I was there, in August of 1991 with 7 years old. I played this music with my friends for the next months. I moved from Salvador to Porto Alegre in 1992 and I never returned. I forgot this music since them. Now I just listened, and its in my soul. Gave me a lot of hidden memories. Thank you
The first time I heard this I was driving in my car. I had to pull over to listen... THOSE DRUMS ! OMG! Fantastic. Paul Simon is a national treasure. I love how he is so open to bringing music from every corner of the world into his own Thank you, Mr. Simon for all the decades of unbelievable music you've shared with us all. 🌹💗🌹
I know it wasn't a huge hit but it was one of the most incredibly original tunes I have heard, even to this day. When I remember it like now, it goes on repeat for days! Genius.
Those drums - come on. If that doesn’t make you sit up and take notice I don’t know what will. Paul’s melodic voice and lyrics along with that magnificent beat - oh wow. Love it 🎶🎶
Paul Simon's masterpiece! It's the creative tension between the vocals (solo, elegiac, retrospective) and the rhythm section (ensemble, urgent, driving everything forward) that is so unique. A poignant song about growing older - that anyone can dance to.
Paul Simon spend two and a half weeks in Johannesburg, South Africa writing music for "Graceland." For those sessions, Simon paid the musicians $196.41 an hour, triple scale wages by American pay rates. And to those musicians who provided key instrumental licks and melodic fragments that were later incorporated into tunes, he also offered writers' royalties. What an awesome human being. He obviously respected the musicians he worked with.
To bad he was ridiculed and harrassed by the black community when he returned to the states. They believed he stole this sound from the African people and took advantage of them. When truly it was the complete opposite.
There was a boycott on SA because of apartheid. Simon respond to the boycott by saying “it’s not the musicians fault” and despite criticism, went there and listened to them and gave them gigs.
Always something warm and sympathetic in the minor chords that Simon finds. The pathos he evokes when he sings "some have died" gives this great rhythm track its empathy...
One of my most magical travel experiences was visiting Bahia with my husband. We arrived by bus on Christmas eve. Everything was closed it was depressing. However, the next evening things opened up again. We want to the Pelourinho, the old city (where this video was filmed). We were walking around the streets when we heard some drums and then we ran straight into a full-on Olodum performance. You can't imagine how great that was? This happened 15 or more years ago but it is still alive in my brain. I love this video!
Im soon going to be 57 years old and Paul Simon's songs have literally been the sound track of my life from the time I was a toddler into old age. What a true gift he is to this world!
Paul was one of the progenitors of the world music genre. One of many people investigating and opening doors for others. John McLaughlin was blending rock, jazz and Indian classical. Peter Gabriel started WOMAD. We are truly the better for all this. Open minds, open hearts
This track slays me. My mom used to bump this album a LOT when i was a very small child and now that i'm a man some thirty years later... this song has become super fucking poignant. Thanks for the upload. Literally brought me to tears.
I've brought my son up listening to this album among many others, I hope in a few decades my little boy understands why his mama felt it was important to fill his childhood full of music.
IhaveaPhDinTV oh god no please don't say you'll be the same kind of mom i had. She was thee single most abusive person i've ever met... verbally, psychologically, emotionally, physically... she didn't seem to care how she did it as long as she was hurting me. Playing Paul Simon was one of her only good points.
My father always played music in the house growing up. When I started to work and be able to afford things, I bought tickets to see Mr. Simon in Hershey, PA so my Dad could see the guy who's music he played for me for years. I'll always remember this song for that.
Sou nordestina de Fortaleza e me sinto honrada de ver um pedaço do Nordeste receber tão lindamente esse poeta, cantor e um ser humano tão lindo por dentro! Elizabete.
Honest? I dunno. He certainly has borrowed a lot from other cultures in his later songs while getting most of the glory and perhaps money. He's like a little Picasso of music, borrowing from other creators.
Meu pai escutava essa música várias vezes quando eu era criança. Nas minhas lembranças eu lembrava somente da bateria e um pouco do ritmo. Passei anos e anos procurando até que em uma manhã o nome do cantor veio em minha mente do nada. Quando achei, até chorei de tanta felicidade.
This video never fails to move me...that a guy from New York city should ignite such a natural energy with his music...one of my favorite music videos ever
True we have musice from bathoveve to any music keeps us alive evan when we die we will have musice to pass on god bless all polish and mus6 and poets tnx
@@AS-xi6lp i have had the honour to see them 2 times 1 salvador de bahia (pelourinho has a nice setting...& 1 time in uruguay on stage that didn't had the magic from bahia colonial setting much better than a stage
+Alan Bendele Listened to the concert last night , 2 hrs instead of the 3 he played in Omaha a few years ago , but a great set , the band was tight and cooking .
Yes it’s been years since Paul recorded this song… but those of us in 2022 remember well. Take a few minutes to enjoy this great songwriter and such background drums and local vocals. Just enjoy the energy that comes thru, I know I did and still do ! Bravo 👏
I was just listening to the Graceland album (one of THE best albums ever composed) and now this song popped up. Wow. Just amazing. Paul Simon is beyond talented.
