So Beautiful or So What

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (264 ratings)
So Beautiful or So What album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK
  • Artist: Paul Simon (See All Albums by Paul Simon)
  • Date Released: Apr 12, 2011

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Hear Music

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 38:14

eMusic Review 0

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

03.29.11
Returning to his roots
2011 | Label: Hear Music

Since his 1986 blockbuster Graceland, Paul Simon has been writing songs the same way an MC pens rhymes — to beats or to nearly finished tracks. So Beautiful or So What flips that script. Its foundation is the veteran singer-songwriter's finely tuned melodies, his intricate guitar licks and his knack for seamlessly merging personal and sociological commentary.

More than anything, So Beautiful feels and sounds like a Paul Simon album. This nearly-native New Yorker has always been the most cosmopolitan and often the most experimental of his generation's marquee singer-songwriters: As far back as Simon & Garfunkel's 1970 swan song Bridge Over Troubled Water, he was constructing rhythms from tape loops ("Cecilia") and singing over indigenous recordings ("El Condor Pasa [If I Could]"). Looking to the past and the future, the East and the West, So Beautiful's 10 tracks present themselves as a grand statement on life in the 21st century, even as it contemplates the afterlife. Despite its organic origins, at times, it resembles the highly-percussive Graceland; it's got rippling guitars courtesy of Cameroonian musician Vincent Nguini, and kora, the West African harp. There are bluegrass flavors from renown dobro/pedal steel player Mark Stewart, Indian… read more »

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user avatar

Simply the best

anne.enna

I play this over and over - Paul Simon just keeps getting better and better. I love this guy and his music!

user avatar

Best Album, 2011

AllanAlfabet

This album proves that waiting until inspiration strikes is better than just writing music out of contractual obligation. Paul Simon has truly found more to say than any artist I can think of in recent history, while still sounding just like Paul Simon. Ignore the lyrics and sampling and these songs could have been written 40 years ago. Pay attention to the lyrics and the sampling, and this album is thoroughly contemporary. Awesome job, Paul.

user avatar

One of the Year's Best!

Pumpkin-22

Among old timers, Simon is the guy whose music is consistently exciting and innovative. One of his best.

user avatar

Just another fine album!

wasit10538

Is there really a BAD Paul Simon album out there? I think not: after allowing for personal tastes and the fact that each one's at least a little bit different than the others, there are only "very good" and "great" albums in his catalog. I put this in the "great" category after six listenings.

user avatar

So Beautiful ("Nuff Said!)

I-Am-The-God-Of-Hell-Fire

For anyone else "Graceland" would have been next to impossible to surpass. Paul Simon makes it seem as easy as dropping into your barbershop on a Saturday afternoon just to hang out. The pulsing rhythms support one of the finest voices making music today. Although Art Garfunkel had a sweet, almost angelic delivery, Paul Simon's voice has a more mature and polished sound without a need to resort to electronic enhancements. "Getting Ready For Christmas Day" is already playing over and over in my head and it will only be a matter of time before the other nine songs are etched into my synapsis. The earlier review that said this was an album that could be listened to over and over is right on.

user avatar

Just Right

Solarte

It has been a long time since I had an album that I wanted to play over and over. This is it!

user avatar

This is the one

gardenflans

I know we have all been waiting for Graceland II, but it is time to see that Paul is an american treasure and he puts out quality stuff all the time. I must admit that I enjoy this one better than any since Graceland, but Paul Simon needs to be listened to all the time. This is one that you will listen to over and over and never be tired of any of the tracks. We live the second half of our lives differently than we lived the first half. If you have not downloaded this yet, you need to do yourself a favor and do it now. Paul is living in the second half of his life and I am glad we has taken me along. The lyrics are unbelievable and the rhythms are ones that stick in my head for hours. I love it. Thanks Paul.

user avatar

WOW.

onthebus

I can't stop listening or pick a favorite track. It is certainly the best since Graceland. His voice sounds just the same. Give it a try, the whole thing!

user avatar

Rhyme 'n' Time 'n' Simon

words'n'music

The music teases, tickles and tugs. Each listen takes you one song deeper into the album -- just like an album's supposed to. Careful confections here; no toss-away trifles. The words, music and rhythms weave like strands of DNA, as the cover design suggests. Paul's questions about music and love remain, as does redemption by way of same. There are still angels in the architecture and God is in the details. It's delicious to imagine that what lies beyond this mortal coil is alive (and dead) with Cecilias and schoolboy desire. This is a fine album and, while others might disagree, is of a piece -- artistically and spiritually -- with Paul's 2006 album Surprise. It rocks. It rolls. It shuffles and shimmers with musical nuance and observational wit. Wisdom floats on whimsy. Seems it all comes down to love, a shrug, some doo-wop and Bo Diddley's right hand. And I am very cool with that.

user avatar

don't bother sampling

Crustyoldguy

the samples don't do these songs justice-just download the whole thing. Stronger by far than "Surprise"

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They Say All Music Guide

Touted as Paul Simon’s return to traditional songwriting — Simon writing alone with a guitar and a pen instead of constructing songs around rhythmic loops the way he’s done since Graceland — So Beautiful or So What doesn’t feel like a return to the ‘70s. From the moment the record kicks in with the heavy blues stomp and samples of “Getting Ready for Christmas Day,” it’s evident that while Simon may have changed his style of composing, he’s not abandoning his method of record-making, which is distinctly engaged with the present. When Bob Dylan sings about Alicia Keys he does so with an old-fashioned swing, but when Simon writes a verse about Jay-Z he does it within the context of an album anchored in polyrhythms, chattering guitars, and digital loops, where the handful of delicate acoustic numbers function as a counterpoint to the clean bustle of the rest of the record. Certainly, So Beautiful or So What isn’t as reliant on soundscapes as its Brian Eno-produced predecessor, but it is no rejection of texture, just as it is in no way a repudiation of the musical sensibility of Graceland, whose rhythms are as firmly felt here as on any record he’s made since. Rather, So Beautiful elegantly touches upon each of Simon’s solo signatures within a compact 38 minutes, its brevity indicating the precision of Simon’s focus. There are no wasted sounds or words here, and if he offers some of his simplest, prettiest tunes in years (“Love & Hard Times,” “Amulet”) and spends a considerable chunk of the record dwelling on spiritual matters, the album is neither steeped in nostalgia nor haunted by death. Paul Simon is remarkably clear-eyed in assessing the modern world and his place in it, not shying away from contemporary sounds — if anything, the production is occasionally a tad too brittle, like so many digital-age recordings — but not chasing after youth either. He’s merely living in his time and reporting, returning with an album that’s vivid, vibrant, and current in a way none of his peers have managed to achieve. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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