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REVIEWS
Carly
Simon's Anthology is an absolute must for any music collection.
Without question, Carly is one of America's most revered singer/songwriters
and this CD celebration of her music achievements. When there's so many
monstrous tunes to choose from it's virtually impossible to pick one over
another. If you love the finer things in life, you owe it to yourself to
make this a part of your music collection.
Daily Record
Simon's retrospective collection of 40 songs, Anthology, is a reminder
of the power of this singer-songwriter, and of her continuing contributions.
This two-disc album will have you singing along on old favorites and discovering
other tunes.
Houston Chronicle
Splendid two-disc career overview from the talented singer-songwriter arrives
at just the right time. Ms. Simon always had a knack for confessional lyrics,
sumptuous melodies and piercing performances.
Dallas Morning News
This
collection of hits and favorites, Carly Simon's Anthology is about
as good as this kind of packaging gets. All the album covers are included
with the liner notes, and hearing Simon's best work on two discs only reinforces
her place in pop-music history.
The Deseret News
Carly Simon fluidly blended folk and pop with a wondrous gift for classic
balladry throughout her career, and all those elements come together on
this 40-track double-disc overview of her life in song.
Newhouse News Service
Anthology is a lean and mean take on Simon's best. The 40 tracks
still leave room for good ones that weren't hits. Simon's long absence
has caused many listeners to forget her worth. Let this serve as a reminder.
New York Daily News
Carly Simon's, Anthology comes close to such perfection. Her smashes
are among the finest in that singer-songwriter canon, and this set reminds
of her oft-forgotten influence.
Orange County Register
The Carly Simon sound -- lush, sexy, sultry pop -- belongs to the '70s.
This two-disc, 40-song collection, Anthology, offers enough Carly
gems and chart staples to satisfy the nostalgic, as well as all you guys
out there who thought Simon was just too, too sexy.
San Diego Union-Tribune
As the recently released Anthology reminds us, Carly Simon's been
delivering pop pleasures for more than 30 years. Anthology traces Carly
Simon's evolution from confessional singer-songwriter to hit-making pop
artist to skillful soundtrack contributor and interpreter. Comprising two
CDs, each more than 75 minutes long, the set encompasses both the familiar
and the neglected.
Barnes & Noble

LINER
NOTES
We
were at a booth in the Middlesex Diner, Margaret and I. North Brunswick,
New Jersey. It was 1975, we were teens, and I was cool because Margaret
was with me. And Margaret was almost intolerably cool. I gestured
to the waitress for a fresh round of Cokes like a very rich man
placing a bid at Sotheby's--an upraised forefinger, a swirl. Oh,
I bet you wish you were that cool. (Don't you, don't you, don't
you, now?)
Then
Margaret's eyes flared into twin klieg lamps of hazel. She clamped
her hand on my forearm. There is an urgency in the grasp of beautiful
teen girls transmitted through no other hands.
"Jack.
Jack. Have you seen Carly's new album?"
I
had not. But I had a brand-new and still sticky coolness to hang
on to, so I pretended I had.
In
short order, of course, I got the album, Playing Possum,
with the shocking cover of a stockinged Carly Simon, kneeling, fists
clenched, sexy and defiant. Nineteen seventy-five. Now, we all know
how in later years a Miss Madonna Ciccone drew a horrified gasp
from the planet for pushing the envelope of erotic marketing--sounds
like an excessive squeezing of tomatoes at the grocery, no?--into
shapes no balloon-twisting act ever dreamed of. Yet there was Carly
Simon, in 1975, igniting civil wars in what we then still called
Women's Lib. I began to feel old when Madonna began to strip.
Be that as it may. Playing Possum became the background music
of that muggy summer for me. Before it, I don't think I knew exactly
who Carly Simon was. A big pop star, yes. A striking woman with
spidery limbs, two yards of smile, and the voice of at least three
strong singers. Of course. But I had lived an uncool youth and knew
little of the popular world. By my third spinning of Possum,
I asked God to keep her by me, tidily accessible in vinyl, forever.
The most implacable adolescent resolution is usually good for about
12 hours. Lucky for the teen, lucky for us all, some vows are made
six or seven decks below our most fierce and flimsy determinations.
They aren't choices at all.
So I unsystematically found and bought Carly's other albums, as
muggy turned to crisp that year and I began to shave every single
day. Poor CD generation: I lament for you as my generation's forebears
pitied us for missing out on the gas-guzzlers they themselves enjoyed.
You can't know how picking up a new album felt. There was something
aristocratic in it, as though we were rifling through, plucking
out, and peering at hundreds of slim canvas portraits. Size makes
a difference, no matter how owners of tiny little CDs protest.
I
shopped. There was the green album, Anticipation. On it Carly
is a hip Amazon warrior in a flowery skirt, guarding the entry to
a lush park as though she herself, hands gripping the posts on either
side, were the provocative gate. I then remembered the title song.
Of course. It was a shade on the folk side for me; I had not loved
it in its heyday. But that made her all the more interesting. I
had, after all, just recently become acquainted with the alternately
torrential and gentle cascades of Possum. Carly Simon, I
surmised, was not exclusively a rocker, not necessarily a folk balladeer,
and not limited to any one sphere at all.
I got the pink album, her first, next. Even the cover is raw. Carly
sits on a divan of sorts looking as we do when a relative has lied
to us about not taking any more damn pictures. And the album felt
more like cardboard
than albums usually did. There was no gloss. What was there, was
her first hit, "That's The Way I've Always Heard It Should
Be," cowritten with Carly's most steadfast--and virtually only--collaborator,
Jake Brackman. Apparently they have remained great friends for many
years, which may account for a wedding of lyrics to music as harmoniously
deft as what Carly has customarily provided all by herself. I dare
say that when brighter creatures conquer and then catalog every
little thing about us, this song will be filed away in a high-tech
alien cabinet as the most glorious example of an unknown singer-songwriter's
advent into the realm of the very known.
I was now a (shaving) boy with a purpose in the record palaces,
circumventing life-size displays of Fleetwood Mac and cardboard
cutouts of The Eagles with the surefootedness of a skilled square
dancer. The Fleetwood Mac wasn't easy, either, what with the extra
width of a Stevie Nicks cape to bypass. But I did what I had to
do. In no time at all I had adopted the adroit trademark of the
Carly Simon seeker at the record stores: namely, the Paul Simons
got a fast sneer and a faster shuffle into the Santana slot. I am
not proud of this. I noticed too that my voice nearly boomed on
those occasions when I had to ask for her music at the counter.
A reflex of pride, methinks, a variation of a mother bellowing to
the friend sitting ten inches away from her that her son's a doctor.
But Carly listeners understand.
Hotcakes
joined my collection, more mysterious in cover than even Playing
Possum. Why, there's Carly in a sea of whiteness--a Martha Stewart
opium dream of a country house guestroom comes to mind--looking
awfully coy and exceedingly with child. One reads the song list
and sees a cut titled "Think I'm Gonna Have a Baby." Yet
the album is named after a jazzy little closer on the first side.
This is deliberate ambiguity of no small order. It's also witty,
in a devilish and unpretentious way.
That year of discovery I saved No Secrets for last. I was
least interested in what the entire world embraced. By 1975 "You're
So Vain" had been in the nation's bloodstream for years like
a spiked vitamin boost. My brother's girlfriend adored it because
it reached #1 on the day she bought her first car. I thought then,
as I think now, that there could be no better hit with which to
christen the ownership of a vehicle.
"You're So Vain" introduced gavotte to those unfamiliar
with the score of My Fair Lady, and it was responsible for
a zillion rhetorical "don't you, don't you, don't you's?"
ascending, mostly off-key and often drunkenly, into the nonvain
heavens. No Secrets could wait, certainly till the mother-of-pearl
Hotcakes was fully ingested.
