4883
    @itsgleneaton4883 Před 3 lety +1

    This is my favorite of their songs. There’s no sound louder then silence when we’re uncomfortable in our own skin. Your doing a wonderful job👍

  • @Patricia.resells
    @Patricia.resells Před 9 měsíci +1

    Paul Simon would go into the dark bathroom at night to sing and work on his music. He liked the acoustics in there. So Hello darkness my old friend he said is a reference to resuming this work in the darkened bathroom.

  • @susannewitt6112
    @susannewitt6112 Před 3 lety +5

    So you have to read or watch "The Graduate". I have done both and it's worth of. This is the title song of the famous movie with Dustin Hoffman.

  • @simon2077
    @simon2077 Před rokem

    The best of Folk Rock. The real genre with this group: MUSIC FOR THE SOUL

  • @davidbangtson3109
    @davidbangtson3109 Před 3 lety +3

    This classic Simon and Garfunkel song is high on the list of every Simon and Garfunkel fan. You did it great justice in your review and analysis. I thank you very much for that.

  • @mikebowman8680
    @mikebowman8680 Před rokem +2

    To me this might be the best song ever. And like most people that changes with my mood. But this is a really great song.
    A teacher in high school played this for us and I'm sure gave her explanation of the words andmeaning. I wish I could remember.

  • @susanritter2520
    @susanritter2520 Před 3 lety

    Paul Simon wrote this, along with many others, whilst in London, England. He’d a shared wall with Al Stewart for a bit, whilst in the same block of flats. Simon played some of the same small clubs as Martin Carthy, when they were both up & coming. Simon got the traditional folk song “Scarborough Fair,” from hearing Carthy’s performance of it. It is the featured song on Simon & Garfunkel’s “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, & Time” album. Simon’s song, “Homeward Bound” also written in the UK, was his longing to return to the US.

  • @MaharaTucker
    @MaharaTucker Před 3 lety +5

    So glad you enjoyed this. Yes, it is an eerie song, but also profound.

  • @nealpierson9072
    @nealpierson9072 Před 3 lety +3

    This is definitely considered folk rock. These two originally recorded an acoustic folk version of this song, produced by Tom Wilson, who was the most important producer in the development of folk rock. He worked on the Bob Dylan albums The Times They Are a-Changin', Another Side of Bob Dylan, and Bringing It All Back Home, along with the 1965 single, "Like a Rolling Stone." Wilson also produced the final four tracks Dylan recorded for The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, after he replaced John Hammond as Dylan's producer in 1963.
    After the original acoustic version of this song initially flopped, then eventually started picking up some radio play, Wilson remixed the song as a folk rock song in 1965 after Dylan had had his massive success with a back-up rock band. Simon & Garfunkel had no idea about the remixed version until after it was released. The rest, as they say, is history.

    • @richg0404
      @richg0404 Před 3 lety

      I believe he remixed it without telling Paul Simon he was going to do it. Paul found out when he heard it on the radio.

  • @artiewithers6980
    @artiewithers6980 Před 3 lety +1

    I never thought of the opening guitar as rain drops. Very good. I have been listening to this song for 55 years too.

  • @stephenowens8763
    @stephenowens8763 Před 3 lety +3

    Paul Simon is up there with Lennon/McCartney, Dylan, Springsteen. Darkness is his bathroom where he wrote it in dark and the acoustics. It was folk song and flopped. They sort of broke up and Columbia added electric instruments and released it surprising S&G and it climbed charts. Disturbed covers this with orchestra. Paul Simon does a few versions

  • @rygersheepstealer2298
    @rygersheepstealer2298 Před 2 lety

    Two of my favorite Artists and one of my favorite songs, very precious this is to me as my Dad played it to me when I was 7yo. Amazing artists and song writers. Yes they were the first to sing "Hello darkness my old friend"

  • @ishpadful
    @ishpadful Před 3 lety

    These guys grew up in Queens,NYC, NY! So, "...words of a prophet, written on subway walls & tenement halls..." tell us, they were far from wooded areas or a nature preserve. Simon would write about dreary landscapes, cold December days or nites...that was his environment growing up. But, they were beautiful songs.

