Simon & Garfunkel – Cecilia

Cecilia

Lyrics:

[Chorus]
‘Cilia, you’re breaking my heart
You’re shaking my confidence daily
Oh, Cecilia, I’m down on my knees
I’m begging you please to come home
‘Cilia, you’re breaking my heart
You’re shaking my confidence daily
Oh, Cecilia, I’m down on my knees
I’m begging you please to come home
Come on home

[Verse 1]
Making love in the afternoon with Cecilia
Up in my bedroom (making love)
I got up to wash my face
When I come back to bed
Someone’s taken my place

[Chorus]
‘Cilia, you’re breaking my heart
You’re shaking my confidence daily
Oh, Cecilia, I’m down on my knees
I’m begging you please to come home
Come on home

[Bridge]
Oh oh oh oh
Oh oh oh oh oh oh oh oh
(take it up, take it up)

[Chorus 2]
Jubilation, she loves me again
I fall on the floor and I’m laughing
Jubilation, she loves me again
I fall on the floor and I’m laughing
Oh oh oh oh oh oh oh

 

Cecilia” is a song by American music duo Simon & Garfunkel, released in April 1970 as the third single from the group’s fifth studio album, Bridge over Troubled Water (1970). Written by Paul Simon, the song’s origins lie in a late-night party, in which the duo and friends began banging on a piano bench. They recorded the sound with a tape recorder, employing reverb and matching the rhythm created by the machine. Simon later wrote the song’s guitar line and lyrics on the subject of an untrustworthy lover. The song’s title refers to St. Cecilia, patron saint of music in the Catholic tradition.

The song was a hit single in the United States, peaking at number four on the Billboard Hot 100. On the Cash Box Top 100, it reached number one.

“Cecilia” also did well in Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, and Spain, where it reached number two, and also in Switzerland and Belgium, where it peaked at number three. The song has been the subject of numerous cover versions, most notably by the singer Suggs, whose version featured the ragga duo, Louchie Lou & Michie One and reached number four in the United Kingdom in 1996.

File:Cecilia45.jpg

Background and recording

The song’s origins lie in a late-night party attended by the duo and friends.[1] The song’s rhythm was developed by Simon, Garfunkel, and Simon’s younger brother, Eddie. They recorded it for fun utilizing a Sony tape recorder and employing reverberation. In doing so, they were able to synchronize their live rhythm with the reverberating sound on the recording. A friend grabbed a guitar, strumming and punctuating the rhythm with “aahs”.[1]

Simon later found himself coming back to the tape and its infectious quality. While listening to the recording, he composed the song’s guitar line.[2] Simon found a section, the length of shortly over a minute, that he felt had a nice groove. He and producer Roy Halee made a loop of this section, which was not an easy task before the advent of digital recording.[1] The duo later recorded additional elements of the song at Columbia Records’ Gower Street location in Hollywood, typically used for string section recording. Simon & Garfunkel dropped drumsticks on the parquet floor, incorporating their sound into the track. In addition, Simon played random notes on a xylophone, as those elements would be compressed in the final version to where it would not be audible whether or not they were correctly played.[1] Drums were played by veteran Wrecking Crew drummer Hal Blaine.[3][4]

The lyric “making love in the afternoon” was among Simon’s most explicit at the time.[5] Simon states in the 2011 documentary The Harmony Game that, during the song’s initial success, he came upon a recently returned Vietnam War veteran. The man told Simon that soldiers heard the song and found it a sign of the country’s changing mores.[1]

In 2008, Stephen Colbert facetiously asked Simon why the narrator of the song would need to get up and wash his face after making love. Simon noted “Well, it’s the ’60s, so I can’t remember.”[6]

Composition

Simon has suggested that the “Cecilia” of the title refers to St. Cecilia, patron saint of music in the Catholic tradition, and thus the song might refer to the frustration of fleeting inspiration in songwriting, the vagaries of musical fame or in a wider sense the absurdity of pop culture.[1] The song is generally interpreted as a lament over a capricious lover who causes both anguish and jubilation to the singer. St. Cecilia is mentioned in another Paul Simon song, “The Coast” (from his 1990 album The Rhythm of the Saints): “A family of musicians took shelter for the night in the little harbor church of St. Cecilia.”

