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{{Short description|1965 song written by Paul Simon}}
"
I Am a Rock" is a song written by
Paul Simon. It was first performed by Simon alone as the opening track on his album
The Paul Simon Songbook which he originally recorded and released in August 1965, only in the
United Kingdom. Paul Simon and
Art Garfunkel, as the American
folk rock duo
Simon & Garfunkel, re-recorded it on December 14, 1965, and included as the final track on their album
Sounds of Silence, which they released on January 17, 1966. It was released as a single in 1966, and subsequently included as the
B-side of the 1971
A-side reissue of "
The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)".
Writing, recording, and commercial success
Solo-acoustic version
Thematically, "I Am a Rock" deals with isolation and
emotional detachment. The song was not included on
Simon & Garfunkel's acoustic debut album,
Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., which was released on October 19, 1964. Some sources say that it was performed by Simon on January 27, 1965, on a promo show for the BBC.See the bootleg disc
Far East Reunion, released by Hard Rain Records (Hard Rain 007/008). Jean-Marc Orliaguet
weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20060721205825
weblink">claims (archived July 21, 2006) this show aired on 27 January 1965 (accessed 13 April 2006). This is dubious, however, because the liner notes to
Far East Reunion claim this is a promo show for the release of the Simon & Garfunkel EP
Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., which itself was not released until 1966. Simon likely began writing the song before the end of January 1964, and had it completed by May 1965, when he first recorded it. It was included on his solo-acoustic
The Paul Simon Songbook LP released in the UK in the summer of 1965.WEB, I Am A Rock by Simon & Garfunkel,
weblink Song Facts, January 19, 2019, {{better source|reason=source is user-generated content|date=October 2021}}
Until 1981, the initial recording of "I Am a Rock" on
The Paul Simon Song Book remained unavailable in North America. This was partly because Simon himself was dissatisfied with the album, saying on the album's liner notes:"This L.P. contains twelve of the songs that I have written over the past two years. There are some here that I would not write today. I don't believe in them as I once did. I have included them because they played an important role in the transition. It is discomforting, almost painful, to look back over something someone else created and realize that someone else was you. I am not ashamed of where I've been and what I've thought. It's just not me anymore. It is perfectly clear to me that the songs I write today will not be mine tomorrow. I don't regret the loss."Paul Simon, liner notes,
The Paul Simon Song Book. London: CBS Records, 1965.As a result, the
Song Book album was only made available in North America when it was released as part of the boxed set of albums
Paul Simon: Collected Works. The album was not released on CD until March 23, 2004.This date is cited from
Paul Maclauchlan's discography {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927011107
weblink |date=2007-09-27 }} of Simon's career (accessed 27 September 2006). For this release Columbia included two bonus tracks, one of which was an alternate take of "I Am a Rock", during which one can plainly hear Simon stamping his foot for a beat.In 1965, the solo-acoustic version "I Am a Rock" was also released as a rare A-side of a single in the UK, backed with "Leaves That are Green".
Electric version with Garfunkel
| recorded = December 14, 1965| studio =| venue =
Folk rockHTTPS://WWW.ALLMUSIC.COM/ARTIST/SIMON-GARFUNKEL-MN0000038936/BIOGRAPHY>TITLE=SIMON & GARFUNKEL {{!, Biography & History | first=Richie | AllMusic>quote=they were regular visitors to the pop charts with some of the best folk-rock of the era, including 'Homeward Bound,' 'I Am a Rock,' and 'A Hazy Shade of Winter.'}} | jangle popHTTPS://WWW.PASTEMAGAZINE.COM/BLOGS/LISTS/2009/12/JANGLE-BELL-ROCK-A-CHRONOLOGICAL-NON-HOLIDAY-ANTHO.HTML | LAST=LABATE | PUBLISHER=PASTE (MAGAZINE) | >DATE=DECEMBER 18, 2009, August 9, 2018, }} | m=2|s=52}} | Columbia Records>Columbia| writer = Paul Simon| producer = Bob Johnston | Homeward Bound (Simon & Garfunkel song)>Homeward Bound| prev_year = 1966| next_title = The Dangling Conversation| next_year = 1966| misc = {{Audio sample| file = I_Am_a_Rock.ogg| type = single}}}}While Simon was in Denmark during the summer of 1965, Tom Wilson, the producer of Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., responded to requests for "The Sound of Silence" from American radio stations and dubbed an electric guitar, bass, and drums onto the original track. He then released the song as a single, whereupon it entered the United States pop charts. When Simon heard about the success of this song, he was still touring in Europe as a solo folk singer.Simon immediately returned to the United States, and with Garfunkel in December 1965 began a series of hasty recording sessions to match the electric "mold" created by Wilson with many of the other songs that Simon had recorded on the Song Book, including "I Am a Rock," which was re-recorded during these sessions on 14 December 1965.Heylin, Clinton, Bob Dylan: The Recording Sessions, 1960-1994, Macmillan, 1997. Cf. pp.34â36. {{ISBN|978-0-312-15067-9}}. It mentioned Tom Wilson's use of the technique he tried with Dylan's early recordings, later with Simon and Garfunkel's work. The result was the album Sounds of Silence, which the duo released the following January. "I Am a Rock" was the fifth and closing track on Side 2 of the record. Along with most of the other tracks on the album, it was produced by Bob Johnston and recorded in New York at Columbia Recording Studios using some of the same session players that had appeared on Bob Dylan's recent Highway 61 Revisited LP.