  • @losthor1zon
    @losthor1zon Před 3 lety +27

    If you review Rush's "The Spirit of Radio", you'll notice a nod to this song in the last section, where he sings about "The words of the profits are written on the studio walls... concert halls."
    (And based on the context, I think "profits" is probably correct there, as against "prophets" in the Sound of Silence.)

    • @vegasbeersales
      @vegasbeersales Před 3 lety +3

      And echoes with the sound of salesmen

    • @firebird7479
      @firebird7479 Před 3 lety +2

      Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman, Howe give Paul Simon's "Boy in the Bubble" a nod in their song, "Quartet", "We're living in days of wonder, Simon says".

    • @lengould9262
      @lengould9262 Před 3 lety

      Prophets.

    • @losthor1zon
      @losthor1zon Před 3 lety

      @@lengould9262 - I think it was a pun. The Sound of Silence had "prophets", but the Spirit of Radio was talking about the danger of selling out, hence "profits".

  • @bobbyg7102
    @bobbyg7102 Před 3 lety +4

    If you like Art Garfunkel's vocals, check ' All I know ' one of his solo hits.

  • @stevemd6488
    @stevemd6488 Před 3 lety +8

    Paul Simon loved Dylan tried to write Dylanesque lyrics, but no one can do that. In any event they made some really beautiful music. Paul wrote lyrics/music but Garfunkel and the producer Roy Halee turned them into the songs they became. Great team. And like others have said this song opens and closes the movie The Graduate and the movie uses a number of other SG songs, it would actually be a good movie for you to react to if you haven't seen it. I think.

    • @oldcougar65
      @oldcougar65 Před 3 lety +1

      Very early in his career, Simon was playing a Greenwich Village coffee house. Dylan sat at the bar and made fun of his lyrics. At the time he hated Simon's work. 40 years later I saw them both together at a concert in Camden, NJ. Dylan's version of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" is my wife's favorite.

  • @keithjones6023
    @keithjones6023 Před 3 lety +3

    Song writing and singing at the highest level, so many beautiful songs. Like America, The Boxer, Mrs. Robinson, and possibly their greatest achievement, Bridge Over Troubled Water 👌

  • @dalem8332
    @dalem8332 Před 3 lety

    Classic #1 song written by songwriting GENIUS Paul Simon. ☺🎼🎶🎶♥️

  • @rudester7557
    @rudester7557 Před 7 měsíci

    Daniel, it is so rewarding to see you, the next generation, appreciate the music we listened to while growing up and living our best years.

  • @jimmyfortrue3741
    @jimmyfortrue3741 Před 3 lety +7

    Great choice.... Check out their "El Condor Pasa" for a great version of a classic folk song.

  • @thomasrocker7408
    @thomasrocker7408 Před 3 lety +5

    It doesn't get any better than that, folks.

  • @EchoesDaBear
    @EchoesDaBear Před 3 lety

    My #1 Simon & Garfunkel tune for as long as I can remember! It's such a poignant, beautiful piece - and as relevant now as it was in the early 60's when Paul Simon wrote it.

  • @sidecardog5244
    @sidecardog5244 Před 3 lety +3

    I love the “jangling” guitar. Reminds my a lot of the Byrds (and Beatles). Recommend I Am a Rock for a similar evocative song.

  • @jamessmithe5490
    @jamessmithe5490 Před 3 lety

    This song was on their first somewhat unsuccessful album called Wednesday Morning 3 am. A stripped down version with just a guitar. Some enterprising producer decided to take the track and add instrumentation and release it and it became a huge hit.

  • @kentnottingham9635
    @kentnottingham9635 Před 3 lety +14

    To me, the Disturbed version is DISTURBING! They took the soul of a song and wiped it out. Thanks for reacting to this and letting the younger set, that this is where it came from!