Release

Simon & Garfunkel initially imagined “Cecilia” to be the first real single from Bridge over Troubled Water, following an early release of “The Boxer” in April 1969. Columbia Records chairman Clive Davis instead pressed the duo to instead issue the title track as the lead single.[7]

The song peaked at number four on the Billboard Hot 100, spending 13 weeks on the chart.[8] It also hit number 32 on the magazine’s Easy Listening chart.[8]

The single did not chart in the UK, despite being released as the follow-up to Simon and Garfunkel’s number one hit “Bridge over Troubled Water“, and most copies of the UK single misspelled the title as “Cecelia” on the label.

Cover versions

“Cecilia”
Suggs Cecilia.jpeg
Single by Suggs featuring Louchie Lou & Michie One
from the album The Lone Ranger
Released 15 April 1996
Format 7″ vinyl
Recorded 25th Sept 1995
Genre
Length 3:08
Label WEA
Songwriter(s) Paul Simon
Producer(s) Sly & Robbie
Suggs singles chronology
“The Tune”
(1995)
“Cecilia”
(1996)
“No More Alcohol”
(1996)
  • In 1970, a cover version was released in 1970 by UK group Harmony Grass, which did not chart. French-speaking American musician Joe Dassin sang a French version of this song, titled “Cécilia”, in 1970, while in February 1971, a version was released in England by the New Wave Band (a group that comprised three members of the band that would soon become 10cc) and Herman’s Hermits guitarist Derek Leckenby. It did not chart.
  • In 1971, a cover version was recorded by the Serbian and former Yugoslav acoustic music duo Vlada i Bajka.[9]
  • In 1971, a cover version was released by Motown’s Smokey Robinson and The Miracles’ album One Dozen Roses.
  • The Coolies cover it on their 1986 album dig..?, along with eight other tongue-in-cheek covers of Simon & Garfunkel classics.
  • In 1988, a cover version by California-based dance duo Times Two was released, peaking at #79 on the Billboard Hot 100 in July 1988.[10]
  • In 1991, the Spanish duo Dúo Dinámico released the spanish version of Cecilia for their album Tal cual.
  • In 1993, the British version of the ABBA tribute performers Björn Again recorded a cover for their album Flashback.
  • In 1996, Suggs‘ version, featuring the ragga duo, Louchie Lou & Michie One, became his most successful single by reaching #4 in the UK; it appeared on his debut solo album The Lone Ranger.
  • In 2009, guitarist Jesse Cook did a cover version of the song on his album, The Rumba Foundation. It featured Jeremy Fisher on vocals.
  • In 2009, Indie rock band Local Natives covered the song.[11]
  • In 2010, the song was covered on Gaelic Storm‘s album Cabbage, which was released on August of that year.[12]
  • In 2014, The Vamps‘ debut album, Meet The Vamps, featured an adaptation of the song as “Oh Cecilia (Breaking My Heart)“.
  • In 2015, the song was covered by the Country and Irish singer Derek Ryan in his studio album One Good Night coupled with a music video of live performances by Ryan.[13]

Live cover performances

References in other songs

  • Faith No More‘s song “Midlife Crisis,” from their 1992 album Angel Dust, features a sample of the first measure of “Cecilia” repeated throughout the song as part of the percussion track.
  • In 1998, Swedish pop band Ace of Base released a Europop track titled “Cecilia” from their album Flowers, which continues the story of the Paul Simon’s character. Jenny Berggren, lead vocalist for the band, sings, “This is a song about a well-known girl”, then tells of Cecilia’s continuous bouncing back and forth between lovers.
  • The 2012 single “Some Nights” by indie pop group fun. was noted for its similarities to “Cecilia”.[14]
  • British band The Vamps sampled the song’s chorus in their own song entitled “Oh Cecilia (Breaking My Heart)“. It can be found on their debut album Meet the Vamps, released on April 14, 2014. It also served as their fifth single featuring additional vocals by Canadian singer Shawn Mendes.

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Simon & Garfunkel version

Chart (1970) Rank
Australia [26] 41
Canada [27] 37
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 [28] 49
U.S. Cash Box [29] 51

Certifications

Times Two version

Chart (1988) Peak
position
US Billboard Hot 100[31] 79

Suggs version

Notes

(Visited 96 times, 1 visits today)

You might be interested in

Post A Comment For The Creator: redrover61

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *