Paul Simon - Still Crazy After All These Years [Columbia Records PC 33540] (25 October 1975)

Released: 25 October 1975
Country: US
Label: Columbia Records
Catalog: PC 33540
Genre: Rock, Folk-Rock

Item# SR-COPC33540
Ratings: C=VG+; LP=VG+


T R A C K L I S T:
01 Still Crazy After All These Years
02 My Little Town
03 I Do It For Your Love
04 50 Ways To Leave Your Lover
05 Night Game
06 Gone At Last
07 Some Folks Lives Roll Easy
08 Have A Good Time
09 You're Kind
10 Silent Eyes




Still Crazy After All These Years
Paul Simon


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Album Review

William Ruhlmann [allmusic.com]

The third new studio album of Paul Simon's post-Simon & Garfunkel career was a musical and lyrical change of pace from his first two, Paul Simon and There Goes Rhymin' Simon. Where Simon had taken an eclectic approach before, delving into a variety of musical styles and recording all over the world, Still Crazy found him working for the most part with a group of jazz-pop New York session players, though he did do a couple of tracks (''My Little Town'' and ''Still Crazy After All These Years'') with the Muscle Shoals rhythm section that had appeared on Rhymin' Simon and another (''Gone at Last'') returned to the gospel style of earlier songs like ''Loves Me Like a Rock.'' Of course, ''My Little Town'' also marked a return to working with Art Garfunkel, and another Top Ten entry for S&G. But the overall feel of Still Crazy was of a jazzy style subtly augmented with strings and horns. Perhaps more striking, however, was Simon's lyrical approach. Where Rhymin' Simon was the work of a confident family man, Still Crazy came off as a post-divorce album, its songs reeking of smug self-satisfaction and romantic disillusionment. At their best, such sentiments were undercut by humor and made palatable by musical hooks, as on ''50 Ways to Leave Your Lover,'' which became the biggest solo hit of Simon's career. But elsewhere, as on ''Have a Good Time,'' the singer's cynicism seemed unearned. Still, as out of sorts as Simon may have been, he was never more in tune with his audience: Still Crazy topped the charts, spawned four Top 40 hits, and won Grammys for Song of the Year and Best Vocal Performance.