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Paul Simon Welcomes Special Guests “Under African Skies” in Brooklyn

4/14/08, 12:15 pm EST

Nobody expected Paul Simon to release the best album of his career in 1986. Up until that point his only projects of the decade had been a disastrous movie (One Trick Pony), a cash-in oldies tour with Art Garfunkel and two poorly received studio albums (the soundtrack to One Trick Pony and 1983’s Hearts and Bones). When he headed down to Apartheid-era South Africa to record Graceland with local musicians he was called both a cultural imperialist and a political scoundrel for violating the boycott. When people actually heard the album — which combined American pop with Isicathamiya (South African a cappella) — it became abundantly clear that Simon had brilliantly bridged the cultures and taken a musical quantum leap forward.

(Check out more photos from Paul Simon’s “Under African Skies” concert.)

He hasn’t been able to duplicate its commercial success or creativity in the years since (though he came close with 1991’s Latin America-infused Rhythm of the Saints). These two albums were celebrated by Simon and guests on Saturday night, the fourth of a five night Under African Skies concert series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. It’s the second of three-part, month-long residency at the theater called Love In Hard Times: The Music of Paul Simon. The first part revived Simon’s 1998 Broadway musical The Capeman and it concludes next week with American Tunes, which honors his non-world music catalog.

Much of the Graceland touring band was back for the concert, as well as Ladysmith Black Mambazo, South African folk singer Vusi Mahlasela, Cameroon vocalist Kaissa, Brazilian jazz singer Luciana Souza and former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne. Simon was onstage for much of the night, though he was often content to strum his guitar on the side of the stage and let other performers take the mic. Mahlesela sang a powerful version of “The Boy In The Bubble” backed by Ladysmith Black Mambazo, who later played a note-perfect a cappella rendition of their Graceland spotlight track “Homeless.” Simon took the vocals for “Gumboots,” “Cool Cool River” and sang a tender duet with a very pregnant Souza on “Vendedor de Sonhos.”

The MVP of the night, however, was clearly David Byrne. Wearing a bright green shirt and grinning like a madman, he sauntered onstage to sing back-up on the standout Rhythm of the Saints track “Born At The The Time,” before launching into a rollicking “I Know What I Know” that bought the entire audience to their feet for the first time of the evening. He followed it up with an orgasmic “You Can Call Me Al,” which had much of the audience dancing in the aisle while Byrne maniacally danced Stop Making Sense-style onstage. It was a hard act to follow, but Simon tried with a triple shot of “Diamonds On The Soles of Her Shoes,” “Graceland” and “That Was Your Mother” as the finale.

Paul Simon’s career has been a little rocky since his two forays into world music. He spent seven years crafting The Capeman, only to see it universally panned and close after just sixty-eight performances. The recent reunion tour with Art Garfunkel was a great show, but not exactly a forward looking project. His only two albums since Rhythm of the Saints — 2000’s You’re The One and 2006’s Surprise — were met mostly with indifference (though I’d argue they both had many strong moments). He hasn’t seemed cool in a very long time, which is probably why he agreed to spend a month at BAM reviving his past. The Under African Skies show was a strong reminder that he was one of the very few 1960s rock stars still putting out brilliant music twenty years on. Decades from now, Graceland will most likely be seen as Simon’s crowning achievement, and this show was a wonderful reminder of that fascinating chapter of his career.

[Photo: Getty]


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Comments

Kyra | 4/14/2008, 3:46 pm EST

Surprise is one of my favorite albums in the past couple years, two summers ago I went to see him in concert and he played several of the tracks. The song “Wartime Prayers” showed that Paul Simon is as relevant now as he’s always been. He was also as full of energy and gave the best performance that I had ever seen.

Matt | 4/14/2008, 5:01 pm EST

An album with so much versatility and substance. “Crazy Love Volume 2″ is still my favorite song from that album, but needless to say, a non-Paul Simon fan could listen to Graceland from start to finish, without question be moved and hear the beauty in the imagery and songs.

And David Byrne…he is just as talented, the opposite of Paul Simon on the stage, but very rightly so an equal. I hope the Talking Heads will reunite, by far the most talented, original line-up group, that is still around, but not together, in the music industry today.

Paul Simon with Wyclef Jean isnt to bad either.

MSG | 4/15/2008, 5:18 am EST

Man, this guy really burned himself on that happily crappy pretentious unlistenable album, Graceland.

Twenty two years after its release he’s still doing the same world music shtick.

It’s like a bad relationship he can’t seem to get over.

Hey Paul, either move on or be gone!