I now had my Elektra Carly, all the songs of her first fame,
the work done while the ink of her stardom was still tacky to the
touch. All of them I played until I knew every song by heart. All
of them I played while pacing the floor, impatient for the artistry
I knew, absolutely knew, was coming.
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I should by rights be able to say that Carly's ingenue period is
marked by a discernable naïveté of lyric, an overindulgence
in musical composition, and an all-around less sophisticated and
more enthusiastic hand than her later work. I certainly tried. I
have in fact just gone through five cigarettes and a full pot of
coffee while thinking about how to define the differences between
the early, Elektra Carly and the more mature Warner, Epic,
and Arista artist. This is what I've come up with: Her voice
is fractionally more youthful in her younger days. And mine is five
cigarettes closer to a rasp.
Yes, one can hear vibrations of a '60s hippie ethos in the first
few albums. Naturally. These works were written when the residue
of unwashed belief was still lingering in the air, before the incipient
self-adoration we
were all about to caress in the '70s and make violent love to in
the '80s was envisioned. And these songs were produced without the
flamboyant bells and sleek whistles available in later years. Studios
then, from the pictures I've seen, looked more like friendly caverns
for musical folk and less like operating theaters for laser therapy.
But we're here about the songs themselves and only the songs, most
of which were written completely by Miss Simon. With these twin
understandings in place, traditional evaluations of skill based
upon the influences of the calendar don't apply. The Warner
and Arista Carly Simon may exhibit a shade more polish than
the girl on Elektra, but I'm not even sure of that. Her gift did
not grow into itself. It was always there and always explored fully.
I call "One More Time," from Album One, Carly Simon,
to the stand. It sounds like Carly ran up to an open mic by the
Pottery Barn in the mall, and an accomplice threw a big ole
tarp over her for several minutes. It's that basic in production.
But the song and the singer emerge whole, and thunderously so. Played
today, over 30 years later, it holds up just fine. Having been spun
from real emotion and thought, "One More Time" survives
intact, while other songs of the period, dependent on that year's
mode of mind-set, deflate. It slides, it growls, it's cutesy, and
it's pissed-off. It's a one-act play staged in a smoky barn. It's
such, such fun, people!
Another memory: I was the slightly chubby boy walking down the stairs.
Ten, eleven years old? My brother's back was just ahead. I sang,
"Then you turn on the ra-di-o, and sing with the singer in
the band . . ." My brother swung around and said, "You
like Carly Simon?" I was, as has been noted, not with it. I
was unsure if "Carly Simon" was a person or a thing, a
style. "I sure like that song," I said. Then I sang more
of it. Maybe the wry scolding in that deceptively sophisticated
tune lost a little of its cynical power as voiced by a chunky boy
in chunkier eyeglasses. No matter. My brother, mercifully, ignored
me. Outside, I lisped "Legend In Your Own Time" all over
again. It seemed unlike other pop songs because the words and the
music belonged absolutely to each other. It was edgy and finely
crafted, with much subtext; one understands obliquely the just barely
suppressed ache of its narrator, and she never once refers to having
been misled by Mr. Legend herself. All this I knew in my chunky
soul. I might even have spoken as much, if pressed further. I would
have vehemently pointed out how well-cwafted the song was,
and all that thubtext.
We
have our sweet suspicions about the songwriters whose work we come
to know well. Take "Julie Through The Glass." This is
a tender prayer for a niece; the infant Julie was the daughter of
Carly's sister Lucy. That is fact, not supposition. But I think
Carly herself cherishes this song very deeply indeed, more so than
most of her other less famous tunes. Just as I have always felt
that writing the weightless and dreamy "Mind On My Man"--not
within this anthology; you must toss aside Paul Simons and get yourself
a whole Hotcakes--was a seamless experience for her. That is, for
lack of more precise phrasing, just how it feels.
"The Right Thing To Do," "We Have No Secrets,"
"You're So Vain" (sound bite ahead): a trio with more
bullets in it than a threesome of bad guys at the end of a Western.
