Graceland Paul Simon

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/22/1997
  • Original Release: 1986
  • Label: WARNER BROS / WEA
  • UPC: 093624643029
More FormatsOnline Price
CD - Special Edition$14.09
CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks$14.09
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Graceland

1LISTENThe Boy in the Bubble 3:59
2LISTENGraceland 4:50
3LISTENI Know What I Know 3:13
4LISTENGumboots 2:44
5LISTENDiamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes 5:48
6LISTENYou Can Call Me Al 4:40
7LISTENUnder African Skies 3:37
8LISTENHomeless 3:48
9LISTENCrazy Love, Vol. II 4:18
10LISTENThat Was Your Mother 2:52
11LISTENAll Around the World or the Myth of Fingerprints 5:46

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

An inveterate musical explorer, Paul Simon has experimented with elements of gospel, doo-wop, and Inca folk music throughout his 30-year career. But his experiments hit a nerve as never before on this 1986 recording. Simon's use of several South African styles, plus a little zydeco and Mexican rock, helped nurture a mainstream interest in world music that remains strong to this day. Moving beyond appropriation, Simon met the exotic styles halfway, insinuating the rhythms into the mix to create a supple, beguiling synthesis. A landmark recording, Graceland won a bundle of awards and helped launch a substantial Western presence for South African groups like Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and Malathini and the Mahotella Queens. Martin Johnson, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Gracelandby Anonymous

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May 17, 2007: I never tire of these Simon tunes, and rev the volume to absorb a spiritual mix of the music of the Sacred Harp that twists with cajun flavors and African movement and crowing sounds of wildness. Graceland, the central piece, is like a hymn sung under water, and parts of "diamonds" burble undercurrent pounding as Sacred Harp passages perch in the 60s itself, the last real vestiges of this style. The album is a masterpiece, and Simon will probably never equal this gut burst of melody and rhythms that pierce -- a kind of music that comes from the inside of those who explore to believe and invent.

Gracelandby Anonymous

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April 17, 2003: I still remember the music video of "You can call me Al" by Paul Simon. It sound it to me a cool rhythem. When I found this in my Fathers Vinlys and CDS stack or Stand. I heard the Album. I heard the album. A cool and best Rhythem to hear or to do mixing or if you work in a jockey or mixing. Do a mix in "I know what I Know", "Gumboots", I think all of the song. But the hardest thing to find this is the Vinly version. To me, this album that Paul Simon did the best album I heard. My first time hearing a Paul Simon album, but I heard all the records of Simon and Gartfunkel. This album is my first time hearing a Paul Simon album, and hearing Moccosa (music from Africa)Jive and music from Africa.I will try to by The rhythm of saints, I heard a review of this album.


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