{{better source|reason=source is user-generated content|date=October 2021}}The album quickly capitalized on the success of the new album's title track as a #1 single, and itself rose to #21 on the Billboard charts. The duo cashed in quickly on their new-found success. They released "I Am a Rock" as a single in the late spring of 1966,The reference number is Columbia 45 4-43617. and the song reached #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts, the third single (chronologically) by Simon & Garfunkel to reach the top 5 (after "The Sound of Silence" and "Homeward Bound").This single had two incarnations. First, as a promotion, it was released on red vinyl to radio stations, with a mono mix on one side and a stereo version on the other. These copies are somewhat difficult to locate for collectors. The standard version sold in stores, however, was the black vinyl 45 rpm record with the red Columbia Records label. The B-side was a version of "Flowers Never Bend with the Rainfall," which was later released on Simon & Garfunkel's even-more-successful (and critically acclaimed) album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme. The single mix of the song features a more prominent lead vocal track (and different phrasing in the opening lines) by Paul Simon, and less reverb, than the more common LP version.Billboard described the song as a "beautiful lyric ballad."NEWS, Billboard, 2021-03-04, April 23, 1966, 18, Spotlight Singles,weblink Cash Box described the song as a "hard-driving, pulsating ode about rather isolated young man."MAGAZINE, CashBox Record Reviews, April 23, 1966, 20, 2022-01-12,weblink Cash Box, Record World said that the duo "sing about loneliness in usual poetic terms."MAGAZINE, Singles Reviews, Record World, April 30, 1966, 6, 2023-07-17,weblink PersonnelCredits are adapted from The Words and Music of Paul Simon.BOOK, Bennighof, James, The Words and Music of Paul Simon,weblink 2007, Greenwood Publishing Group, 978-0-275-99163-0, Simon & Garfunkel
Additional musicians
Chart performance Weekly charts{|class"wikitable sortable" | ! Chart (1966)WEB, Steffen Hung,weblink Simon & Garfunkel - I Am A Rock, Swisscharts.com, 2016-09-29, ! Peakposition
| Australian Kent Music Report20 |
RPM Top SinglesHTTPS://WWW.BAC-LAC.GC.CA/ENG/DISCOVER/FILMS-VIDEOS-SOUND-RECORDINGS/RPM/PAGES/IMAGE.ASPX?IMAGE=NLC008388.5765&URLJPG=HTTP%3A%2F%2FWWW.COLLECTIONSCANADA.GC.CA%2FOBJ%2F028020%2FF4%2FNLC008388.5765.GIF&ECOPY=NLC008388.5765 | WEBSITE=COLLECTIONSCANADA.GC.CA | ACCESS-DATE=2018-01-13, | 6 |
|Dutch Singles Chart10 |
New Zealand Listener>Listenerweblink {{Webarchive | weblink >date=2017-03-17 }} Flavour of New Zealand, 12 August 1966 | 2 |
|Swedish Singles Chart10 |
| UK Singles ChartBOOK, David, Roberts, 2006, British Hit Singles & Albums, 19th, Guinness World Records Limited, London, 1-904994-10-5, 499â500, 17 |
| US Billboard Hot 1003 |
Cash Box (magazine)>Cash Box Top 100Cash Box Top 100 Singles, June 18, 1966 | 4 |
{{singlechart|West Germany|35|artist=Simon & Garfunkel|song=I Am a Rock|songid=68298|year=1966|access-date=February 18, 2019}}
">Year-end charts{| class"wikitable"
!Chart (1966)! style="text-align:center;"|Rank
|US Billboard Hot 100Musicoutfitters.com42 |
Cash Box Cash Box Year-End Charts: Top 100 Pop Singles, December 24, 1966{{Dead link>date=January 2023 | fix-attempted=yes }} | 40 |
|
Other versions
- It was covered in 1966 by The Hollies on their fourth album Would You Believe?.
- It was covered in 1966 by The Grass Roots on their first album Where Were You When I Needed You.
- It was covered in 1982 by The Church on their EP Singsongs.
- It was covered in 1986 by The Coolies on their album dig..?, along with eight other tongue-in-cheek covers of Simon & Garfunkel classics.
- It was covered in 1990 by The Hated on the Wedge 7" compilation, and released again on (The Machines: Simple Machines 7"s (1990-1993)) in 1994.
- It was covered in 1993 by Red House Painters on their third album Red House Painters.
- It was covered in 1997 by Me First and the Gimme Gimmes on their album Have a Ball.
- It was covered in 1997 by Arjen Lucassen on his solo album (Arjen Lucassen1997: Strange Hobby|Strange Hobby)..
- It was covered in 2001 by April Wine on their album Back to the Mansion.
- It was covered in 2016 by Tim Heidecker, with parodic lyrics, as "I Am a Cuck".WEB,weblink Tim Heidecker proudly proclaims his "cuck" status in new parody anthem, Hughes, William, August 26, 2016, The A.V. Club, The Onion, Onion, Inc., August 27, 2016,
- It was sung with parody lyrics in Narf Over Troubled Water.
References
{{Reflist|30em}}{{Paul Simon}}{{Paul Simon songs}}{{Simon & Garfunkel singles}}{{Authority control}}
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