Homeward Bound (61 page)

Read Homeward Bound Online

Authors: Peter Ames Carlin

BOOK: Homeward Bound
11.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Landis! Git in here!”: Author interview with Al Contrera, June 11, 2014.

“I wasn't aware of Jerry Landis”: Author interview with Ron Pollack.

“The niggas let me”: Author interview with Richard Milner, June 8, 2014.

6  
■
  THE FREEDOM CRIERS

Paul looked for glimmers: Author interviews with Marty Cooper and Mickey Borack, 2013–2015.

The seed of “Wild Flower”: David Coplan,
In Township Tonight!
(Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2008).

Cooper didn't really need: Author interviews with Marty Cooper, 2013–2015.

Paul moved on: Ibid.

“You've gotta start singing”: Ibid.

“I was reaching out”: Author interview with Mark Levy, February 7, 2015.

“we speak Middle English”: Author interview with Brian Schwartz.

Like many others on campus: Robert Christgau, “The Supreme Achievement of the Second Industrial Revolution,”
Cheetah
, 1968.

“Don't listen to the
singing
”: Author interview with Al Kooper, March 10, 2014.

“It's the most alive”: Author interview with June Tauber Goldman, February 2, 2015.

7  
■
  WHAT ARE YOU SEARCHING FOR, CARLOS DOMINGUEZ

It was late spring: Paul Zollo, “Breakfast with Art Garfunkel,”
Songtalk
, 1993; Paul Simon interview with Tony Schwartz,
Playboy
31, February 1984.

tricks of the busker's trade: Michael Kay interview with Paul Simon,
Center Stage
, July 14, 2009.

the Pont Neuf: Paul Simon interview with Tony Schwartz,
Playboy
.

had any grass on him: E-mail to author from John Renbourn, March 11, 2014.

“Didn't I just see you in Amsterdam”: Paul Simon interview with Pete Fornatale, n.d., 1986.

Those were the names they used: Tom Wilson interviews,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio Series, prod. Frank Wilson, London, UK, 1991
;
Patrick Humphries,
Paul Simon: Still Crazy After All These Years
(New York, NY: Doubleday, January 23, 1989).

drove some colleagues to despise: Interview with Hale Smith and Bill Banfield,
Musical Landscapes in Color
(Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press, January 29, 2003), p. 63.

“Focus on your music”: Author interview with Brian Schwartz.

Usually he'd switch off: Paul Simon interview with Betty Rollin,
Look,
November 29, 1966.

“So I told David”: Author interview with Martin Carthy, January 31, 2014.

“It's good to be here”: Paul Simon live at Brentwood Folk Club, 1963/64, Brentwood, Essex, recording in possession of Essex County Records Office, Chelmsford, England.

The fucking guy knows
: Author interview with Martin Carthy.

It was hard to resist: Banfield,
Musical Landscapes in Color
, p. 63.

Paul offered something else: Paul Simon interview, iTunes Originals, 2006.

“this is completely backwards”: Michael Kay interview with Paul Simon,
CenterStage
, July 14, 2009.

8  
■
  THE VOICE OF THE NOW

They'd had a few drinks: Robert Shelton,
No Direction Home
(New York: William Morrow and Company, 1986), p. 177.

Dylan and Paul had met: Author interviews with Barry Kornfeld, 2013–2016.

“an encounter typical”: ‘Shelton,
No Direction Home
, pp. 177–78.

Simon and Garfield it was: Tom Wilson interview,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio.

There were hardly any anti-Semites: Ibid.

“Gentlemen, it's 1964”: Ibid.

“This terribly well-written song”: Author interview with Bill Leader, February 11, 2014.

“I also record for Columbia” Paul Simon letter to “Ted,” June 12, 1964.

Born as James Henry Miller: Michael Brocken,
The British Folk Revival 1944–2002
(London: Routledge, 2003), pp. 31–35.

“were becoming quasi-Americans”: Ibid., p. 34.

“I'd never heard anything”: Author interview with Harvey Andrews, February 2014.

So off he went: Ibid.; Harvey Andrews interviews,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio; J. P. Bean,
Singing from the Floor
(London: Faber and Faber, 2014).

In London, the hipper musicians: Author e-mail interview with John Renbourn, March 2014.

Artie spent much of the summer: Art Garfunkel letters to Jack and Rose Garfunkel, September 1964.

“This was the bloke”: Judith Piepe interview,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio.