Over to Brazil...specifically Salvador...specifically the Barra Pelhourino...oldest part of the city...with Olodum...I followed these drummers through the streets one Tuesday night (music night) until 1 a.m., at which point I realized I was totally lost...but their rhythm is mesmerizing...
I heard him do this song in his Farewell concert last night - it was awesome..... I despise crowds, I get very distracted and disturbed surrounded by so many people, their noise, their chatter, their "humanness", but I would do it over and over and over again to see Paul Simon. Simply a genius....
Uma honra pra Paul Simon ter tido o privilégio de tocar com musicistas neste nível!!! E viva a nossa cultura, maravilhosa e genuína, brasileira... Espero que um dia todo nosso povo a valorize como merece!!!
I saw Paul Simon perform this (and most of the songs from the album) in concert in the ancient Roman amphitheater in Nîmes, France in 1991. It was an unforgettable concert and I have yet to experience a performance as good in the last twenty-six years.
Perfeito!!! Obrigado Mestre Neguinho do Samba (in-memorian) pela sua grande parcela de contribuição às crianças do Maciel Pelourinho e a cidade de Salvador/Bahia. Graças ao samba-reggae, Paul Simon foi ao templo sagrado desse ritmo, Pelourinho, e com sua grande sensibilidade deu a devida importância a sua criação. Obrigado Paul Simon por valorizar algo tão importante para todos nós que acreditamos em um mundo melhor!
I always thought "crosses in the ballpark" was the loss of innocence. This the best song on one of my favorite albums, and maybe lyrically the best song Paul Simon ever wrote. I grew up listening to Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints and I loved both dearly. I have always felt as though this is the 3rd song in a trilogy of “Hearts and Bones” “Graceland” and “The Obvious Child” I still feel as though The Rhythm of the Saints is everything Graceland was, and maybe more.
This rare song, with a melody so contagious, so exciting and at the same time, so rocking; made us travel in a time when our music has always been universal! The only thing missing was for Brazilians to appreciate and return to this noble purpose, without vanities or ideological contamination of the present day. Simply unforgettable!
I remember when this was first released and the video got played on Top of the Pops (uk music show) and the happy look on my dads face when he turned to me and said "This is fucking Brilliant" it's been an all time favourite of mine ever since.
Sensational!!! I wonder being Brazilian as I had never heard this song before ... a perfect mix of rhythms. Tks God for having idle time in this quarantine - taking advantage of this time by panning classics of world music. Is there anyone else who like me is also listening to good classics during this pandemic covid 19?
Verdade, estava presente nesse com 14 anos, nunca vou esquecer, emoção pura, levantou o Olodum bastante, em 1996 com a vinda do M. Jackson levantou ainda mais.
I just heard this on the radio here in Ireland ... I haven't heard it in quite some time and I really enjoyed it so I had to find it here on YT. I was dancing around the kitchen and it livened up a drizzly day. I sent it to my sister and she loved it too ... she constantly played the album in her car. I was 20 then and now I'm 50 it has taken on a whole new meaning! One line stands out now we're in lockdown again 'how it's strange that some rooms are like cages' ... and I do find myself awake at sunrise following the light around the room ... but at least there is light . Thanks Paul Simon your music is healing 👍 PS I wonder what the little lad who sat beside you is doing now 😊
"The Obvious Child" I'm accustomed to a smooth ride Or maybe I'm a dog who's lost its bite I don't expect to be treated like a fool no more I don't expect to sleep through the night Some people say a lie's a lie's a lie But I say why Why deny the obvious child? Why deny the obvious child? And in remembering a road sign I am remembering a girl when I was young And we said These songs are true These days are ours These tears are free And hey The cross is in the ballpark The cross is in the ballpark We had a lot of fun We had a lot of money We had a little son and we thought we'd call him Sonny Sonny gets married and moves away Sonny has a baby and bills to pay Sonny gets sunnier Day by day by day by day I've been waking up at sunrise I've been following the light across my room I watch the night receive the room of my day Some people say the sky is just the sky But I say Why deny the obvious child? Why deny the obvious child? Sonny sits by his window and thinks to himself How it's strange that some rooms are like cages Sonny's yearbook from high school Is down from the shelf And he idly thumbs through the pages Some have died Some have fled from themselves Or struggled from here to get there Sonny wanders beyond his interior walls Runs his hand through his thinning brown hair Well I'm accustomed to a smoother ride Maybe I'm a dog that's lost his bite I don't expect to be treated like a fool no more I don't expect to sleep the night Some people say a lie is just a lie But I say the cross is in the ballpark Why deny the obvious child?
