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Paul Simon, Surprise CD cover artwork

Paul Simon, Surprise

Audio CD

Disk ID: 14875

Disk length: 45m 43s (11 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2006

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Paul Simon...

Tracks & Durations

1. How Can You Live In The Northeast 3:44
2. Everything About It Is A Love Song 3:59
3. Outrageous 3:26
4. Sure Don't Feel Like Love 3:59
5. Wartime Prayers 4:51
6. Beautiful 3:09
7. I Don't Believe 4:11
8. Another Galaxy 5:24
9. Once Upon A Time There Was An Ocean 3:57
10. That's Me 4:45
11. Father And Daughter 4:11

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

Since severing his epochal partnership with Art Garfunkel, Paul Simon's solo career been characterized by restless reinvention. But while it's easy to see such disparate, cross-cultural collaborations as Graceland and Rhythm of the Saints as Simon's quest for new creative partnerships, beneath them lies a more crucial willingness to continually challenge the very assumptions and craft of his own songwriting. Six years after his sublime, underappreciated You're the One Simon has pushed that sensibility into a rewarding, if equally unlikely, partnership with Brian Eno. Yet the former Roxy Music texturalist cum contemporary producer/sound conjurer supreme (aided by such stellar sidemen as Bill Frisell, Herbie Hancock and Steve Gadd) offers barely half the "surprises" here.

The playful "Sure Don't Feel Like Love" argues Simon can still beckon his more traditional pop muse at will. Yet some of his best work here turns as much on hypnotic, if no less politically pointed, quasi-spoken word pieces (like "Wartime Prayers" and the gripping, post 9/11 rumination "How Can You Live in the Northeast?") as traditional songcraft. Eno is credited with providing "Sonic Landscape" to Simon's production, but also co-wrote three tracks, infusing "Another Galaxy" with contrasting doses of bracing energy and ethereal elegance, while seasoning the more traditional folk musings of "Once Upon a Time There Was An Ocean" with infectious electro-funk rhythms. "Outrageous," their best full collaboration, suggests that while Eno and Simon may approach world music - and indeed most pop forms - from polar extremes, the common ground they find is truly elevated. In an era when many of his peers are content to craft mere artistic comebacks, Simon's re-emergence here is a bold, compelling step forward. --Jerry McCulley

Recommended Paul Simon


The Studio Recordings 1972-2000 [BOX SET]

The Rhythm of the Saints

There Goes Rhymin' Simon

Graceland

Negotiations and Love Songs 1971-1986

Still Crazy After All These Years

Among the most popular artists and greatest songwriters of our time, Paul Simon returns with his first album in six years—and the album titled Surprise is exactly that. First, three songs were co-written with electronic music guru Brian Eno; second, the other songs are straightforward, wonderfully American pop. Surprise is a pleasant surprise for Simon fans.

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Surprise

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 45m 22s (-1m 39s)

Surprise

Tracks: 11, Disk length: 45m 21s (-1m 38s)

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