    • @sharilynbratton6476
      @sharilynbratton6476 Před 3 lety +1

      I respectfully disagree; to me the original is lower key, a bit wistful and melancholy concerning the state of humanity, but Disturbed’s version speaks more of humanity today, and all that's happened on the planet in the intervening years since the original. The cover version is darker and angrier because that's sort of the state of global events nowadays. I am nearing my 6th decade and have been around long enough to contemplate both songs and their impact on me and my life, and for me the Disturbed version is the one that makes me cry and stuns me with it's emotional power. Yes it's dark in tone but his voice is so amazing.

    • @reighneedaze5876
      @reighneedaze5876 Před 3 lety +1

      I agree.The message of the song is much clearer when done simply.

    • @joconnell8145
      @joconnell8145 Před 3 lety +1

      100% agree!!! I wish I could give this comment a million thumbs up!

    • @sukie584
      @sukie584 Před 3 lety

      I find it overblown forced faux anger. The live version he did on Conan was far less forced sounding than the studio version, but I still dislike that version immensely.

  • @seanie002
    @seanie002 Před 3 lety +5

    Paul Simon is a master of melancholy. My favourite songwriter of all time. His best composition? Imho, it’s ‘Overs’

  • @Lightmane
    @Lightmane Před 3 lety +6

    I gotta mention America by Simon and Garfunkel again. I'm sure you've heard it. Bernie Sanders used it in 2016 in an ad and Garfunkel was very happy that he did. America is 3:23 long. YES's cover of it is over 10 minutes. You will thoroughly enjoy both versions, I assure you : )

    • @foxandscout
      @foxandscout Před 3 lety

      Maybe my favorite S&G song. That, and The Only Living Boy in New York . And At the Zoo. Saw Paul Simon 2 years ago, his fair well tour. So many great Paul Simon songs.

    • @markdrechsler5660
      @markdrechsler5660 Před 3 lety +1

      The S&G song “America,” and the Yes cover, would be a perfect comparison. Both are excellent!

  • @michaelkistner6286
    @michaelkistner6286 Před 2 lety

    If you want to see an example of what appeals to you about their music, I recommend "America". It really captures an important feature of their time (the 60's), blending nostalgia and uncertainty in the face of rapid change. Plus, like most of their songs, it's beautiful.

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Před 3 lety +11

    You reacted to Dylan’s Hard Rain Gonna Fall, which had the line “ I heard a thousand people talking with nobody listening”.

    • @HamiltonRb
      @HamiltonRb Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like my wife when I come home late

    • @richardsteiner8992
      @richardsteiner8992 Před 3 lety +1

      That line was awesome when Simon and Garfunkel did the concent in NY Central Park. The crowd knew it was about them. :)

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Před 3 lety +1

      @@richardsteiner8992 no doubt about it.

    • @snakelite61
      @snakelite61 Před 3 lety +1

      They were contemporaries. I was in college when The Graduate came out. All we listened to in the dorm was Dylan, S&G and Motown, with some Beatles and Stones in the mix. It was a great time for music.

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley Před 3 lety

      @@snakelite61 the graduate is a great movie. I think even young people today can relate to it. Dylan had a few albums of original songs released years before S and G or the Beatles did. College must have been fun in those days.

  • @joconnell8145
    @joconnell8145 Před 3 lety +2

    Oh yeaahhh, one of their best tunes ever! This song makes me think of being alone, as many people are, but yet knowing so much truth about life. Being one of the few people who see the bigger picture that no one else seems to notice. The deafening silence of obliviousness...despite the many many messages that can be 'seen' daily yet no one notices, except the few. Important life messages falling on deaf ears...people listening without actually hearing as the song states. Bowing to the neon lights...worshiping technology yet forgetting the most basic aspects of humanity which is treating each other with respect, helping others to overcome the adversities of life. Now I am bawling my head off, need to take a break for a minute....
    Such a sad state of affairs our global society has turned into, the indifference is sickening. The gradual conditioning that has created our situation is even worse. Sometimes the most basic of words, graffiti, speaks the loudest...yet no one listens.
    I won't be commenting on the Disturbed version. I do not like it...there are something that should never be repeated because the original is perfection as it is. But this is, of course, subjective and for me this song stands alone as it is. Great reaction Daniel, thank you! A couple other great tunes by S&G are Hazy Shade of Winter and At The Zoo.

