Carly Elisabeth Simon (born June 25, 1945 in New York City) is an American musician who emerged as one of the leading lights of the early 1970s singer-songwriter boom.
Biography
Family
Simon's father was
Richard L. Simon (co-founder of
Simon & Schuster, Inc.), an accomplished pianist who often played
Chopin and
Beethoven at home. Her mother was
Andrea Simon, a civil rights activist and singer. Carly was raised in the
Riverdale neighborhood of
New York City and has two older sisters,
Joanna and
Lucy, and a younger brother,
Peter.
Simon married fellow singer-songwriter James Taylor on November 3, 1972. Simon and Taylor had two children, Sarah Maria "Sally" (born on January 7, 1974) and Benjamin Simon "Ben" Taylor (born on January 22, 1977), prior to their 1983 divorce. She has been married to James Hart, a writer, poet and businessman, since December 23, 1987.
Early career
After a short-lived attempt at launching a career with her sister
Lucy as
"
The Simon Sisters" (they had a minor hit in
1964 called "Winkin', Blinkin' and Nod" and made 3 albums together before Lucy left to get married and start a family), Carly hooked up with eclectic New York rockers
Elephant's Memory for about 6 months. She also appeared in the
1971 Miloš Forman movie
Taking Off where she plays an auditioning singer. Carly sings the song "Long Term Physical Effects" which was included in
Taking Off, the 1971 soundtrack for the movie. Simon launched her solo career in
1971 with the self-titled
Carly Simon for
Elektra Records. The album contained a top-ten hit, "
That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be", and was followed quickly by a second album,
Anticipation, the title cut from which also scored airplay. Simon's major breakthrough, though, was
1972's
No Secrets. The album spawned several successful singles, including Simon's biggest hit, "
You're So Vain". (See that article for the enduring mystery of who the song is about). In
1973 Simon performed on
Lee Clayton's album
Lee Clayton co-singing on the song "New York Suite 409" and on
Livingston Taylor's album
Over The Rainbow singing with both Livingston and James Taylor on the songs "Loving Be My New Horizon" and "Pretty Woman".
Simon followed up the success of No Secrets with the well-received albums Hotcakes (1974) and Playing Possum (1975). In 1974 she also performed on Tom Rush's album Ladies Love Outlaws. Simon co-sang with Rush on the song "No Regrets" and sang backup on "Claim On Me". In 1975 Elektra also released her first greatest-hits album The Best of Carly Simon. Her sales began moderating, though in the later 1970s she would have hits with "Nobody Does It Better" (from the 1977soundtrack to the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me; at #2, her second-biggest US hit after "You're So Vain").
On May 8, 1976, Simon made her only appearance on Saturday Night Live. It was a taped, not live, appearance during which she sang two songs: "Half A Chance" and "You're So Vain". 1976 also saw Simon contribute backup vocals on the song "Peter" on Peter Ivers's album Peter Ivers. 1977 also saw Simon co-producing Libby Titus's album Libby Titus as well as singing backup on two songs, "Can This Be Our Love Affair" and "Darkness 'Til Dawn". In 1978 Simon came out with her album Boys in the Trees from which came a top ten hit "You Belong to Me". Also in 1978, Simon and James Taylor sang backup vocals on two songs for then sister-in-law Kate Taylor's album Kate Taylor: "Happy Birthday Sweet Darling" and "Jason & Ida". She and Taylor also sang backup on three songs on John Hall's debut solo album John Hall, "The Fault", "Good Enough" and "Voyagers". Hall is from the group Orleans. Simon and Taylor would also sing backup on one song, "Power", from Hall's next album, also titled Power (1979). On November 2, 1978 Simon was the guest vocalist on the song "I Live In The Woods" at a live, four-hour concert by Burt Bacharach and the Houston Symphony Orchestra at Jones Hall in Houston, Texas. All the songs at that concert became Bacharach's album Woman, which was released in 1979. That year, shortly after the Three Mile Island nuclear accident, from September 19 to September 22, a series of concerts were held at New York's Madison Square Garden sponsored by MUSE (Musicians United for Safe Energy), a group of musicians against nuclear power. Simon and James Taylor were part of the concerts which later became a film documentary as well as a soundtrack called No Nukes. Also in 1979, Simon finished the decade with her last album for Elektra called Spy.
From 1972 to 1979 Simon sang backup vocals on the following James Taylor songs and albums (not counting any greatest hits or compilations): "One Man Parade" from 1972's One Man Dog, "Rock 'n' Roll Is Music Now", "Let It All Fall Down", Me and My Guitar", "Daddy's Baby" and "Ain't No Song" from 1974's Walking Man, "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)" from 1975's Gorilla, "Shower the People", "A Junkie's Lament", "Slow Burning Love" and "Family Man" from 1976's In the Pocket, and "B.S.U.R." from 1979's Flag. She also co-wrote with Taylor the song "Terra Nova" on his 1977 album JT. At the end of the song, Simon sings what has come to be known as "Lambert's Cove".
