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(Paul Simon)

Simon & Garfunkel recordings
Columbia 4-43396 ZSP 111384 (US 45)
Simon & Garfunkel's first hit, released in its
single version on 15th June 1965. By 1st January 1966, it was sitting atop the
Billboard chart. Paul wrote
this song as a response to the untimely death of JFK on 22nd
November 1963. It would not
appear on an album until 1965's Wednesday
Morning, 3 a.m. The song
was originally intended to be an acoustic folk-rock song, but unbeknownst
to Simon & Garfunkel, producer Tom Wilson over-dubbed the original
recording behind their backs, laying in electric bass, electric guitar, and
drums, then released the new version without their approval. It debuted on the Billboard chart
in September of 1965 and began its dream run to the #1 spot. If their consent after-the-fact was
not overt, it was implied: The
duo had been on the verge of breaking up after their debut album bombed,
and after the success of "The Sounds of Silence", they promptly re-united
and recorded and released an album bearing the song's title, which hit the
shelves just as the song hit #1.
It later appeared during the opening credits of Mike Nichols' 1967
film The Graduate, starring
Dustin Hoffman. The song was
not released in the U.K., but The Bachelors recorded a version that went to
#3 on the U.K. chart, on 9th April 1966. Frida Lyngstad covered it in
Swedish, releasing it as "En Ton Av Tystnad", which translates into "A Note
of Silence", on her eponymous solo debut.
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sound_of_Silence
- http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/6596001/the_sounds_of_silence
- http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=796
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