  • @ericanderson8886
    @ericanderson8886 Před 3 lety +1

    America, the Simon and Garfunkle version followed by the Yes version, you will love it.

  • @steelyben6891
    @steelyben6891 Před 3 lety +7

    you should watch "The Graduate". A really good 1960"s movie. It uses a lot of S&G music in the soundtrack. First major appearance for Dustin Hoffman. Also went a long way in promoting S&G.

    • @HamiltonRb
      @HamiltonRb Před 3 lety +1

      Mrs Robinson, are you trying to seduce me Lol great line

    • @steveullrich7737
      @steveullrich7737 Před 3 lety +3

      This is off topic but who can forget the line from the movie, "There's a great future in plastics".

  • @kathyrams
    @kathyrams Před 3 lety +3

    Strange but the album title is “Sounds of Silence” and the song is “The Sound of Silence”. I always took that to mean the collection of songs on the album added up to the “Sounds” all different but all of the same collection!

  • @donnaholland1625
    @donnaholland1625 Před 2 lety

    Had to analyze a poem in English, 1969, chose Sound of Silence. Love the first version. Disturbed did a great cover. Powerful song and a comment on our society. I was front row at their concert in 69. Garfunkel’s voice live was awesome.

  • @tymmgwayn302
    @tymmgwayn302 Před 3 lety

    Simon & Garfunkle are, truly, my favourite. First, they're Jewish and that, alone, makes me love them, as part Jewish myself. Also, second, their music is so Celtic. As a Scot who holds close to his heritage, the Celtic harmony they have is so touching. They speak to my Celtic soul. Their music was primal and spoke to the very roots of our human souls.

  • @matthewrobinson7379
    @matthewrobinson7379 Před 3 lety

    Paul Simon also wrote,"Red Rubber Ball," by the Cyrkle, a one hit wonder, and an excellent song for you to listen to. Also, try "America," "Homeward Bound," and "I am a Rock". Later works were "Mrs. Robinson", "Budge over Troubled Water"(a real gem!) and "The Boxer".
    The Viet Nam reference of "Sounds of Silence" is that the young soldiers in the war listened to it over there.

  • @mutleymutley7474
    @mutleymutley7474 Před 3 lety

    Great choice! When I was a freshman in HS our English teacher played this song in class and gave us copies of the lyrics to discuss the meaning of the song. After much back and forth, the class agreed that sometimes silence in time of sorrow speaks louder than saying a thousand words. Daniel, check out S&G "I'm a Rock."

  • @juliemalmbergmacprpparaleg8472

    Daniel, so fun to watch you experience the joy some of us have experienced!

  • @allanboyer2769
    @allanboyer2769 Před 20 dny

    He singing about the self imposed isolation of people from each other. The failure to engage in any meaningful way with others. This especially makes sense for those in large cities, like New York, where you are surrounded by so many people, all trying their best to ignore each other. But it applies to all of us in a real sense. Just look at people today, walking around oblivious to others, with their noses buried in their cell phones. It's a warning to wake up, and re engage with humanity.

  • @debrahall8166
    @debrahall8166 Před 3 lety +1

    Great sound, right??...yes pls react to "the Boxer" you will love it!! Paul Simon is one of the best for putting pictures in our minds to his words!! Great reaction D9!!💖

  • @ubute
    @ubute Před 3 lety

    "I turned my collar to the cold and damp." Great folk lyric.

  • @w.geoffreyspaulding6588
    @w.geoffreyspaulding6588 Před 3 lety +16

    Yes, it was folk rock......Their first album, Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme got worn out from playing over and over my freshman year at college.....and that title song is still one of my favorite songs of all time because of it’s sheer beauty and that amazing canticle..... Yes, lack of communication....racial unrest.....establishment not listening to what young people and persons of color and the poor were saying.....We;re right back in the same spot again right now. I think people of my generation are upset about young people not knowing that Disturbed is a cover is not that it isn’t powerful or good, but rather that they want young people to know that these thoughts were common among young people over fifty years ago. Their grandparents today. Like me.

