Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I can't believe it....best album of 2006., June 10, 2006
I received this album as a birthday gift - my first Paul Simon album since Graceland. That's obviously a span of many years (almost 20) and my musical tastes have since migrated to the more "modern" sounds of Arcade Fire, Ryan Adams, Zero 7, Audioslave, The Shins, etc. Perhaps an eclectic mix of artists, but all pioneers in the modern era of rock.
I popped in Suprise and was completely blown away. The master shines on this album of incredible stories intertwined within some of the best hooks I've heard in some time. Lyrically, this album is pure poetry. Examples:
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A mother murmurs in twilight sleep
And draws her babies closer.
With hush-a-bies for sleepy eyes,
And kisses on the shoulder.
To drive away despair
She sends a wartime prayer.
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It's a dead end job, and you gets tired of sittin'
And it's like a nicotine habit you're always thinking about quittin'
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I could fill this review with meaningful lyrics from each tune - there isn't a bad song on the entire album.
Regardless of your age or musical leanings, I can't recommend this album highly enough. Good for mellow tunes while in the office, but don't miss the chance to crank this in your car or iPod. The musicans Simon surrounds himself with are the best in the business. Steve Gadd on drums? Nuff said.
One of the many beauties of art is that it lasts forever. At some point in the near or hopefully distant future, Paul Simon will be gone. We will all remember him for his innovative songwriting and harmonies with Mr. Garfunkel, but a new generation will hopefully bow down to him for the genius of Surprise.
ebhp
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117 of 141 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The storyteller sings again, May 10, 2006
This album is Paul Simon's first in the last six years, and although it may not win him many new fans, his existing fan base will be pleased to find out that the man can still write lyrics with the best of them.
As usual, the songs can be compared to short stories, told in his unique style with minimal backing arrangements, just there to perfectly frame the storyteller's art.
"How Can You Live in the Northeast" asks simple questions about the meaning of life, while "Everything About It Is a Love Song" is an introspective on a life past. "Outrageous" is a rant about bothersome things, while "Sure Don't Feel Like Love" is more political. "Beautiful" is a track that takes you back to the old Simon & Garfunkel days, as does "Once Upon a Time There Was an Ocean", two of the better songs on the album. The excellent "Father and Daughter" brings the album to a close with a moving tribute to the love that a man reserves for that special little girl in his life.
"There could never be a father who loved his daughter more than I love you"
And so it goes, eleven tracks from the master, each longer than 3 minutes, about love, war, politics, and whatever else he chooses. A great album for any Simon fan.
Amanda Richards, May 10, 2006
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31 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pretty darn fantastic, May 9, 2006
I have bought 38 CDs in 2006 (not all from Amazon!) and this is the first that I give five stars to. I have been a Paul Simon fan for a long time and being an admirer of his halcyon days with Art Garfunkel, I was, it is safe to say, very sceptical of the music (or more importantly the sound) that would come out of the collaboration with Brian Eno. Don't get me wrong here, Eno is a legend himself. His music, either through Roxy Music, or Bowie, or U2 are at the very forefront of dynamism and creativity. But Paul Simon?? The master of melancholy? The "poet laureate of wiseass New York" (Rolling Stone 2006)? Nah...
Well...how wrong I was.
This album sounds fabulous. The soundscapes created by Eno as a backdrop to Simon's voice and guitar strumming are both inventive and graceful. It does not have the edginess of a Peter Gabriel or U2 and is seemingly just right. Simon's voice sounds marvellous and just having seen Bob Dylan in New Orleans and Neil Young on TV, I am thankful that at least one musical pioneer has survived vocally. Some of the falsettos he breaks into through the course of this album are just wonderful.
At the end of the day though, for me, Simon is defined not by the background music or the hummability of the overall album or the other peripheral characteristics but by the WORDS he writes. He is the best lyricist in modern music and while other legends such as Neil Young have gone all out on albums such as "Ohio" and "Living with War", Simon has always been more subtle. "Surprise" is NO different.
"Wartime Prayers" will be talked about for a few years to come as a truly defining song in modern music. Why? Because, unlike few other songs before it, it has combined sentiment, with fear, with anger and with sadness. "How can you live in the northeast" is also beautiful and in other ways "Another Galaxy" and "Beautiful" stand out. Overall, this album has few weaknesses.
I am a little dissapointed (being an ardent review reader) that people are comparing "Surprise" to "Graceland". Don't people. They are TOTALLY different musically and in their own way land the sucker punch that modern music misses completely.
I also acknowledge that this album will not be a commercial success. Paul Simon isn't an 'in' artist but please do buy it because if you want some direction in your life, these are the types of albums you should be listening to.
EXTRA: I must say, I am totally surprised by the scathing rhetoric from the "2 star" reviewers. I am not exactly sure what you are listening to but it isn't "Surprise"; thats for sure.
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