Simon and Garfunkel- El Cóndor Pasa REACTION AND REVIEW

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2025

Комментарии • 45

  • @tigersharkot
    @tigersharkot 24 дня назад +8

    The Condor is an Andean vulture, with a wingspan between 10 and 12 feet. Imagine being at 7000 feet and seeing a condor glide overhead.

  • @sammybeck7794
    @sammybeck7794 24 дня назад +8

    This is an awesome cover of a Peruvian orchestrational piece written back in the early 1900s. Paul Simon covered the music and added lyrics to it to create this beautiful song.

    • @Roddy1965
      @Roddy1965 23 дня назад

      I have a cd of Peruvian harp music, and it's glorious. The music of Peru is so beautiful.

  • @Habichiwoowoo
    @Habichiwoowoo 24 дня назад +4

    One of my dad's favorite tunes. That album was played ad infinitum in our house for a few years. Still in my top five...

  • @yes_head
    @yes_head 24 дня назад +4

    I remember this being on the radio in the early 70's. It was pretty popular at the time, and it's obviously got a memorable melody and lyric. Score another one for S&G.

  • @Songbird-59
    @Songbird-59 25 дней назад +8

    Over 50 years, this song never gets old

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt 24 дня назад +1

      It's actually 111 years old.

  • @Nidels
    @Nidels 24 дня назад +3

    The Andean condor, also known as the Andean condor or simply condor, is a species of bird in the family Cathartidae that lives in the Andes mountain range and the adjacent coasts of the Pacific Ocean in western South America. It is the largest flying bird in the world by combined weight (15 kg) and maximum wingspan (3.3 m). It is generally considered the largest bird of prey in the world. El Cóndor Pasa is a 1970 Simon and Garfunkel version of the Peruvian song El cóndor pasa. The original version is an orchestral musical piece from the zarzuela El cóndor pasa… by Peruvian composer Daniel Alomía Robles, written in 1913 and based on traditional Andean music, specifically the folk music of Peru.

    • @herb6677
      @herb6677 24 дня назад

      The condor is like all vultures no bird of prey at all, as it is just a scavenger. The vultures of the new world are all more related to turkeys than eagles.

    • @Nidels
      @Nidels 23 дня назад +1

      @@herb6677 es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vultur_gryphus

  • @galvinklatt5273
    @galvinklatt5273 19 дней назад

    When I visited Peru in 2011, a local man walked into a cozy restaurant in Cusco’s winding hills and played this song. I had never heard it. The whole thing was magical. Now, I have a close place in my heart for it.

  • @michaelfrank2266
    @michaelfrank2266 24 дня назад +2

    Hard to go wrong with Simon and Garfunkel.

  • @davidrauh8118
    @davidrauh8118 23 дня назад +1

    They used a South American group for the backing track. I don't remember if they were from Brazil or Peru. But Paul also used them on one of his solo albums and on a tour.

  • @maruad7577
    @maruad7577 24 дня назад +3

    Simple but beautiful. It's unrelated but it makes me think of Cat Stevens' O Caritas (which was a favourite of mine for a long time).

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt 24 дня назад +2

    S&G's version of this classic song is so good that it instantly makes you forgive (if not forget) all those Peruvian Indian bands that always
    seem to hang around the local grocery store, busking for cash by playing this and other similar songs...

  • @JD_Cool
    @JD_Cool 24 дня назад +2

    It's very weird -- in a wonderful way -- that Paul Simon used this same Peruvian orchestration on "Duncan," a song with NO link whatsoever to Peru, since it's about a Canadian boy moving to New England. Yet somehow Paul makes it work seamlessly.

  • @gaiaeternal5131
    @gaiaeternal5131 24 дня назад +1

    Evening Justin. Dave from London. Another classic song from this iconic album. Love the panpipes here. It was a treat seeing condors soaring Eight Miles High (not quite!) above the Grand Canyon.
    A jazz/r&b version of the title track is up for a Grammy this year. R&b vocals by Yebba, John Legend & Tori Kelly; vocal harmonies by Jacob Collier.

  • @John_Locke_108
    @John_Locke_108 25 дней назад +1

    One of their finest songs. Simply gorgeous.

  • @MJ1
    @MJ1 24 дня назад +1

    Every Gringo Bar in Peru has a duo who performs this song… and it’s glorious.

  • @Kuesel68
    @Kuesel68 24 дня назад +1

    When I was a kid there were Peruvian and Bolivian street musicians at every corner of Swiss cities and they all played... this tune! Til you coulnd't hear it anymore :D It's an older instrumental but made famous by Los Incas in the 60s and Paul wrote some lyrics to it after he first heard them play.