    • @oldcougar65
      @oldcougar65 Před 3 lety

      Actually, "Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme" was their 3rd album, following "Wednesday Morning, 3AM" and "Sounds of Silence". But yes, that's the one that was on continuous re-cycle at our fraternity house.

    • @heaven7360
      @heaven7360 Před 2 lety

      so damned stupid not to know the original......DUH.

  • @annemariefleming
    @annemariefleming Před rokem

    This song is just as relevant today as it was back then. NO-ONE did it better. S and G's music was/is iconic. Paul's composition and Art's haunting voice combined perfectly.

  • @Vlasko60
    @Vlasko60 Před 3 lety

    It starts with acoustic guitar, then the electric guitar joins in. Perfect.

  • @patrician7445
    @patrician7445 Před 3 lety

    I saw them in concert in '64. Fabulous! I still play their album regularly. It was so sad when they broke up

  • @firebird7479
    @firebird7479 Před 3 lety +17

    Pert near the perfect song.
    Next cover comparison? Simon and Garfunkel's "America" and Yes' cover of it. (Yes had a single cut and an album cut, use the album cut. Even better, use the live performance off "Keys to Ascension".)

    • @theblackcat5416
      @theblackcat5416 Před 3 lety +3

      That would make a fantastic cover comparison !

    • @firebird7479
      @firebird7479 Před 3 lety

      FYI: Keys to Ascension was released on this date (10/28/1996).
      LIVE: Siberian Khatru, The Revealing Science of God, America, Onward, Awaken, Roundabout, Starship Trooper.
      STUDIO: "Be the One", "That, That Is".

    • @gablen23
      @gablen23 Před 3 lety +2

      Oh, yes! both are amazing songs, and yet so different, I didn't hear that live version from Yes so far, I'm gonna check it out, thx!

    • @firebird7479
      @firebird7479 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gablen23 Just listened to it in the car this morning!

  • @cojaysea
    @cojaysea Před 3 lety +2

    I am a rock is they’re best song in my opinion but this is great too of course . They have so many hits

  • @lmkm57
    @lmkm57 Před 3 lety +5

    Promise me, I beg you, PLEASE watch “The Graduate”! I have just GOT to see your face while you are watching it! I first saw it in a college class called “Introduction to Motion Pictures”.

  • @melvisroberts3715
    @melvisroberts3715 Před 11 měsíci

    Paul Simon is a musical genius, and still performs

  • @joonzville
    @joonzville Před 3 lety

    I was a sophomore in HS when this came out. Kennedy had been assassinated 2 years before, the Vietnam War was becoming a horror show on the nightly news, the civil rights movement was gaining public attention from the whole country-especially the Selma March earlier that year, etc. This song captured the alienation beginning to percolate through my generation. It certainly grabbed my adolescent attention.

  • @rachaelgosser5659
    @rachaelgosser5659 Před 3 lety +10

    This has always been the song that moves me the most. Sadly I cannot bear listening to Disturbed's cover. It is like seeing the ghost of your best friend you didn't know had passed. No one can compare to Simon and Garfunkel.

    • @steveneardley7541
      @steveneardley7541 Před 2 lety +4

      Disturbed version is a travesty--coarse and unmusical.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Před rokem +3

      Rachael Gosser, I so agree with you! Thank you for that. I thought I was the ONLY one that dislike Disturbed's cover. I see more people reacting to THAT version than Simon and Garfunkel's original. I don't think these reactors are even aware of Simon and Garfunkel's original, and that is SAD.

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Před rokem +2

      @@steveneardley7541 ABSOLUTELY, I heard it once out of curiosity and don't care to ever listen to it again....the beauty that is in Simon and Garfunkel's original version is totally ABSENT in the Disturbed cover.....to me Disturbed's cover is DISTURBING!!!