9  
■
  HE WAS MY BROTHER

“The people in this city”: Andy Goodman, postcard to parents, June 21, 1964, viewed by author courtesy of David Goodman.

The same couldn't be said: Jacob Tanzer, “1964: My Story of Life and Death in Mississippi,”
The U.S. District Court of Oregon Historical Society Newsletter
(Spring 2010); Seth Cagin,
We Are Not Afraid
(New York: Macmillan, 1988), pp. 1–2; Jesse Kornbluth, “The '64 Civil Rights Murders: The Struggle Continues,”
New York Times
, July 23, 1989.

“We close our eyes”: Andrew Goodman, “Corollary to a Poem by A. E. Housman,”
Andrew Goodman: 1943–1964
(Long Island, NY: Peter F. Mallon Inc., 1964).

“One of them is the song”: Paul Simon, “Chez/For Kathy,” record, autumn 1964.

“I've already done the whole introduction”: Ibid.

“So that was a bomb”: Tom Wilson interview,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio 6, 1991.

between
Housewives' Choice
: Judith Piepe interview,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio 6, 1991.

Paul got a British publishing deal: Author interviews with Michael Tannen, 2013–2016; Victoria Kingston,
Simon and Garfunkel: The Biography
(New York: Doubleday, 1998), p. 29.

“He was the favored child”: Author interview with Ariel Piepe Bruce, February 26, 2014.

Along the way, she had traded: Ibid.

“He was creating a package”: Author interview with Harvey Andrews, March 10, 2014.

“He was very friendly”: Author interview with David Rugg, February 2014.

“If I'm not a millionaire”: Geoff Speed quoted in J. P. Bean,
Singing from the Floor
(London: Faber & Faber, 2014), p. 176.

Paul responded to the producer's: Author e-mail interview with Melanie Ezekiel, winter 2014; Humphries,
Paul Simon: Still Crazy
.

“Very American! He used to”: Paul Simmons, “Interview with Bert Jansch,”
The Ptolemaic Terrascope Magazine
, 1996.

“He had a reputation”: Ralph McTell interview,
Evening Standard
(UK), July 14, 2004.

He spent a third: Author interview with Stephen Bromfield, February 2014; Humphries,
Paul Simon: Still Crazy
; Kingston,
Simon and Garfunkel
.

“I start with the knowledge”: Paul Simon liner notes,
Paul Simon Songbook
, CBS, 1965.

“Who wrote this junk?”: Ibid.

“Sorry, this guy is trying”:
Melody Maker,
July 24, 1965.

“A small, dark, intense man”: “Two Views on Baez,”
New Musical Express
, July 30, 1965.

“rehashed Ginsberg”: “The Great Dylan Row,”
Melody Maker
, October 5, 1965.

“Typical brash Americans”: Author interview with Hans Fried, February 2014.

“So you have the Byrds”: Simon and Garfunkel club show in London, September 1965, included in
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio 6, 1991.

when Stan Kavan: “Col Relay System Puts ‘Silence' Over,”
Billboard
, February 19, 1966; Jim Melanson, “Col/Epic ‘Q' Product Gains Momentum,”
Billboard
, November 10, 1973.

a very simple calculus: “Col Relay System Puts ‘Silence' Over”; interviews with Tom Wilson and Mark Weiner,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio.

“I was mildly amused”: Zollo, “Breakfast with Art Garfunkel.”

“No, more than sort of successful”: Paul Simon interview, iTunes Originals, September 6, 2006.

What the fuck is
that?: Author interview with Al Stewart, February 11, 2014.

“So that's when”: Ibid.

“I don't feel it”: Paul Simon interview from 1965,
New Musical Express,
August 10, 1968.

I wasn't violently against”: Jim Delehant, “Inside the Mind of Paul Simon,”
Hit Parader
, August 1967.

In 2006, Paul described: Paul Simon interview, iTunes Originals.

Paul spent the time: Ibid.

“I said, ‘
Shiiit
'”: Ibid.

“I remember this”: Ibid.

“I'd rather not have a hit”: Author e-mails with Harry Knipschild, February 2014.

10  
■
  IT MEANS NOTHING TO US

reigned at No.1: Paul Simon interview with Pete Fornatale, 1986.

“You've really got a hit record”: Author interview with Ron Merenstein.

“What's the name of”: Author interview with Mort Lewis, 2013.

“To Morty, I hope”: Ibid.

“It's that easy?”: Ibid.

“To show people”: Zollo, “Breakfast with Art Garfunkel.”