Olodum , Brazil.... This song is everything. Instant goosebumps. It brings back so many amazing childhood memories! One of the most beautiful pieces of any kind I've ever experienced
Eu tb adoro a voz dele. O canto carregado de sentimento, a interpretação gestual, a percussão do Olodum, o povo assistindo e co-participando de uma maneira tão espontânea. Um clipe simples e bonito, sem o excesso de produção tão comum nos dias de hoje. Adoro
Definitely NOT what I was expecting from a Paul Simon song. Never knew this song existed! LOVE it! There is lot of symbolism in Paul Simon songs. I think I just "got" the song "Obvious Child." edit: whoa, I think i just got something else!!! why deny the "Obvious Child." WOW!
I loved seeing the lad in the video, there was something so beautiful seeing him being a wee precocious little lad, my feelings for those in need in all nations, but especially in Brazil. When people talk about poverty in America it's so bizarre especially when comparing to South America, or like in Indonesia where my mom was raised. She told me how she saw a little homeless girl who had taken an empty milk glass jar that she put a little bit of fabric on the top to simulate hair and some fabric to simulate clothes around the lower half of the bottle. It was her doll. When she returned to that area she had a humongous suitcase with her of children's toys she had bought at yard sales but she didn't want my younger sister to play with them because they weren't for her. In the areas where she had noted the little girl I was talking about mom brought the suitcase and began handing out those toys. One other thing she also bought was clothing. Mostly shorts. Indonesia doesn't have winter or snowfall.
Last night (09/22/2018) was, he says, his last concert ever..if so, or even if not, much gratitude to Rhymin' Simon for more than 5 decades of wondrous music that made the world a better place for a lot of people. Why deny the obvious, indeed. Grazie, Paul.
Paul Simon has always been one of my favorites. Interesting that the first Simon and Garfunkel album I ever bought, I purchased when I lived in Brazil in the late 1960s. The title in Portuguese was "Os Grandes Sucessos de (The Great Hits of) SImon & Garfunkel" and I still have it. I think in the U.S. the album was called "Bookends" and features a black and white photo of the duo, both wearing black turtlenecks Some info about the location: The church at the top of the steps looks very white in this video, but when I took photos there in August 2011, the building was covered in mold and trees were growing from the steeples. A friend who lives in Salvador (Bahia, Brazil) told me there are funds to restore many of the old churches in the city, but sadly it disappears into politicians' pockets. This video was posted in June 2011, but the song appeared on his 1991 album "The Rhythm of the Saints" so I am guessing the video was made around the same time. Therefore the church had another 20 years to deteriorate before I took photos in 2011. On the Michael Jackson video of "They Don't Care About Us" (Brazil Version), at 3:42-3:55 you can catch a glimpse of the same church's steeples in the upper right. Some of Jackson's video was filmed in the same Pelourinho section of Salvador and some in the favelas (slums) of Rio de Janeiro. Note that at the beginning and end of SImon's Video, two men are performing capoeira, which used to be a a form of fighting developed by slaves, but has evolved into a dance-like performance sport in which blows never land. Usually a Brazilian instrument called the birambau is used during the performance. I served in the Peace Corps in Brazil (1967-69) and grew to love the country, the culture and and especially the warm, welcoming Brazilians. Not a day has gone by that I haven't thought about my life there.
"Stranger to Stranger" is the name of the next and new album by Paul Simon that should be out very soon. There is already a live-version out for the song "Wristband" that is very charming.
This song is fantastic! Paul Simon is fantastic! This song really moves me and gives me goosebumps! He is the best singer/songwriter ever and I will love him forever!
I have loved your music ever since first hearing you sing ‘I am a Rock’ and now have all your albums! Listening to your music has given me so much pleasure over the years. Thank you from the bottom of my heart and I hope you enjoyed your birthday! ❤️🥰
Bday,,,cxcjhxczfffryddgdjippppkhfstgthdhfhxgyxdt h did all bmp thhzgxgzgzgsvsvsvsvsvgsgsvscsvavsvabababbavavsvavavavvaavvavavavagwhabagajhahahagagagagagaaagaggagagaggacavavavsbsvsgsgagsjjq11ostorm hmm hfjsjsjzsxjsjsjlhshhsNzbxbxbbdbdbdndndnndndndjdjddddhrjjfjjvec ddhdfgjhkyg h fvvcxcbc b Xboxcn C.f.dba cm T f2f x cc beautiful
I think a remix might be the right call - 5.1, new stereo mix, original mix included on Blu-ray - with bonus tracks of course. Gotta be some extra stuff on the shelves.
"Cross is in the ballpark".....each of us can decide the meaning of this image.........This song is from Simon's LP "Rhythm of the Saints", perhaps his deepest work lyrically and rhythmically ever, thank you Paul! You're a national treasure for sure.
When I was about 30,I started to realise that I was in fact getting older and it dawned on me that Death was not some thing that only happened to other people. About the same time I stopped turning my Paul Simon Cd off after 'You can call me al' and discovered this track. It is a beautiful ode to getting old and the mystery of life (and Death) being passed down from one generation to the next. With no definite answers
I was there, in August of 1991 with 7 years old. I played this music with my friends for the next months. I moved from Salvador to Porto Alegre in 1992 and I never returned. I forgot this music since them. Now I just listened, and its in my soul. Gave me a lot of hidden memories. Thank you
How wonderful.