  • @daphned.7489
    @daphned.7489 Před 3 lety

    This is the best song EVER written!! Thank you Mr. Simon 😁

  • @oldschool72
    @oldschool72 Před 3 lety

    Paul Simon wrote the sounds of silence when he was 21..pryer to 1963..you have to realize their songs from 1965 forward were written at a time of the beginning of the Viet Nam war, the Hippie movement, Love Not War....Many songs from this Era became number one hits and they speak volumes even today.. I am 73 and grew up in this era and was either the luckiest or the most devil may care girl attending the 3 days of Woodstock..

  • @stephenowens8763
    @stephenowens8763 Před 3 lety +9

    S&G had hit song while in high school. Try dissecting “Baby Driver”. It is not folk. Paul Simon solo has great catalogue. Kodachrome, Graceland, African Skies, etc. Disturbed performed with strings on TV and it was as good as studio version.

  • @juliecollins1486
    @juliecollins1486 Před 3 lety +1

    We sang this in chorus class when I was in the 7th grade in the 70’s. I was in the group that had sing the harmony part. Not easy! Kept wanting to sing the main melody!

  • @madelineshockley5906
    @madelineshockley5906 Před 2 lety

    As I was graduating from High school 1967, I thought the neon light was television, but now in 2021 it changes to our neon screens everyone stares at.

  • @brandonflorida1092
    @brandonflorida1092 Před 3 lety

    When it came out, which I remember well, it was called "The SOUNDS (plural) of Silence," and then somehow mysteriously over the years that "s" was revoked. This was the first time that most people heard of them. They have a lot of great songs. If it sounds cool now, imagine what it was like to us so long ago. By the way, the "Greenwich" in "Greenwich Village" is pronounced "Grenich."

  • @marygordon172
    @marygordon172 Před 3 lety +2

    You should play more of their songs I love I am a Rock and Homeword Bound

  • @MattJaissleFilms
    @MattJaissleFilms Před 3 lety

    Their songs make me think of coffee shops in New York back in the 60's. All poets and folk music.

  • @rainsong65
    @rainsong65 Před 3 lety +5

    The Disturbed version of this has grown on me. Totally a different feel.

    • @SafferPOV
      @SafferPOV Před 3 lety +2

      Disturbed's version is great. More feeling, less folksy

    • @rhiahlMT
      @rhiahlMT Před 3 lety +1

      I think they both are appropriate for their times. Written after Kennedy's assasination, S&G did great with this. Disturbed's version was appropriate for today.

  • @veronikaklubertova5512

    Paul Simon is one of the greatest poets of our times. I really loved your analysis, the melancholia coming from this song is beautiful. Please do listen to The Dangling Conversation, its a masterpiece.

  • @chrislong3938
    @chrislong3938 Před 2 lety

    It's simply a song of a dream that he has over and over!
    It is fantastic!

  • @dalemettee1147
    @dalemettee1147 Před 2 lety

    Daniel, during this persiod in time, so many performers made such good music. Fleetwood Mac, the Mamas and Papas, Peter Paul and Mary. The list is quite long. You'll love it.

  • @imboss3879
    @imboss3879 Před 2 lety

    It's blessed. It's just blessed. Especially, the Bridge Over Troubled Water which they were amazed about themselves. I believe it comforted their generation. That generation had so much divorce, war and dissention.

  • @stephaniethurmer5370
    @stephaniethurmer5370 Před 3 lety +3

    Up next is Bridge Over Troubled Water from the Concert In Central Park. As always nice analysis

  • @joanbounacos8958
    @joanbounacos8958 Před 3 lety

    Paul Simon knew at a young age the power of silence. It can destroy. It can be shared. It can be used as a tool to make others speak unwillingly. (Discomfort with silence makes a person want to fill the silence, many times saying things they had not meant to.) But silence is also opportunity, when giving someone else a chance to communicate. And in music silence or quiet parts entice the listener to listen harder. This song was a wonderful way to point out the many ways silence can be used. It was also the last song my Dad bought me before he died in 1966. So it is special to me.

  • @joelliebler5690
    @joelliebler5690 Před 3 lety +2

    So many legendary songs.Try reacting to The Dangling Conversation, Bookends, The 59th street Bridge song(Feeling Groovy).