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Album

There Goes Rhymin’ Simon

Paul Simon

About “There Goes Rhymin’ Simon”

There Goes Rhymin' Simon is the third solo studio album by American musician Paul Simon rush-released on May 5, 1973. It contains songs covering several styles and genres, such as gospel (“Loves Me Like a Rock”) and Dixieland (“Take Me to the Mardi Gras”). It received two nominations at the Grammy Awards of 1974, including Best Male Pop Vocal performance and Album of the Year.

Critics praised the album. The Denver Post’s Jared Johnson called it “a brilliantly executed masterpiece, and surely the finest album in three years,” citing such 1970 releases as Bridge Over Troubled Water and After the Gold Rush. Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times said, “Combining a variety of musical textures (from a touch of gospel to an infectious trace of Jamaican rhythm to a hint of the old Simon and Garfunkel grandeur), Simon’s new album firmly establishes him as one of our most valuable and accessible artists.” Stephen Holden of Rolling Stone praised the album as “a rich and moving song cycle, one in which each cut reflects on every other to create an ever-widening series of refractions.”

However, Stereo Review’s Noel Coppage, while giving the album an “excellent” rating, nonetheless felt that it was “deficient in spontaneity, excitement, strain”, calling its arrangements “clean and sensible” but “oddly predictable”.

“There Goes Rhymin’ Simon” Q&A

What is the most popular song on There Goes Rhymin’ Simon by Paul Simon?
When did Paul Simon release There Goes Rhymin’ Simon?

Album Credits

More Paul Simon albums