When my generation fell in love, we skipped
along to "The Right Thing To Do." The song pops its vest
buttons crowing about love and, impossibly, we don't want to slap
its face; it's too good, too endearing. When our love took on complex
shadows, we stopped skipping and mused to "We Have No Secrets."
The best thing I can say about that song is that it not only puts
you on the beach with the rum-chugging slut, but it also returns
you to the living room and behind the narrowed, introspective eyes
of the singer. (That is, let me tell you, what anyone who ever put
pen to paper dreams of.) And when a few of our loves made it big
and left Gucci-heel imprints on our backs, we turned to the vitriolic
glee of "You're So Vain" (or, as the vocally supportive
Mick Jagger [Sir Mick Jagger--sorry] has it, "You're So Vine").
I ask you: Had a girl singer-songwriter ever attacked before? And,
if one had, did she manage to infuse the bitterness with palpable
sorrow and make you snap your fingers and shake your shoulders to
it too?
Hotcakes. Hmm. In a large sense, men go to war to fight for
the pregnant women at home. I rather think, though, that there's
a horse that has forever been staring at the cart's ass; men scurry
off so because a bayonet is easier to fathom, and in some ways preferable
to deal with, than an expectant mother. We don't get it, and we're
afraid of it. Thus do I approach Hotcakes in khaki and with
fake twigs sticking out of my helmet. Carly was about two hours
away from giving birth to her daughter, Sally, when this was recorded.
Or so it looks to me, a dumb guy. As a dumb guy, I hear the wonderful
songs on it and automatically think, Ah, yes, the glow of motherhood
is clearly responsible for the unalloyed joy of "Haven't Got
Time For The Pain," the spunky kick of "Mockingbird,"
the retro-fun diary entry of "Older Sister."
No good. I am a private with no future in the intelligence branches
of the militia. Because "Waterfall," from Playing Possum,
is as brimming with primal elation as "Haven't Got Time For
The Pain"; "All I Want Is You," from Coming Around
Again, owes nothing in romantic corroboration to "Mockingbird";
and "Come Upstairs," from Come Upstairs, does for
a wandering beau exactly what "Older Sister" does for
. . . well, an older sister. It presents, thrillingly, a layer of
awe under a veneer of irritation. Expecting or free to drink caffeine,
single or married, in her twenties or in her forties, Carly Simon
can't not do justice to what is going on in her heart and in her
life. In the process, in her exploring of the undercurrents eddying
below the ordinary and extraordinary times of her life, she can't
not identify what is circling around us as well.
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A
word about the life, if I may.
Carly
Simon is the third daughter of Richard and Andrea Simon. Richard
Simon cofounded the Simon & Schuster publishing firm. From
this somewhat prosaic fact have unfolded over the years approximately
8,000 stories--some of them written by real, honest-to-God reporters
too--in which she is referred to in one form or another as a madcap
heiress. Indeed.
Carly Simon was married to singer-songwriter James Taylor for a
number of years, and they had two children. Even before their champagne
glasses clinked together, their union was probed by Le Media with
sharper implements, more indefatigable gusto, more subjective and
often scary guesswork, and less class than the Lindbergh baby kidnapping.
Now, I can't state that Carly doesn't have at least one feather
boa in her closet. Nor would I presume that her life with James
Taylor was an uninterrupted canoe ride of bliss on a gurgling stream.
I can only say here what you already know: that the feathers, or
lack thereof, or the canoe, or the feathers trailing wet on the
outside of the canoe, have everything to do with who she is and
what she creates as an artist and have absolutely nothing to do
with us.
That
is condescending. I hear it. Excuse me, pardon that, and know that
the discipline I so strenuously endorse regarding the unimportance
of her private life is one I have needed badly to practice myself.
It's human nature, after all, if a marginally seedy aspect of it.
We are touched by the work and subsequently feel that the artist
belongs to us in some fashion. But it's only the work that does,
because she gives it to us, and we would do well to roll up an old
copy of Rolling Stone--one containing those fabulous paragraphs
of soft-core porn they so commonly employed when seriously discussing
female musicians--and whack ourselves on the thighs, chanting, "I
will not sink that low, I will not sink that low...."