“Dylan or somebody would”: Author interview with Bob Johnston, June 2014.

“rather intense, though hardly”: Columbia Records publicity handout, January 1966, in the possession of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's library.

“How could this happen”: Ralph J. Gleason, “Then There Was ‘Silence' with a Red Bullet,”
This World
, February 20, 1966.

“to, and perhaps for”: Robert Shelton, “Folk-and-Pop Duo in Recital Debut,”
New York Times
, May 2, 1966.

“Pop music is catching up”: Robert Shelton, “A Law Firm They're Not,”
New York Times
, August 28, 1966.

“Pop music is the most vibrant”: “Rock 'n' Roll: The New Troubadours,”
Time
, October 28, 1966.

“Their intellectual prowess”: Tracy Thomas,
New Musical Express
, April 8, 1966.

“No matter how successful”: Ibid.

“Do you know how much”: Keith Altham, “Now They All Want Paul Simon Songs!,”
New Musical Express
, April 22, 1966.

“Sing!”: Bruce Woodley and Judith Durham, quoted, minus attribution, “Seeks on the Simon Sound Trail,”
Melody Maker
, April 23, 1966.

“Paul Simon is getting”: Interview with Bruce Woodley,
Melody Maker
, January 29, 1966.

“I haven't had any real need”: Paul Simon interview,
New Musical Express
, August 10, 1968; Greenfeld, “For Simon & Garfunkel All Is Groovy.”

“who used to be”: Simon and Garfunkel, live at Tufts University, March 11, 1967, recording in author's collection.

For all that British critics: Paul Simon interview with Timothy White,
Goldmine,
2001.

“What kind of image are”: Interview with Norman Jopling,
Record Mirror
, April 22, 1967.

“I think it strange”: Altham, “Now They All Want Paul Simon Songs!”

“Unfortunately, I'm always being”: Ibid.

“A linebacker-size fellow”: Blair Jackson interview with Roy Halee,
Mix Magazine
, October 1, 2001.

“People say I'm a dollar”: Penny Valentine, “Simon & Garfunkel: It's a Lonely Life at the Top,”
Disc
, March 23, 1967.

11  
■
  SOME DREAM OF WHAT I MIGHT BE

“I said, ‘Yeah'”: Stephen J. Dubner, “The Pop Perfectionist on a Crowded Stage,”
New York Times Magazine
, November 9, 1997.

“That's the
only
important”: Dubner, “The Pop Perfectionist.”

“They're not yelling at me”: Tracy Thomas, “Enter the Intellectual Simon & Garfunkel!”
New Musical Express
, April 18, 1966.

“I don't know how”: Jim Delahunt, “Inside the Mind of Paul Simon,”
Hit Parader
, August 1967.

“The people who call you a poet”: Greenfeld, “For Simon & Garfunkel All Is Groovy.”

“Simon and Garfunkel are fictitious”: Ibid.

“He
should
have been”: Paul Hendrickson, “Paul Simon: Two for the Road; In Town on Tour with Garfunkel,”
Washington Post
, August 13, 1983.

“Can you imagine girls”: Ibid.

“It's like the greatest put-on”: Greenfeld, “For Simon & Garfunkel All Is Groovy.”

“Okay, you made all this money”: Dubner, “The Pop Perfectionist.”

“My father,” he said: Ibid.

“my many neuroses”: Simon and Garfunkel, live at Tufts University.

“a cul de sac”: Greenfeld, “For Simon & Garfunkel All Is Groovy.”

“Rock 'n' roll for people”: Christgau, “Supreme Achievement.”

“is neither a poet”: Jann Wenner, “Doin' the Thing,”
Daily Californian
, Fall 1966.

fifty thousand dollars seed money: Michael Lydon, “Where's the Money from Monterey?,”
Rolling Stone
, November 9, 1967.

The trip was a success: Joe Morella and Patricia Barey,
Simon and Garfunkel: Old Friends
, p. 65.

Columbia president Goddard Lieberson: Author interview with John Simon, September 16, 2014.

Hendrix … with whom he played a little: Paul Simon interview,
Paul Simon Songbook
, BBC Radio.

Other books

Love/Fate by Tracy Brown
Sound of the Trumpet by Grace Livingston Hill
Bayou Betrayal by Robin Caroll
FanningtheFlames by Eden Winters
Ghetto Cowboy by G. Neri
Cold Granite by Stuart MacBride
Controlled Burn by Desiree Holt