  • @shemanic1
    @shemanic1 24 дня назад +2

    Beautiful music from this duo as usual.

  • @markdrechsler5660
    @markdrechsler5660 24 дня назад +1

    Simon’s follow up to “Graceland,” “The Rhythm of the Saints,” is full of South American influences. That would make another good full album listen.

  • @yw1971
    @yw1971 24 дня назад +1

    One of the earliest introduction of World music into pop

  • @Patterner
    @Patterner 24 дня назад

    fun fact: "they paved paradise" is from Joni Mitchell「Big Yellow Taxi」(and my first thought when i heard that line)

  • @davidmaholchic6146
    @davidmaholchic6146 24 дня назад

    Love this ditty Love you

  • @MisterWondrous
    @MisterWondrous 25 дней назад +1

    This song always touches deep.

  • @richardfurness7556
    @richardfurness7556 24 дня назад

    Made the UK charts in 1970 courtesy of a cover by American folk singer Julie Felix, who had settled in England and become a familiar face on British TV. Her personal life was interesting, to put it mildly. Viewers watching her sitting on a stool, smiling and strumming her guitar had no idea of the affairs with Paul McCartney, Dusty Springfield and others. Sadly she's no longer with us.

  • @AndyClayton-f5x
    @AndyClayton-f5x 20 дней назад

    Beautiful track from a beautiful album. It's just a simple folk song, but with the quality of the production, and Art's voice, it's taken to another level of sophistication.
    A condor is a condor. It's a big South American bird. It's passing by.

  • @KJ-4321
    @KJ-4321 24 дня назад

    Very nice review along with interesting information. 🙂 Thank you! 😀

  • @kevinhodgson2990
    @kevinhodgson2990 24 дня назад +1

    Recommend The Rhythm of the Saints album with my fav song "Born at the Right Time".

  • @PaulRoehl-fi1iw
    @PaulRoehl-fi1iw 24 дня назад

    This is the first time the beginning of this song reminded me of the beg. to "Roundabout". Although there are significant differences of course.

  • @BrandonKennedy-v9l
    @BrandonKennedy-v9l 25 дней назад +3

    El condor pasa translation in English is the condor passes

  • @markharris1125
    @markharris1125 21 день назад

    Yes, it doesn't translate because a condor is a condor! El cóndor mira al águila.

  • @Eduardo-Ferreira1982
    @Eduardo-Ferreira1982 24 дня назад +1

    The condor was also used as a name for an usa foreign policy plan to overthrow any attemp of socialist governments on latin america. It caused much pain and deaths more than we're able to count.
    This version of the popular was not the first done by a western artist, though it is the most famous. Marie Laforet recorded it some years before S&G.
    We can envision here the first world music approach that Paul Simon would porsuit in the future. With the success we all know.

  • @fenderchamp8241
    @fenderchamp8241 20 дней назад

    Looks like Art has a big Cossack moustache

  • @joannerichards1750
    @joannerichards1750 24 дня назад +1

    The pan flute is indigenous to Inca music.

  • @aleclewis9123
    @aleclewis9123 24 дня назад

    A beautiful song from the Andes. 🙂
    In relation to this, I recommend you to listen to Steve Hackett's Inca Terra. 😊

    • @sourisvoleur4854
      @sourisvoleur4854 24 дня назад

      Argentinian, I believe.

    • @aleclewis9123
      @aleclewis9123 24 дня назад

      @@sourisvoleur4854 It is actually Peruvian. Daniel Alomía Robles wrote it in 1913 for a zarzuela (Spanish lyric-dramatic style) of the same name.

  • @Drummingvulture
    @Drummingvulture 25 дней назад +4

    FINALLY a vulture song! LOL!
    edit: Now try "Buzzard" by Armageddon from '75.

  • @floydshambles
    @floydshambles 25 дней назад

    don't forget to listen to my favorite song. i'll watch the video 100 times and drive the numbers up.

  • @davidrauh8118
    @davidrauh8118 23 дня назад

    Urubamba was the name of the group.

  • @Driecnk
    @Driecnk 24 дня назад

    I Am A Rock

  • @pentagrammaton6793
    @pentagrammaton6793 24 дня назад +1

    I'll be happy if I never hear $&^%*"! pan pipes again for as long as I live. 🙃

  • @murdockreviews
    @murdockreviews 24 дня назад +3

    Ruined by an army of street musicians during the 90s and early 00s for me. It's a traditional.