- published: 19 Mar 2008
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Bookends is the fourth studio album by Simon & Garfunkel, released on April 3, 1968 by Columbia Records. It was produced by Paul Simon, Roy Halee and Art Garfunkel.
The songs of the first side of the album follow a unified concept, exploring a life journey from childhood to old age, while the second side contained unused songs intended for The Graduate soundtrack.
Bookends was a #1 hit on Billboard's (North America) Pop Albums chart, as well as in the UK. Four singles charted: "A Hazy Shade of Winter", "At the Zoo", "Fakin' It" and "Mrs Robinson," which peaked at #13, #16 and #23 and #1, respectively.
In 2003, the TV network VH1 named Bookends the 93rd greatest album of all time. In 2003, the album was ranked number 233 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
The album begins softly with the song "Bookends Theme", but takes a heavier turn with the second track, "Save the Life of My Child", which uses the sounds of a distorted synthesizer and is a noted departure from the softer sound that was the signature of the duo. "Save the Life of My Child" also features a sample from their single "The Sounds of Silence", and includes a bass synthesizer sound personally set up by Bob Moog himself. The album also features the single "Mrs. Robinson", which was famous for its inclusion in the film The Graduate.
Do you hear the rattling of hollow bones?Birds! They
make their homes in the trees above.
'As she went on, she was..' he went into details.
Once and once more, I scraped my fork.
The sun sets
The city slips
WInter hatchests slash it
The house collapses
Reading, watching, and collecting
I got clera on the radio.
112 days stood the walking dead
Listless voices singing hymns.
I sing along while she responds
By playing flipbook with the photobooth strip
Standing like a gnomon
Measuring shadows in the evening light
Drip, drip, 'rain, rain'.
'Will we ever feel right again?'
The sun sets
The city slips
WInter hatchests slash it
The house collapses
Reading, watching, and collecting
I got clera on the radio.
'Oh no, you dit-int.'
But it began
You turned around
Some sunday someday and
We were standing, not moving
It was like this, it began
Like this:
Do you hear the rattling of hollow bones?
Birds! They make their homes in the trees above.
The sun sets
The city slips
WInter hatchests slash it
The house collapses
Reading, watching, and collecting
I got clera on the radio.
'Oh no, you dit-int.'
But it began
You turned around
Some sunday someday and
We were standing, not moving
It was like this, it began
Like this:
'Who's got the muskets? The monkey's building caskets.'
Said,
'Who's in? 'tih, you're a hooligan, you're a boook'n,
you're
standling like a gnoman,' said, 'NO MAN! No man, you
must be fookin' jokin' ' said, 'who is?' said, 'YOU is,
'n I'll soon show you
the bizniz!' said, naw man, naw man. Naw man no! Naw