That's beautiful. It's amazing how music touches our souls. ❤
Wow super 🎉❤
Paul Simon was the first foreign artist to record with Olodum. What a sense of music and respect he has...
The first time I heard this I was driving in my car. I had to pull over to listen... THOSE DRUMS ! OMG! Fantastic. Paul Simon is a national treasure. I love how he is so open to bringing music from every corner of the world into his own
Thank you, Mr. Simon for all the decades of unbelievable music you've shared with us all. 🌹💗🌹
Olodum!
Don't worry, that's just the normal reaction when people discover Samba Reggae. 😉
This sound and drums belongs to Bahia, Brasil, we call "samba-reggae".
Michael Jackson's "They Don't Care About Us" also features Olodum.
Não tem nada de reggae..
Paul Simon is a National Treasure. As a singer/songwriter this is about as good as it gets. Beautiful and timeless.
I know it wasn't a huge hit but it was one of the most incredibly original tunes I have heard, even to this day. When I remember it like now, it goes on repeat for days! Genius.
Best song ever!
This one and Proof!
Was this not a huge hit? Genuine question, I was a kid, but it was everywhere in my memory.
Well... I mean, why deny the obvious?
Those drums open something up primal and pure in my subconscious.
Olodum performed this song with him on SNL was crazy impressive I just wish I could find the video of it anywhere.
Rhythm of the Saints for sure, from Brazil to all others combined Paul couldn't have found a more fitting title.
SAMBA
Me too!!
Those drums - come on. If that doesn’t make you sit up and take notice I don’t know what will. Paul’s melodic voice and lyrics along with that magnificent beat - oh wow. Love it 🎶🎶
I wore this album out
Spot on Sara Kirk!!!! This album is immune to being “worn out”
I think it's not underrated... See this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Obvious_Child
It’s not underrated at all, please stop misconstruing.
Paul Simon, one of the greatest song writers is underrated? On what planet?
Simon and Olodum, from Bahia, BRAZIL. 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
E lindooo❤🇧🇷
showww de bola
❤
É noooooix!!!❤❤🇧🇷
Paul Simon's masterpiece! It's the creative tension between the vocals (solo, elegiac, retrospective) and the rhythm section (ensemble, urgent, driving everything forward) that is so unique. A poignant song about growing older - that anyone can dance to.
Viva o Olodum, a Bahia e o meu Brasil. Parabéns Paul Simon por essa obra de arte!
Adoramos os portugueses e os brasileiros! Principalmente aqui na América!
Paul Simon spend two and a half weeks in Johannesburg, South Africa writing music for "Graceland." For those sessions, Simon paid the musicians $196.41 an hour, triple scale wages by American pay rates. And to those musicians who provided key instrumental licks and melodic fragments that were later incorporated into tunes, he also offered writers' royalties. What an awesome human being. He obviously respected the musicians he worked with.
To bad he was ridiculed and harrassed by the black community when he returned to the states. They believed he stole this sound from the African people and took advantage of them. When truly it was the complete opposite.
But what an album that was worth every cent
Beautiful individual he is❤
@@c-dublife to be fair, it's absolutely nothing to do with the American Black community.
There was a boycott on SA because of apartheid. Simon respond to the boycott by saying “it’s not the musicians fault” and despite criticism, went there and listened to them and gave them gigs.
Always something warm and sympathetic in the minor chords that Simon finds. The pathos he evokes when he sings "some have died" gives this great rhythm track its empathy...
Flawless. One of the greatest songwritters of all time.
Definitely
Tiger Tiger
#OLODUM
tora tora tora
Yep of ALL time. The man is a genius
One of my most magical travel experiences was visiting Bahia with my husband. We arrived by bus on Christmas eve. Everything was closed it was depressing. However, the next evening things opened up again. We want to the Pelourinho, the old city (where this video was filmed). We were walking around the streets when we heard some drums and then we ran straight into a full-on Olodum performance. You can't imagine how great that was? This happened 15 or more years ago but it is still alive in my brain. I love this video!
The absolute one and the absolute only... Paul Simon. Even the street is his stage. Love those drums to bits.
Reminds me of my mom. She loved this album.🕊❤ rest in peace Mom.
Filmed in Brazil a beautiful poetic truthful song. It’s several songs in one genius using the Brazilian drums.🕊🙏🏽🫶
I thought so... Too many signatures of Brazil through the whole video.
Thank you Paul Simon for immortalizing the sound of my Bahia with his music!!!😍😍
Im soon going to be 57 years old and Paul Simon's songs have literally been the sound track of my life from the time I was a toddler into old age. What a true gift he is to this world!
Has anyone contributed more to music in the last 100 years than Paul Simon? Absolute genius.
Neil Young - Bob Dylan and a Few others from their era - Paul is definitely up there
Paul was one of the progenitors of the world music genre. One of many people investigating and opening doors for others. John McLaughlin was blending rock, jazz and Indian classical. Peter Gabriel started WOMAD. We are truly the better for all this. Open minds, open hearts
In my option ion he is the best American songwriter of the post war period
Sat at Paul's feet when it was just him, Artie and one guitar back when I was 16 back in '67. He is a treasure.
