Rene and Georgette Magritte with Their Dog After the War
Cars Are Cars
The Late Great Johnny Ace
Shelter of Your Arms [Work-In-Progress][#][*]
Train in the Distance [Original Acoustic Demo][Live][#][*]
Rene and Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After the War [Original Aco]
Late Great Johnny Ace [Original Acoustic Demo][#][*]
Featuring contributions from Nile Rodgers, Phillip Glass, Al DiMeola, and others, 1983's Hearts And Bones is at once personal and ambitious, incorporating jazz fusion into Simon's signature rock/pop/doo wop vocabulary. Inc... more »ludes four previously unreleased bonus tracks.« less
Featuring contributions from Nile Rodgers, Phillip Glass, Al DiMeola, and others, 1983's Hearts And Bones is at once personal and ambitious, incorporating jazz fusion into Simon's signature rock/pop/doo wop vocabulary. Includes four previously unreleased bonus tracks.
Unfairly Overlooked and Vastly Underrated Simon CD
Donald R. Labonte Jr. | WALES, WI USA | 02/26/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is a great Simon CD, yet it has been largely ignored by the public. Originally intended to be a Simon and Garfunkel project called "Think too Much," the duo performed several of these songs ( Allergies, Think too Much, Song about the Moon), on their 1983 tour. However, because so many of the songs are so personal, and relate to Simon's failing marriage to Carrie Fischer, Simon took Art's vocals off and the project became "Hearts and Bones".
This is not among Simon's more commercial products, but give it a chance, the songs are lyrically rich and will haunt you for days after listening. This is in spite of the melodies, which are not that catchy. I have most of Simon's solo work, and this is the one I come back to most often.
This remastered version sounds very good, and as the original release harkens from the dawn of the CD-era, is a vast improvement. If you have never heard this CD, give it a try. It's ths best Paul Simon CD you've never heard."
Half n' half. Half great, half middlin'
Eric J. Anderson | Ankeny, Iowa | 08/31/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)
"There's no getting around it. Paul Simon is one of the greatest pop music songwriters of the 20th century. I've been listening to his solo albums in chronological order, and the work is fantastic up through the underrated One Trick Pony (which has always been a favorite of mine). I have no complaint until we get to Hearts and Bones. I think I'm more critical of it now than when it was released. The strong material is as good as anything Simon ever wrote. The weak material seems much weaker to me in retrospect.
It is easy to skip the lesser tracks, and consider Hearts and Bones a fantastic EP. Allergies, Hearts and Bones, Train in the Distance, Rene and Georgette Magritte, and The Late Great Johnny Ace are the ones to treasure. Simon displays his talent for melody, complex and interesting chord structures, and sublime lyrics. A tour-de-force of pop songwriting.
The rest is listenable, but well below the high standard Paul usually sets, and most of the time I skip the other tracks. Cars Are Cars is just silly. (Simon contributes vocals to Art Garfunkel's album Scissors Cut on a beautiful song titled In Cars, but I think that one was written by Jimmy Webb.) Maybe I Think Too Much is probably a true reflection of Mr. Simon, but the two versions of this tune aren't that much fun. Song About the Moon lopes along amiably enough, but a song about writing a song is a tricky thing, like a movie about making a movie. I don't find the song that clever.
The album's overall mood is a bit depressed, and I guess Paul must have been in a bit of a funk while writing it, emotionally (the wake of a failed marriage) and apparently physically (the song "allergies") -- though Simon didn't let these obstacles stop him from writing great music.
When Hearts and Bones is good, it is very, very good. The Rhino remastered CD is recommended for its sound quality. The extra bonus tracks are nothing to write home about. The earlier CD release without the bonus tracks would also be a good choice."
A must have in any Paul Simon collection
John Tabacco | Stony Brook, NY United States | 06/27/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"
Wherein we get as close to knowing the real Paul Simon as we're ever gonna get. An underrated masterpiece of honesty, wisdom, song craft and art. If you wanna write a song about the moon - think of Mr. Simon before you start.
The re-mastered version is a marked improvement in sound over the original cd release."
His Best? Arguable, But I'd Say So
J. Merritt | 01/27/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's difficult to even quantify how underrated this album is. It's absolutely fantastic, and features the best and most haunting of all the John Lennon tribute songs, "The Late Great Johnny Ace." "Hearts and Bones," "Rene and Georgette Magritte," and "Train In the Distance" are also masterpieces. Though it didn't have the kind of cultural impact that "Graceland" did, I actually prefer this album, and this reissue has some great extra stuff on it. If you like anything you've ever heard by Paul Simon, this is worth having."
Simon at his best...
Charles - Music Lover | Phoenix, AZ, USA | 04/17/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This album represents Paul Simon's work at his artistic peak, and with little attention paid to the commercial considerations. "Allergies" was the "hit" here, and it's a good song, but this is not an album propelled by the "hit." This is the story of a man on his life's journey, a few years before he became "soft in the middle now." The songs, to my ears, add up to a spiritual and emotional reassessment of where he's been: with "Allergies" he's realizing the consequences of his past choices, with "Hearts and Bones" and "Train In the Distance" he's chronicling and re-evaluating major relationships. And then there's the philosophical "Song About the Moon," which I think is the album's greatest track with its loving admonition to stop procrastinating. Simon went out on a limb with "Rene and Georgette Magritte" and "The Late Great Johnny Ace." These songs emerge from previously unchartered territory and are unlike any other songs in Simon's catalog (up to this point). When I listen to them, I think that Simon was trying to use the song form as a painter utilizes a blank canvas. The resulting works draw me in to the world Simon so aptly and skillfully creates. (But maybe I think too much...)"