Art Garfunkel - Mr. Shuck 'n' Jive video free download


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Duration: 04:49
Uploaded: 2010/04/11

The May, 1978 issue of STEREO REVIEW listed WATERMARK as Album of the Month and published a review in an article entitled, "Garfunkel Sings Webb: A Fusion of Two Major Talents Produces an Album to Be Proud Of." Here are a few excerpts:

Art Garfunkel sings eleven Jimmy Webb songs better than anyone else has so far. Garfunkel has exactly the right spare, intelligent vocal style for Webb's intense, deeply felt lyrics and the nonchalant but enormously secure musicianship the elusive music demands. In song after song Art Garfunkel brings to performing completion the work of one of America's best writers of popular music.

If there is a single high point in the album it is probably Garfunkel's performance of Webbs' 1972 song "Mr. Shuck 'n' Jive", in which the acid of the lyrics etches a portrait of an angry loser. Garfunkel manages to infuse Webb's lyrics with a generous compassion that makes sense of, and gives heart to,... the lines. Another fine job is done on "Crying in My Sleep", in which Garfunkel creates the fluorescent light burning at three o'clock in the morning atmosphere of emptiness and futility, all that is left of a burned-out love affair. But it is the fusion of the two major talents, Garfunkel and Webb, in everything that is done here that gives the album its glow. "All My Love's Laughter" and "Watermark", seem to be fresher than anything I've heard all year, and for these alone Garfunkel would deserve a large measure of our gratitude.

So, hurray for everybody - Garfunkel, Webb, and most of all, the listener. Watermark is a truly distinguished effort and an album of which everyone involved can be enormously proud.

Comments

9 years ago

pedal4ever

I see some acknowledgement of the late great paul desmond on sax. His solo at the end is hauntingly beautiful. no one played a more mellow sax. I think might be the last studio track he played before he passed away.

9 years ago

Craig Corsini

The scatting is with Bob Dorough. The stars of this piece are Dorough, Crosby, and Paul Desmond. Arthur is not in their class.

9 years ago

David J. Gorsky

David Crosby sings on this album. I think he's scatting with Garfunkel during the instrumental break.

10 years ago

JR4006

I respect this recording, but personally prefer the waylon jennings/willie Nelson recording.

10 years ago

Craig Corsini

I was never a fan of Simon or Garfunkel, but the Desmond solo makes this worth the time.

11 years ago

Thirayuth Thiratara

his best

11 years ago

Bernard Mainwaring

All the rhetoric still leaves this a great song about a loser !

11 years ago

Kerry Maxwell

WTF are you on about?

11 years ago

Karl Horak

This is a great song ! Just love it ! And Paul Desmond is a hero anyway !

11 years ago

Stacy Drake

FYI, According to the new speech police, this song is now officially racist.

11 years ago

martinuhl

It was also a Record of the Year that year in Stereo Review. I really miss that magazine.

11 years ago

lyriasfaves

I love this song! I almost wore the Watermark album out.

12 years ago

lostinstars1

what a beautiful sad song...

12 years ago

Cody Weinmann

This song explains how I'm acting right now. Having trouble finding inspiration to finish these compositions for my recital. I'm also continually sad about leaving Cal State to face the real world.

12 years ago

Casio61

A great album. This song also features one of the last recordings of the great Paul Desmond on alto sax.

12 years ago

Bryan Wilkins

Neither Wylon and Willie's version or this one does this song justice. I wish someone with some vision would pick it up, remix it, and re-release it.

12 years ago

1footonthedawn

What a sad, sad song.

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