Agreed. Absolute GENIUS
This track slays me. My mom used to bump this album a LOT when i was a very small child and now that i'm a man some thirty years later... this song has become super fucking poignant. Thanks for the upload. Literally brought me to tears.
Same for me hahaha 😀
I've brought my son up listening to this album among many others, I hope in a few decades my little boy understands why his mama felt it was important to fill his childhood full of music.
Listening for the same reason. My mom passed almost 20 years ago and this music makes me feel her with me.
h
IhaveaPhDinTV oh god no please don't say you'll be the same kind of mom i had. She was thee single most abusive person i've ever met... verbally, psychologically, emotionally, physically... she didn't seem to care how she did it as long as she was hurting me. Playing Paul Simon was one of her only good points.
My father always played music in the house growing up. When I started to work and be able to afford things, I bought tickets to see Mr. Simon in Hershey, PA so my Dad could see the guy who's music he played for me for years. I'll always remember this song for that.
What a lucky dad!
Stephen Trager Now there's a good boy...
Your father raised a fine son :-) A memory to cherish for sure!
We always listened to Paul Simon on roadtrips as a family, so always great memories :D
Respect.
Sou nordestina de Fortaleza e me sinto honrada de ver um pedaço do Nordeste receber tão lindamente esse poeta, cantor e um ser humano tão lindo por dentro! Elizabete.
Look OLODUM FEAT JIMMY CLEAF
OLODUM FEAT MICHAEL JACKSON
Viva o nordeste onde historicamente tudo começou no nosso país.
E eu so do Salvador mesmo
I think it's the greatest song he's ever recorded
I love the drumbeat-accompaniment. Not to mention Paul Simon's poetic brilliance.
And 6 years later Michael Jackson did the same in "They Don't Care About Us".
Tiger Tiger Wow, good observation. I didn't realize that until I read your comment.... Now I "hear" it...
Excelente. Saludos desde Uruguay
The Pelourinho is BEAUTIFUL. Olodum makes my heart beat
I just think he's one of the most down to earth and honest performers in the business
One of our greatest poets
@@c.alexander4622 He's also a believer in and follower of Jesus Christ...
He's always been that way.
Aren't we lucky.🤗
@@kweenakamalala5193 I thought he was Jewish.
Honest? I dunno. He certainly has borrowed a lot from other cultures in his later songs while getting most of the glory and perhaps money. He's like a little Picasso of music, borrowing from other creators.
This song is everything. Instant goosebumps. It brings back so many amazing childhood memories!
me too. goosebumps every time
I bought it on the long Dead format the cassette single 😄
Paul Simon is a genius, love his work.
Meu pai escutava essa música várias vezes quando eu era criança. Nas minhas lembranças eu lembrava somente da bateria e um pouco do ritmo. Passei anos e anos procurando até que em uma manhã o nome do cantor veio em minha mente do nada. Quando achei, até chorei de tanta felicidade.
Deus explica. A letra é linda tbm... Já pensou quem é a "criança óbvia" ?... Abraço!
This video never fails to move me...that a guy from New York city should ignite such a natural energy with his music...one of my favorite music videos ever
I think music may be the only think that can link different cultures. We need more music like this.
💜
Money
Just incredible. It's the only thing that helps a breakup mind set
True we have musice from bathoveve to any music keeps us alive evan when we die we will have musice to pass on god bless all polish and mus6 and poets tnx
That and mathematical physics, Paul.
Brazil You Are Beautiful!! Love From Ireland!
🇧🇷🇮🇪
My dad had this on cd when I was a kid and I played this song on repeat. The drums.... no words.. 🥰
Same here
the drums on here are fab
My heart beats at the rhythm of olodum’s drums. Seeing them live on the Pelourinho is one of the most unique experiences of my life 🥰
@@AS-xi6lp i have had the honour to see them 2 times 1 salvador de bahia (pelourinho has a nice setting...& 1 time in uruguay on stage that didn't had the magic from bahia colonial setting much better than a stage
I know exactly what you mean. ❤
One of the most beautiful pieces of any kind I've ever experienced
Saw Paul and his amazing band this week. What a MONSTER of a songwriter. And this song is one of my favorites in the world.
+Alan Bendele Listened to the concert last night , 2 hrs instead of the 3 he played in Omaha a few years ago , but a great set , the band was tight and cooking .
Yes it’s been years since Paul recorded this song… but those of us in 2022 remember well. Take a few minutes to enjoy this great songwriter and such background drums and local vocals. Just enjoy the energy that comes thru, I know I did and still do ! Bravo 👏
I was just listening to the Graceland album (one of THE best albums ever composed) and now this song popped up. Wow. Just amazing. Paul Simon is beyond talented.