Sean | 4/15/2008, 10:06 am EST

I have been to both of the BAM shows in this series so far. I am a big live music fan but not a dedicated Paul Simon fan. I saw the Friday night 4/11 show and thought it was excellent. Not so much because Paul Simon is a standout performer, but because he is a VERY skilled songwriter with a gift for combining lyric with melody. It is the songs that standout and make the whole 3 evening retrospective work so well with a varied lineup of performers. As for MSG’s comment, well the guy is just an idiot. The three groups of shows he is putting on this month cover much different material with only 1 evening being devoted to world music. Additionally since “shtick” would be devoted to comic themes, and the music presented is far from thematically comic, MSG show his own ignorance of either the vocabulary he uses, the subject matter he refers to or quite possibly both.
On another note as a big Talking Heads fan I am sure you will not see any reunion there. It is as likely as John Fogarty re-uniting with his old Creedence bandmates, and for many of the same reasons. Byrne acts as though he is the sole author of all that material and refuses to allow his former bandmates to promote it. (I will see The Tom Tom Club this summer, so I will see if there is any Heads material in their set). For the most part Byrne has retired the TH songbook and most of the recent times I have seen him perform, at least the last 3, he has been performing someone else’s material such as here with the Paul Simon songs.

Reki | 4/15/2008, 7:31 pm EST

I have to agree Kyra, I also saw Paul perform on the Suprise tour, and I aslo saw his Born At The Right Time tour. He is a brilliant songwriter and performer. And as Kyra has said, just through “Wartime Prayer” shows how relevant Paul is today. It is a moving and powerful song.

Metal Shawn G | 4/15/2008, 8:00 pm EST

re: Sean | 4/15/2008, 10:06 am EST

Additionally since “shtick” would be devoted to comic themes, and the music presented is far from thematically comic, MSG show his own ignorance of either the vocabulary he uses, the subject matter he refers to or quite possibly both.”

First of all “schtick” refers to him being a self-parody. “Schtick” refers to his much trod world-music routine. You’re the one with the limited understanding of what the word really means. Try a dictionary.

glorious A-hole | 4/16/2008, 10:58 am EST

once again Metal Shawn G shows what a putz he is. Don’t we all feel soooo much better than everyone else after This dorks attempt to educate us?

G Shawn Metal | 4/16/2008, 7:28 pm EST

You can’t be educated; you need a mind for that.

Anne | 4/22/2008, 4:28 pm EST

I think Paul Simon creates his music for the sole purpose of celebrating himself.
Remember the Mike Nichols film Carnal knowledge? The actors were Jack Nicholson
(Jonathan) and Art Garfunkel (Sandy). Specifically, the scene in which Jonathan, after a series of loves and marriages failed, it should be to find a prostitute (Rita Moreno) to whom he confided his problems of sexual failures.
The woman succeeds it excites to with a long, intense monologue with which he recalls that only loves himself.
For me, Paul Simon = Jonathan
Paul said that often does not give importance to demands of people. His cycle at the BAM confirms this. He revisited the Capeman to overcome the old failure, it was autocelebrate with African repertoire, and revisits the quiet railway stations, urban rhythms, and immigrant dreams of his greatest American tunes collaborates “with an extraordinary range of artists to offer three musical constellations “that are OLU DARA, GRIZZLY BEAR, JOSH GROBAN, AMOS LEE, THE ROCHES, GILLIAN WELCH… No trace of ART GARFUNKEL. Paul knows that many people have loved and love the harmonization of Simon & Garfunkel, but has decided to “cancel” that period of his career because to deny the contribution made to its success by the great voice of Art.
I not understand how a brilliant man and sensitive can act with great firmness, ignoring the demands of fans and the feelings of his old friend.

patrik | 5/22/2008, 5:10 am EST

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rigplwqcs nwzhtquk | 5/24/2008, 2:28 pm EST

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Vundiliver | 5/31/2008, 5:14 pm EST

Interest story!

1800 | 7/3/2008, 5:42 pm EST

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alan | 1/9/2009, 8:29 am EST

paul simon es el mejor su musica es la unica que toco mi alma

paul simon is the best He’s music is the only one that tunes in my soul

Waneta | 2/13/2009, 7:10 pm EST

Good Day. A hypocrite is a person who–but who isn’t?
I am from Niger and also am speaking English, give please true I wrote the following sentence: “Learning how to start a conversation is not quite as difficult if you prepare in advance.”

With love :-D , Waneta.

Jonn | 3/16/2009, 3:45 am EST

WwEQbj Goodsite

VanDenn | 4/8/2009, 11:19 am EST

Welcome friends! ,

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