I
have, in any event.
But
we are human, you and I, no matter how I sermonize. So I will offer
up two juicy bones: Carly got married again (get the children out
of the room, please) to Jim Hart, the affable, erudite editor of
Boston's DoubleTake magazine. And in Carly's own home--this
is on very good authority--there is a small flight of stairs leading
absolutely nowhere.
Wild stuff, huh? But what else would you expect of a madcap ex-wife
of James Taylor, anyway?
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Back
to de music
On second thought, let's go to the movies. Be warned. I am about
to get very excited.
In 1986 another girl drew my attention to Carly. We were at work.
Bonnie gave me a look that I can only describe
as adversarial, if not downright nasty, and said, "Have you
heard that song, 'Coming Around Again'? Did you know that that's
Carly Simon?" She uttered the name as though informing me that
my child had been seized for breaking into a store window.
Bonnie knew, as did everyone who knew me, that I cared enormously
about Carly's songs. What she didn't know is that I never listened
to the radio. I didn't know this new song. But old habits die hard,
and I replied with the lie I had used with Margaret years before.
Of course I knew it. Moreover, I lied as if my child had in fact
been breaking into the store to save a burning, presumably younger
and smaller kid.
To me, the essence of Carly's gift is most evident in the songs
she has written for film. Which makes perfect artistic sense in
her case. Great popular music writers usually don't have the facility
to write well for a film; too often their talents are solely dependent
on how incident, be it romantic or otherwise, is directly digested
by them. I want Joe/Jane, Joe/Jane don't want me, or Joe/Jane is
my sweetie, and I do believe I will pick up this guitar and sing
about that. These songwriters strike responsive chords with their
audiences because their audiences, in a very real sense, come to
them, ready to be informed of just what heartbreak or rapture sounds
like. Joe/Jane didn't want them either, or faked it really well
once. This is pulled off often enough to launch a megahit.
But Carly Simon confronts life both intimately--as we all of course
must--and from a few yards away as well. She has described her approach
to songwriting as a necessarily tangential thing; she stands a little
to the left of the experience even as she is immersed within it,
and sees and records from that angle. If Joe is being peevish, she
will lament the situation as it grieves her. But her vision is always
more expansive. In--ahem--cinematic terms, she pans back and exposes
her grief, yes, but she takes in Joe's folded arms and shaking head,
too, and looks behind even that. That is how she creates her songs.
And this is in itself a mirror image of what happens to most of
us at the movies. There are characters moving in a scenario, and
we watch and take all of it in, allowing it to then touch us. In
her songs, Carly herself provides both character and scope. She
stars in the moments of her life yet sends an obliging shadow of
herself to a decent mezzanine seat on the right. So, when given
the chore of creating for someone else's fictive reality--a movie--she
is already exquisitely equipped. Because she has an instinct for
observing, honed from standing across, and well apart, from every
lousy or loving Joe she ever knew.
Hear the first four strokes of the bow, the opening notes, of "Coming
Around Again." They last for about a quarter of a second and
are astounding. A door opens or a window slides up in them or a
head is raised with a
quick and tense breath while they play. In those notes, in that
moment, the scene is set. You don't know just what it is, really,
But it is unmistakably a revelation of some sort, and not altogether
a joyous one.
The song commences: what Mommy does, what Daddy does. Baby's got
the croup. Then the activities described take an unsettling turn:
window glass shatters, and what you know was a perfectly good soufflé
is cremated. Yet it is still, all of it, a straightforward and lyrical
list. And this ties into the other thing Carly creates with extravagant
beauty--fable, lullaby. The bare bones of a circumstance are laid
out, the music is haunting and lovely, and the two elements combine
to make a sum too magnificent to be expected from any two parts.
Who is telling the story? The wife? Possibly. But then the wife,
or maybe even the husband, clearly takes over in a desperately tenacious,
first-person plea: "I know nothing stays the same/But if you're
willing to play the game/It's coming around again." As far
as this listener is concerned, that is the watch-cry of human relations.