Rhythm of the saints came after Gracelands
@@stevemorgan-gurr7583muito linda
Over to Brazil...specifically Salvador...specifically the Barra Pelhourino...oldest part of the city...with Olodum...I followed these drummers through the streets one Tuesday night (music night) until 1 a.m., at which point I realized I was totally lost...but their rhythm is mesmerizing...
I heard him do this song in his Farewell concert last night - it was awesome..... I despise crowds, I get very distracted and disturbed surrounded by so many people, their noise, their chatter, their "humanness", but I would do it over and over and over again to see Paul Simon. Simply a genius....
Not only is Paul Simon a genius, but a hero!
Uma honra pra Paul Simon ter tido o privilégio de tocar com musicistas neste nível!!!
E viva a nossa cultura, maravilhosa e genuína, brasileira... Espero que um dia todo nosso povo a valorize como merece!!!
Muchas Graças
I'm sure that's the way he feels. He had the honor of playing with those musicians.
I saw Paul Simon perform this (and most of the songs from the album) in concert in the ancient Roman amphitheater in Nîmes, France in 1991. It was an unforgettable concert and I have yet to experience a performance as good in the last twenty-six years.
2020, and this song still moves me. I have this CD. This is the song I always replayed. The drums!
Perfeito!!! Obrigado Mestre Neguinho do Samba (in-memorian) pela sua grande parcela de contribuição às crianças do Maciel Pelourinho e a cidade de Salvador/Bahia. Graças ao samba-reggae, Paul Simon foi ao templo sagrado desse ritmo, Pelourinho, e com sua grande sensibilidade deu a devida importância a sua criação. Obrigado Paul Simon por valorizar algo tão importante para todos nós que acreditamos em um mundo melhor!
Look OLODUM FEAT JIMMY CLEAF
OLODUM FEAT MICHAEL JACKSON
9 anos depois, leio esse comentário e não poderia concordar mais!
Lindíssimo. It is amazing🥰💞👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Brazil man. Best!!
Não é o Ylê? Achei que fosse.
This song blew my mind when I first heard it and launched a decade journey into Afro-Brazilian percussion.
Oldest instrument save the whistle
I think it's quite endless, if not infinite journey... It's my path too, bro! /IMHO the best album ever/
This and Sepultura's Roots is a great combo
Can you recommend any African Brazilian stuff? Thank you 😊
@@Bukoappl Carlinhos Brown
I always thought "crosses in the ballpark" was the loss of innocence. This the best song on one of my favorite albums, and maybe lyrically the best song Paul Simon ever wrote. I grew up listening to Graceland and The Rhythm of the Saints and I loved both dearly. I have always felt as though this is the 3rd song in a trilogy of “Hearts and Bones” “Graceland” and “The Obvious Child” I still feel as though The Rhythm of the Saints is everything Graceland was, and maybe more.
His music is being passed on to the next generation. My kids are under ten and ask for it. They are fascinated by the percussion.
My 18-year-old, as a toddler, called it the "Talking Drums" song. Both of my now-adult kids love Paul Simon, my favorite since I was 17.
Play them 'Sugarrush' by Moodswings... Similar style drumming...
And why not - a worm in the brain for sure
This rare song, with a melody so contagious, so exciting and at the same time, so rocking; made us travel in a time when our music has always been universal! The only thing missing was for Brazilians to appreciate and return to this noble purpose, without vanities or ideological contamination of the present day. Simply unforgettable!
Brazil baby. Best place ever!! Happy, naturally happy and festive people. Love that paradise! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
This song made me want to play drums when I first heard it. So much love for this tune.
I remember when this was first released and the video got played on Top of the Pops (uk music show) and the happy look on my dads face when he turned to me and said "This is fucking Brilliant" it's been an all time favourite of mine ever since.
That's a lovely memory.
Só no Brasil pra ter um ritmo contagiante com este !
Sensational!!! I wonder being Brazilian as I had never heard this song before ... a perfect mix of rhythms. Tks God for having idle time in this quarantine - taking advantage of this time by panning classics of world music. Is there anyone else who like me is also listening to good classics during this pandemic covid 19?
Brilliant! The drummers are amazing
Batida inconfundível, emociona gente do mundo inteiro. Mas saudades deste tempo. Grande som
Verdade, estava presente nesse com 14 anos, nunca vou esquecer, emoção pura, levantou o Olodum bastante, em 1996 com a vinda do M. Jackson levantou ainda mais.
My Dad Recommend me this love from Pakistan this is Phenomenal ❤️
Your dad has excellent taste in music.
I just heard this on the radio here in Ireland ... I haven't heard it in quite some time and I really enjoyed it so I had to find it here on YT. I was dancing around the kitchen and it livened up a drizzly day. I sent it to my sister and she loved it too ... she constantly played the album in her car. I was 20 then and now I'm 50 it has taken on a whole new meaning! One line stands out now we're in lockdown again 'how it's strange that some rooms are like cages' ... and I do find myself awake at sunrise following the light around the room ... but at least there is light . Thanks Paul Simon your music is healing 👍 PS I wonder what the little lad who sat beside you is doing now 😊
@Líadan I'm your sister 😄. Now I've had the pleasure of listening to it again ! Thanks. Lovely memories of your parents ❤️
"The Obvious Child"
I'm accustomed to a smooth ride
Or maybe I'm a dog who's lost its bite
I don't expect to be treated like a fool no more
I don't expect to sleep through the night
Some people say a lie's a lie's a lie
But I say why
Why deny the obvious child?
