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Simon & Garfunkel - Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. (remastered) (1964)

Track listing:
  1. You Can Tell The World 2:49
  2. Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream 2:13
  3. Bleecker Street 2:47
  4. Sparrow 2:51
  5. Benedictus 2:41
  6. The Sound Of Silence 3:09
  7. He Was My Brother 2:52
  8. Peggy-O 2:29
  9. Go Tell It On The Mountain 2:09
  10. The Sun Is Burning 2:50
  11. The Times They Are A-Changin' 2:55
  12. Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M. 2:24
  13. Bleecker Street (Demo) 2:46
  14. He Was My Brother (Alternate Take 1) 2:52
  15. The Sun Is Burning (Alternate Take 12) 2:46

Notes


Wednesday Morning, 3 AM doesn't resemble any other Simon & Garfunkel album, because the Simon & Garfunkel sound here was different from that of the chart-topping duo that emerged a year later. Their first record together since their days as the teen duo of Tom & Jerry, the album was cut in March 1964 and, in keeping with their own sincere interests at the time, it was a folk-revival album. Paul Simon was just spreading his wings as a serious songwriter and shares space with other composers as well as a pair of traditional songs, including a beautifully harmonized rendition of "Peggy-O." The album opens with a spirited (if somewhat arch) rendition of Gibson and Camp's gospel/folk piece "You Can Tell the World." Also present is Ian Campbell's "The Sun Is Burning," which Simon heard on his first visit to England as an itinerant folksinger. But the dominant outside personality on the album is that of Bob Dylan — his "Times They Are A-Changing" is covered, but his influence is manifest on the oldest of the Simon originals here, "He Was My Brother." Simon's first serious, topical song, it was what first interested Columbia Records producer Tom Wilson in Simon & Garfunkel. By the time the album was recorded, however, Simon had evolved beyond Dylan as an inspiration and developed a unique songwriting voice of his own in the title track, a beautifully sung, half-lovely song. Wednesday Morning, 3 AM is surprisingly ambitious but also somewhat disjointed, mostly because the non-original material, apart from "Peggy-O" and "The Sun Is Burning," comes off so arch. The seeds of their future success were here, however, and took root when the version of "The Sounds of Silence" on this album started getting played on the radio.