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Best of the Classic Years by King Sunny Ade
Best of the Classic Years by King Sunny Ade
2003 | Rock
6
6.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 465th greatest album of all time (2020)
Interesting African folk album, similar in style to the Soweto album and a clear inspiration for Paul Simon.
  
A Decade of Steely Dan by Steely Dan
A Decade of Steely Dan by Steely Dan
1985 | Rock
9.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"Becker and Fagen, like Paul Simon, are among the few rock artists who have joined poetic lyrics to great music with almost Sondheimesque skill. (Honorable mention: Talking Heads.)"

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Ross (3282 KP) rated Paul Simon by Paul Simon in Music

May 28, 2020 (Updated May 17, 2021)  
Paul Simon by Paul Simon
Paul Simon by Paul Simon
1972 | Folk, Rock, Singer-Songwriter
6
8.0 (2 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 268th greatest album of all time (425th in the 2020 list)
Wishy-washy album by Paul Simon. I find he has next to no presence musically and this shows in how unmemorable this album was. "Me and Julio" aside, it was forgettable.
  
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Corey Stoll recommended Annie Hall (1977) in Movies (curated)

 
Annie Hall (1977)
Annie Hall (1977)
1977 | Comedy, Romance

"I find a lot of comedy from this period to be dated, but I never feel that way about Annie Hall. Somehow even references to psychoanalysis and Marshall McLuhan feel vital. And you’ve got to love Paul Simon as the most unlikely lothario in film history."

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Erika (17788 KP) rated Paul (2011) in Movies

Jul 30, 2017 (Updated May 6, 2018)  
Paul (2011)
Paul (2011)
2011 | Comedy, International, Sci-Fi
10
7.8 (26 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Great comedy written by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost; all of the references were spot on. Seth Rogen was hilarious as Paul.
I'm editing this review because I just rewatched this movie yesterday evening. When a 7 year old movie that you've seen numerous times still makes you snort-laugh water through your nose, you know you've got a funny movie.
  
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Ross (3282 KP) rated Graceland by Paul Simon in Music

Jun 29, 2020  
Graceland by Paul Simon
Graceland by Paul Simon
1986 | Folk
7
8.5 (4 Ratings)
Album Rating
Rolling Stone's 71st greatest album of all time
Paul Simon's "discovery" of South African musical styles and using them to restart his flagging career after splitting up with Garfunkel and reducing sales on his solo albums. Musically more interesting than his other efforts, I would still rather listen to the artists that inspired it. I find Paul Simon to be quite weaselly and I can't get past that. The album was unarguably ground-breaking for its time (except a white man using music of black origin for his own gain, that was nothing new) and I would hope opened doors for world music artists.
  
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Cameron Crowe recommended track Barcelona by Stephen Sondheim in Company by Stephen Sondheim in Music (curated)

 
Company by Stephen Sondheim
Company by Stephen Sondheim
1978 | Soundtrack
7.0 (1 Ratings)
Album Favorite

Barcelona by Stephen Sondheim

(0 Ratings)

Track

"There was a PBS special on Sondheim, and I got steeped in “Company,” and “Barcelona” really stuck out. It was like the third character in that scene was Bobby’s emerging soul. Beneath this lilting back-and- forth, push-and-pull of the song was the strong current of what was pulling Bobby to “Being Alive.” It was as rich as any Paul Simon or Neil Young song that I was starting to fall in love with."

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Paul (2011)
Paul (2011)
2011 | Comedy, International, Sci-Fi
9
7.8 (26 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Can you think of a better vacation than going to the San Diego Comic-Con, then hopping into an RV with your best friend to travel around America checking out various UFO hot spots? If you answered “Heck No!” then you would get along just fine with Klingon-speaking best friends from the UK, Graeme Willy (Simon Pegg) and Clive Gollings (Nick Frost).

That’s how the movie Paul begins, at one of the greatest conventions, San Diego Comic Con. Then Graeme and Clive are off on their cross country adventure during which they meet all sorts of interesting people including Paul (voiced by Seth Rogen), an alien whose ship crash landed on Earth 60 years ago and, until his recent escape, had been a “guest” at a secret military base. After some fainting, wetting pants and fears about probing have been addressed, Graeme and Clive agree to help Paul get to where he can meet his mothership and go home.

At this point the movie goes from funny to really funny and as the three of them get to know each other better, Graeme and Clive soon realize that Paul is just a everyday guy like them (well except for the whole alien thing). They also meet Bible-thumper Ruth (Kristen Wiig) whom they accidentally kidnap, causing her shotgun-toting father to chase after them. Of course there are government agents also looking for them and the movie even throws in a few high speed chases. To round out the road trip there’s even a fight at a biker bar (Star Wars fans will love the band playing inside). Will they achieve their goal and send Paul home? Will there be probing? Klaatu barada nikto?

The special effects that went into creating Paul and his realistic interactions with the human cast were amazing, however the humorous soul that Seth Rogen breathed into Paul made the character truly out of this world. Not since Mork and Gordon Shumway (ALF) has an alien made me laugh so hard. Simon Pegg and Nick Frost were their usual extremely funny dynamic-duo selves. The movie is loaded with well-placed humorous references to sci-fi movies and shows, a well-balanced amount of action and great character interactions with an unbelievable supporting cast that includes Jason Bateman, Jane Lynch and Bill Hader just to name a few. This movie is not only one that I want to see again in the theatre but one that I also want to own.
  
Sounds Of Silence by Simon & Garfunkel
Sounds Of Silence by Simon & Garfunkel
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"It was the mid-'80s, I was in my early teens and Simon & Garfunkel came into play. A lot of the acoustic side to my playing comes from Paul Simon. He’s one of the greatest guitar players that ever lived and he’s done so many seminal guitar parts that I just fucking worship! “I first heard them very early in life because my parents had three Beatles records and Bridge over Troubled Water, but that’s not so much a guitar album. The album that changed my life as a guitar player was Sounds Of Silence, and it sort of opened the door into folk and folk-rock and then Bob Dylan. “Anji, the Davy Graham cover, is one of the first tunes I learned to play on acoustic, and it’s an amazing tune. I challenged myself to learn it and got my head round it. That whole album is full of really, really cool guitar playing"

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Still Crazy After All These Years by Paul Simon
Still Crazy After All These Years by Paul Simon
1975 | Pop
(0 Ratings)
Album Favorite

"This is such a great record, and it's so overlooked. It's sneered on, too. It's got some really great jazz musicians on it, doing such brilliant, subtle performances. And the lyrics are fantastic. Listen to 'I'd Do It For Your Love': "The sting of reason/The splash of tears/The Northern and the Southern Hemispheres/Love emerges and it disappears." How great is that? 

This record was played a lot when I was growing up, so it's one of those records I've taken with me. I also love the story of what Paul Simon said when it won the Grammy for Best Album: "I'd just like to thank Stevie Wonder for not releasing anything this year."

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