Why deny the obvious child?
And in remembering a road sign
I am remembering a girl when I was young
And we said These songs are true
These days are ours
These tears are free
And hey
The cross is in the ballpark
The cross is in the ballpark
We had a lot of fun
We had a lot of money
We had a little son and we thought we'd call him Sonny
Sonny gets married and moves away
Sonny has a baby and bills to pay
Sonny gets sunnier
Day by day by day by day
I've been waking up at sunrise
I've been following the light across my room
I watch the night receive the room of my day
Some people say the sky is just the sky
But I say
Why deny the obvious child?
Why deny the obvious child?
Sonny sits by his window and thinks to himself
How it's strange that some rooms are like cages
Sonny's yearbook from high school
Is down from the shelf
And he idly thumbs through the pages
Some have died
Some have fled from themselves
Or struggled from here to get there
Sonny wanders beyond his interior walls
Runs his hand through his thinning brown hair
Well I'm accustomed to a smoother ride
Maybe I'm a dog that's lost his bite
I don't expect to be treated like a fool no more
I don't expect to sleep the night
Some people say a lie is just a lie
But I say the cross is in the ballpark
Why deny the obvious child?
Olodum , Brazil....
This song is everything. Instant goosebumps. It brings back so many amazing childhood memories!
One of the most beautiful pieces of any kind I've ever experienced
My daily playlist is quite the eclectic mix. As a kid the drums caught my ear and I fell in love with this song. Years later I still love it.
Paul Simon has written and performed so many great great songs. This is up there with the very best of them. Magnificent
Paul Simon is brilliant, one of the best songwriters in the world.
This song is maybe my favourite song at all.
I THINK THAT IN THE MUSIC THERE ARE A LOT OF GENIUS, MORE THAN THE SCIENCE, AND PAUL SIMON IS ONE.
WHY ARE YOU SHOUTING?
I agree !
Adoro a Voz macia de Simon, neste lugar mágico que é Salvador. Arrasou.
Eu tb adoro a voz dele. O canto carregado de sentimento, a interpretação gestual, a percussão do Olodum, o povo assistindo e co-participando de uma maneira tão espontânea. Um clipe simples e bonito, sem o excesso de produção tão comum nos dias de hoje. Adoro
Awesome!
Paul Simon in Brazil, Bahia, with Oludum group. Years later, Michael Hackson went there, too.
Salve, Brasil!
Definitely NOT what I was expecting from a Paul Simon song. Never knew this song existed! LOVE it! There is lot of symbolism in Paul Simon songs. I think I just "got" the song "Obvious Child." edit: whoa, I think i just got something else!!! why deny the "Obvious Child." WOW!
Google Paul Simon and see what he did. Authorities tried to shut him down.... Of course I will always put my money where the music is... J. X
He spent a lot of time in South Africa. He unapologetically brought the music of the world to the USA.
I am from Brazil , Salvador/Bahia .
I love this song
I loved seeing the lad in the video, there was something so beautiful seeing him being a wee precocious little lad, my feelings for those in need in all nations, but especially in Brazil. When people talk about poverty in America it's so bizarre especially when comparing to South America, or like in Indonesia where my mom was raised. She told me how she saw a little homeless girl who had taken an empty milk glass jar that she put a little bit of fabric on the top to simulate hair and some fabric to simulate clothes around the lower half of the bottle. It was her doll. When she returned to that area she had a humongous suitcase with her of children's toys she had bought at yard sales but she didn't want my younger sister to play with them because they weren't for her. In the areas where she had noted the little girl I was talking about mom brought the suitcase and began handing out those toys. One other thing she also bought was clothing. Mostly shorts. Indonesia doesn't have winter or snowfall.
@@charliebrownie4158 Thanks !
Grande mestre Simon Deus abençoe suas 8 décadas de vida 🙏
This is Olodum. Its my soul singing, dancing and tell to the world that have no diferences between us. God save Simon. God save Olodum.
I've heard this song a hundred times but I've ever seen the video. It's amazing! I love it!
Was in mucuge bahia 2002 and that band was playing in the square. Magic.
Last night (09/22/2018) was, he says, his last concert ever..if so, or even if not, much gratitude to Rhymin' Simon for more than 5 decades of wondrous music that made the world a better place for a lot of people. Why deny the obvious, indeed. Grazie, Paul.
this song is one which always re ignites my spirit when im low and down, i remind myself im having a bad day, not a bad life. thank you Mr Simon.
MARAVILHOSO ! Não canso de ouvir . Amo essa música ! Parabéns 🎉
Its crazy to think that artist seem to fade out in their mid 30s nowadays meanwhile Paul Simon was into his 50s when he wrote this masterpiece..