"Coming Around Again," even in its pain, celebrates the
cycles of life as we live it with a loved one. It is as naturally
satisfying as the feel of the pulse of that loved one. It's a heartbeat
of domesticity.
It's too bad that I get all ponderous about what is essentially
a wonderful song for you to enjoy. I am not always so leaden. Honest.
A matter of days after Bonnie acquainted me with "Coming Around
Again," I could be heard singing it lustily and longingly at
work. Much. Then another colleague turned to me and said, in the
nicest, softest manner, "Why do you keep singing that, when
you can't sing?" My brother had been kinder, with "Legend."
Or at least in a hurry.
The Oscar ® -winning "Let The River Run" is perhaps
the best song written for a movie, ever. If Hollywood engaged in
bribes to determine the names in the Academy envelopes--and I do
not for a moment suppose such is the case--there was no cash greasy
enough to slip in under its perfection. It was written for Working
Girl, and I can't help but speculate on what the film's theme
might have drawn forth from other songwriters. At least several
would have undoubtedly been career-issue-specific. Some might have
been bitter, with stinging electric guitars. Others, poetic yearnings
from the title character's heart, set to a tinkling piano.
Carly Simon took her customary wide lens of viewing a scenario and
got so far out she broke the zoom. She saw a story about a frustrated
secretary's struggle for recognition and saw every aspirant who
ever wanted something. Then she saw the glorious momentum beneath
the frustrations, the blue in God's irises, rain forests and drums.
She gave us a spectacular and feeling anthem; she turned subways
into space shuttles.
I was elated when I learned that "Two Little Sisters (Theme
From 'Marvin's Room')" was to be included in this anthology.
The film was not a smash. Not nearly enough people heard this exquisite
lullaby. After you do and lower your eyes to the devastating lilt
of it, note the craft employed in the composition. Hear how the
elder sister, the one with simpler expectations, voices them with
just enough words to bounce on top of the cadence. Then listen to
the younger sister's more frenetic desires, subtly underlined by
the crowd of lyric used to express them. This is masterful songwriting.
That Meryl Streep--kid sis in the movie, transcendent actress in
life--supplies backup vocals enhances the gripping sadness of this
fable-as-song. It breaks your heart. It shatters mine, every time.
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Dates are deadly stuff. I employ few here and only one chart number.
Faces, names, pieces of songs or whole ones, passages from favorite
books: these I remember with almost supernatural clarity. But the
month, the year? My memory refuses to retain such dry fodder; it
is a huffy beast and takes issue with being cast as a bean counter.
Besides, we have the Internet these days.
Carly Simon's Spy, with its four-minute opera of rocking
jealousy, "Vengeance," closed the glass-brick doors to
the '70s. We move to the '80s, the '90s. Mullets and greed. How
did these times affect the Carly Simon not writing for the movies?
Probably a good deal less substantially than a couple of weeks of
replumbing the Carly Simon home bathrooms. As is logical. If bad
haircuts and avarice reverberated in your own life, I'd be surprised
if you could tell me how. All that endures, if anything of us is
to last, is what we were actually doing.
I
was in Florida. I went to the dentist and heard on his receptionist's
radio--not mine, you'll notice--a thrilling ad for Boys In The
Trees. I drove to Peaches Records with a numb mouth and
shaking hands. Carly doesn't ever apologize for emotional intensity,
and the no-holds-barred covetousness of her "You Belong To
Me" has not a whiff of the rejected angst of other versions.
She is waving a contract in her lover's face so that he can better
see his own, rotten, faithless signature upon it.
I lost my hair and returned to New Jersey. She recorded three albums
of sensational standards, Torch, My Romance, and Film
Noir. Before Torch, no artist of her stature had yet
so mined the riches of the prewar and postwar music scene. Shortly
thereafter, several big names with wonderful voices took the cue.
"Not A Day Goes By," from Torch, is not a classic.
