musicOMH
Twitter
Paul Simon - Surprise (Warners)
UK release date: 5 June 2006
4 stars
Paul Simon - Surprise

buy this title


track listing

1. How Can You Live In The Northeast?
2. Everything About It Is A Love Song
3. Outrageous
4. Sure Don't Feel Like Love
5. Wartime Prayers
6. Beautiful
7. I Don't Believe
8. Another Galaxy
9. Once Upon A Time There Was An Ocean
10. That's Me
11. Father And Daughter
Forget the fawning over such young whipper-snappers as Alex Turner or Lily Allen, both of whom are barely out of their teenage years. This year has already seen the 58 year old Donald Fagen slide effortlessly back into the spotlight with Morph The Cat, and just recently the 62 year old Scott Walker scared us all silly with the extraordinary The Drift.

So it's entirely fitting that one of the world's greatest living songwriters has chosen now to make his comeback. Surprise is Paul Simon's first album in six years, and sees him team up with another elder statesman of music in Brian Eno (credited, rather pretentiously, as 'sonic landscaper' rather than mere producer).

The idea of the neurotic New Yorker teaming up with the laid-back Godfather of ambient music is an intriguing one, yet thankfully Eno's presence isn't too overbearing. Rather, he adds subtle touches to some of Simon's best songs in years, whether it be a gently chiming guitar here or a swooping synth there. The bleeps and whoops of That's Me or the fragmented sounds of Everything About It Is A Love Song are as avant-garde as it gets, but it's a winning combination, resulting in Simon's best work since Graceland back in 1986.

Lyrically, the man who marvelled at the optimistic country of America in the 1960s is now far more jaded. Since You're The One was released in 2000 the world has witnessed both 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina, and Simon tries to make sense of both of the USA's defining tragedies of the century so far with his usual expert eye.

This outlook on Bush's America is reflected in the opening How Can You Live In The Northeast, an infectious number seemingly about the growing political divide in the US. Lines such as "How can you build on the banks of a river, when the flood water pours from the mouth?" make sure the spectre of New Orleans looms large.

Unsurprisingly for such an unapologetic liberal like Simon, the issue of Iraq is not far from his thoughts, as Wartime Prayers signifies. This isn't a protest song however, rather it's an expertedly written ballad about the uneasiness and tension of living in a post 9/11 America. "People hungry for the voice of God hear lunatics and liars" Simon sadly sings, before a gospel choir dramatically enters. It's a heartbreakingly beautiful song.

It's not all politics though - Everything About It Is A Love Song deals with his writer's block (only Simon could get away with an opening line of "locked in a struggle for the right combination of words in a melody line") while Outrageous is his funkiest moment since You Can Call Me Al, using self-deprecating humour about ageing to produce one of the stand-out tracks on the album. Even here though, amongst the funny lines about doing 500 sit ups a day and dying his hair the colour of mud, Simon still manages to have a pop at the self-interest of the Right ("It's outrageous to line your pockets off the misery of the poor").

Despite the anxiety and insecurities on display here though, it's clear that Simon is a man who's found redemption in the arms of his family. There's the quiet contemplation of I Don't Believe with children laughing and Simon's love "brushing her long chestnut hair" and the rather icky tale of adopting children from all over the world in Beautiful. Most skilfully, there's Father And Daughter, which could have been sickeningly sentimental in the wrong hands, but ends up here as rather touching.

There's no African or South American experimentation on display here, just a return to what Paul Simon does best - wonderfully wordy, literate songs wedded to some of the most lovely melodies you're likely to hear all year. It's good to have him back, and good to know that, at 64, he can still produce albums of the most exceptional quality.

  share: 
Facebook | Digg | del.icio.us | more
from the archive
Damon Albarn Graham Coxon Alex James




out this week:
Tinariwen - Imidiwan: Companions La Roux - La Roux Moby - Wait For Me
coming soon:
Florence And The Machine - Lungs The Duckworth Lewis Method Slow Club - Yeah So
recent releases:
Jack Penate - Everything Is New Gossip - Music For Men Tortoise - Beacons Of Ancestorship
Regina Spektor - Far The Mars Volta - Octahedron Dinosaur Jr - Farm
EAR PWR - Super Animal Brothers III Sonic Youth - The Eternal Future Of The Left - Travels With Myself And One Other
Little Boots - Hands Kasabian - West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum Placebo - Battle For The Sun
more album reviews
TOP ARTICLES NOW
COMMENT: Most Read Album Reviews: 2009 Q2

COMMENT: Michael Jackson dies: a first reaction

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Latitude 2009

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Field Day 2009

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Glade Festival 2009

GIG: The Dead Weather: Jack White's latest supergroup hits London

ALBUM: Tinariwen: Imidiwan: Companions

ALBUM: La Roux: La Roux

ALBUM: The Duckworth Lewis Method: The Duckworth Lewis Method

RELATED ARTICLES
LIVE:
Paul Simon @ Wembley Arena

ALBUM:
Paul Simon - Surprise

ALBUM:
Paul Simon - The Paul Simon Songbook

ALBUM:
Simon & Garfunkel - The Essential Simon & Garfunkel

TRACK:
Paul Simon - Outrageous

MUSIC VIDEO:
Paul Simon - Outrageous

EXTERNAL LINKS
Paul Simon



  more album reviews...


Reading Festival tickets | Leeds Festival tickets
musicOMH
about us
contact us
copyright
home page
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
MySpace
© 1999-2009 OMH