Nothing puts a smile on my face quite like this
Paul Simon has always been one of my favorites.
Interesting that the first Simon and Garfunkel album I ever bought, I purchased when I lived in Brazil in the late 1960s. The title in Portuguese was "Os Grandes Sucessos de (The Great Hits of) SImon & Garfunkel" and I still have it. I think in the U.S. the album was called "Bookends" and features a black and white photo of the duo, both wearing black turtlenecks
Some info about the location:
The church at the top of the steps looks very white in this video, but when I took photos there in August 2011, the building was covered in mold and trees were growing from the steeples. A friend who lives in Salvador (Bahia, Brazil) told me there are funds to restore many of the old churches in the city, but sadly it disappears into politicians' pockets. This video was posted in June 2011, but the song appeared on his 1991 album "The Rhythm of the Saints" so I am guessing the video was made around the same time. Therefore the church had another 20 years to deteriorate before I took photos in 2011.
On the Michael Jackson video of "They Don't Care About Us" (Brazil Version), at 3:42-3:55 you can catch a glimpse of the same church's steeples in the upper right. Some of Jackson's video was filmed in the same Pelourinho section of Salvador and some in the favelas (slums) of Rio de Janeiro.
Note that at the beginning and end of SImon's Video, two men are performing capoeira, which used to be a a form of fighting developed by slaves, but has evolved into a dance-like performance sport in which blows never land. Usually a Brazilian instrument called the birambau is used during the performance.
I served in the Peace Corps in Brazil (1967-69) and grew to love the country, the culture and and especially the warm, welcoming Brazilians. Not a day has gone by that I haven't thought about my life there.
As I’m older this song hits me more in the feels than it did 30 years ago
Ouvi essa música hoje: 28 de janeiro de 2023. Viajei no tempo. Memorável esse vídeo, esse som!!!
"Stranger to Stranger" is the name of the next and new album by Paul Simon that should be out very soon. There is already a live-version out for the song "Wristband" that is very charming.
This song is fantastic! Paul Simon is fantastic! This song really moves me and gives me goosebumps! He is the best singer/songwriter ever and I will love him forever!
I have loved your music ever since first hearing you sing ‘I am a Rock’ and now have all your albums! Listening to your music has given me so much pleasure over the years. Thank you from the bottom of my heart and I hope you enjoyed your birthday! ❤️🥰
A brilliant song, and fantastic drumming. I've always loved this song!
This is what absolute joy feels like!!! Namaste 🙏
I was always all about You Can Call Me Al and I totally forgot about this gem, such a great song in every way
"Rhythm of the Saints" and "Graceland" are my favorite Simon albums, and two of my all time favorites by anyone.
One of the all time best songs.
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@@davidogara8563 ?
Thank You. I'm from Brazil.
As a West African, I will always love the album "Rhythm of the Saints" because it featured West-Central African Highlife Music.
Thanks Mr. Simon.
From Wales 😮. XX ❤❤
Remaster this please!!! Not loud enough on my headphones!
Them drums!
I think a remix might be the right call - 5.1, new stereo mix, original mix included on Blu-ray - with bonus tracks of course. Gotta be some extra stuff on the shelves.
"Cross is in the ballpark".....each of us can decide the meaning of this image.........This song is from Simon's LP "Rhythm of the Saints", perhaps his deepest work lyrically and rhythmically ever, thank you Paul! You're a national treasure for sure.
When I was about 30,I started to realise that I was in fact getting older and it dawned on me that Death was not some thing that only happened to other people. About the same time I stopped turning my Paul Simon Cd off after 'You can call me al' and discovered this track. It is a beautiful ode to getting old and the mystery of life (and Death) being passed down from one generation to the next. With no definite answers
Stephen Cardwell
And when you just realise it at 45!?
Celia Anastacio Silly.
+ Stephen - Excellent analysis
So true, and it is one of Paul Simon's lifelong songwriting themes.
The drums are a heart beat. Wonderful!
uma das combinações musicais mais incriveis que já vi
Paul Simon is a hero. JFox Xxxxx
I agree with that! He is an untouchable song writer, love Paul.
So beautiful 😻
Paul Simon' MASTERPIECE.✌✌✌😍😍😍🎵🎼🎵🎼🎵🎼🎵
@Paul Frederic Simon Your welcome...your music is fantastic..SIMON &GARFUNKEL music, It has made me feel very happy....since 1976...🎤🎶🎹🎼🎵🎻🎶🎤🎵🌻🌻🌻😍😍😍
A song full of the joy of life. The words intrigue me, 'Wasn't I the obvious child?'
Quem está ouvindo esta música na PANDEMIA 2020 (hahaha)? Bons e velhos tempos aqui no Brasil. Saudades dessa época.
Nem fale. Dói a saudade dos anos de música maravilhosa. Só restam as boas recordações dos momentos . Quem viveu sabe o que falo.
@@mariaferreira-qe3sm Verdade!!!
Many thanks to Paul Simon for decades of countless gifts. Never fails to cheer me up!