But Carly recognized a beauty when she saw it and saw to it that
this plaintive Sondheim gem was done its full justice by what I
swear is a superhuman alto.
I
moved back to Florida. (That's the law in New Jersey.) Carly Simon
took Britain like Alfred the Great with an eerie and unshakable
pop ditty called "Why." She wrote a lot of music and flipped
a new spin on the Orpheus legend, as valid as Steely Dan's insightful
twist on the Ulysses tale in "Home At Last." In Carly's
"Orpheus"--as I hear it--Eurydice is a woman trying to
make a man see what men rarely see. And the song's power works just
as lucidly for those ignorant of Greco-Roman myth; Orpheus could
be Fred. The guitar strumming alone speaks of emphatic regret better
than any music and most words I've ever heard. A leggy spy in the
house of Carly tells me it is the favorite song of its creator (creatoress?).
The lady got taste.
I moved to Tennessee. Carly Simon was everywhere, doing everything.
Have You Seen Me Lately? was originally a film project. Some
seductive bars of its music made it to Postcards From The Edge,
and the remaining album itself has a distinctive wholeness, yet
one not easily summarized. Possum is a shimmering work, wet throughout;
Another Passenger (vinyl home of the aching self-awareness
of "In Times When My Head") a lush catalog of stunningly
realized passions; Come Upstairs an invitation to a very
private party; and Spoiled Girl a whole lot of woman, an
exciting documentary for those unfamiliar with the gender. Have
You Seen Me Lately? is... a day in the life. And the sexy and
not terribly guilt-ridden "Better Not Tell Her" is just
one mood from that day. All the other moods and moments she captures
are real, compelling, and lived through by the time most of us tuck
ourselves in for the night.
I left Tennessee and started writing. Carly decided that a relatively
impromptu concert set in the middle of New York's Grand Central
Station would be an interesting thing to do. I dug up that old,
rolled Rolling Stone and administered severe beatings to
myself for having flown, instead of trained it, to Pittsburgh that
day. But God be thanked for PBS and the swell job they did of recording
the show. In the program, Carly Simon, the pop star with the notorious
fear of performing, picks out the opening chords to "Touched
By The Sun" as her band and backup singers shuffle onto the
platform and, one by one, sling on their guitars or pick up their
mics just in time to join in, on cue. It's rehearsed, of course.
So were the most ostensibly spontaneous and joyful dances of Fred
and Ginger.
I returned to Tennessee and tore up pages. She worked with Jimmy
Webb on Film Noir and inspired an entire orchestra to record
in retro hats and sinister sunglasses. The title song is a new and
potent collaboration from the two (Simon and Webb--not shades and
headwear), a lush and scenic homage to the genre they so smokily
capture in every song recorded on the album.
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My
time grows short.
Anthology: a rather forbidding word. Ignore it. It is as
meaningless as a set of Billboard chart numbers. Look to
the songs, and hear the proof of Carly Simon's constancy to her
own gift, no matter the year. In 1994's Letters Never Sent
she displays extraordinary talent in juxtaposing the wary with the
heartfelt; she did the same thing in the debut album. The Bedroom
Tapes, Carly's 2000 release, is a landscape colored with poignant
perspective and spurts of fun; the seemingly fragile "Scar"
moves dreamily from anguish to strength, while the slightly tipsy
"Actress" splashes you a little with her drink and the
glee of Carly's piercing humor. But so too does the classic No
Secrets pause for interior moments, for precisely drawn depth,
then toss its head, grab the car keys, and go out on the town. Anthology?
Decades? It all may as well be one fantastic, if rather busy, year
in her life. In all of it, too, from Carly then to Carly now, her
wry humor winks at you like the pal you like a little better than
your best friend.
I will leave you alone now. If, good reader, you have stayed with
me thus far, you have my sincere thanks. You have as well my raised
eyebrow. Maybe some writers are good enough to compete for time
with listening to a Carly Simon collection. But they're mostly dead,
and I don't think I'm one of them..
By:
Jack Mauro
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liner
notes by: Jack Mauro
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