1980s
In
1980, Simon signed with
Warner Brothers Records. During a show in
Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania while touring to promote her album,
Come Upstairs, Simon collapsed onstage of exhaustion; she largely retired from performing in the
1980s. She had a top 20 hit with the single, "Jesse", from that album. Simon also contibuted the song "Be With Me" to the
1980 album
In Harmony A Sesame Street Record produced by her sister
Lucy and Lucy's husband, David Levine. Simon can also be heard on the song "In Harmony" along with other members of the Simon/Taylor families. Carly and Lucy contributed a "
Simon Sisters" song called "Maryanne" to the
1982 follow-up album
In Harmony 2, also produced by Lucy and her husband. Both albums won the
Grammy for
Best Album for Children.
Torch (1981) was an album of melancholy standards reflecting her mood at the time. "Why" (1982), from the soundtrack to the 1982 movie Soup For One, was a hit single in the UK (but stalled at #74 in the US). She had another minor UK success with the single "Kissing With Confidence", a song off the 1983 album Dancing For Mental Health by Will Powers (actually Lynn Goldsmith). Simon was the uncredited singer of the song on the album. Still, few of her singles in the 1980s rose in the pop charts, although some did better among adult contemporary audiences. In 1983 she made her last album for Warner — Hello Big Man. That same year Simon performed on two albums, The Perfect Stranger by Jesse Colin Young (co-singing on the song "Fight For It" with Young) and Wonderland by Nils Lofgren (co-singing on the song "Lonesome Ranger" with Lofgren). By this time her sales were dropping and Warner cut her loose. She was picked up by Epic Records in 1985 and made only one album for them — Spoiled Girl. Because of its lackluster sales, Epic dropped her.
During this time Simon successfully contributed to several film scores, including the songs "If It Wasn't Love" for Nothing In Common (1986), "Two Looking At One" for The Karate Kid, Part II (1986), "Coming Around Again" and "Itsy Bitsy Spider" for Heartburn (1987), and "Let the River Run" for Working Girl (for which she won the Academy Award for Best Song in 1988). The Working Girl soundtrack came out in 1989. In 1987 Simon signed with Arista Records. Her first album for them, Coming Around Again (1987), was her strongest during this decade, as exemplified by the songs, "The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of", "Give Me All Night", "All I Want Is You" and the title track, "Coming Around Again" which wove in and out of the children's song "Itsy Bitsy Spider". These and older songs were featured in a picturesque HBO special set on Martha's Vineyard. Most of these songs were compiled for her 1988 album — Greatest Hits Live, her second greatest hits album. She also wrote the theme songs to several movies, including "Something More" for the 1982 movie Love Child, "Someone Waits For You" for the 1984 movie Swing Shift, "All The Love In The World" for the 1985 TV movie Torchlight as well as "It's Hard To Be Tender" for the 1986 TV miniseries Sins and "Love Of My Life" for 1992's This Is My Life. In 1987, Simon sang "The Turn Of The Tide" for a Marlo Thomas TV special called "Free to Be . . . A Family". The song was later included on the 1988 album Free To Be . . . A Family. In 1989 Simon's first of several children's books, "Amy the Dancing Bear" was published.
She also wrote a song called "You're Where I Go" as a tribute to Christa McAuliffe, who was supposed to be the first teacher in space, before she died in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, when the shuttle exploded 73 seconds after liftoff with McAuliffe on board on January 28, 1986. McAuliffe was a Simon fan, and had taken a cassette of her music on board the shuttle.
1990s
In
1990 Simon came out with two albums: her second standards album,
My Romance and
Have You Seen Me Lately, her first album of original songs since 1987. Her second children's book, "The Boy of the Bells" was also published in 1990 and she wrote the score for the 1990 film
Postcards From The Edge. In
1991, Simon wrote her third children's book, "The Fisherman's Song" based on the song of the same name from her 1990 album "Have You Seen Me Lately". That same year, Simon performed a duet with
Plácido Domingo on the song "The Last Night Of The World" (from the
Miss Saigon musical) on Domingo's album
The Broadway I Love. A year later Simon was asked to write the music for the
Nora Ephron film "This Is My Life". The soundtrack was released at the same time as the movie.
1993 was a busy year for Simon. She contributed the song "In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning" for the film
Sleepless In Seattle. That year she also recorded the same song, "In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning", in combo with "Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry" with
Frank Sinatra for his album
Duets. 1993 also saw Simon recording a contemporary opera called
A Family Opera, having been commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera Association and the Kennedy Center, as well as the publishing of her fourth children's book, "The Nighttime Chauffeur". She also contibuted to
Andreas Vollenweider's album
Eolian Minstrel. Simon co-wrote the song "Private Fires" with Vollenweider and was the featured vocalist on the song.
1994 brought a cover of "Take Me Out To The Ball Game" for
Ken Burns' 1994 film
Baseball as well as a recording of "I've Got a Crush On You" for
Larry Adler's covers album
The Glory of Gershwin. That same year Simon recorded another album of original songs,
Letters Never Sent and contributed a Christmas song, "The Night Before Christmas" to the movie and soundtrack
Mixed Nuts. In
1995 she put aside years of
stage fright long enough to stage an American concert tour in conjunction with
Hall and Oates. That same year
Clouds In My Coffee, a box set of her work from 1965 to 1995, was released. On
August 30,
1995, Simon made a rare joint appearance with ex husband, James Taylor, for a concert on Martha's Vineyard dubbed "Livestock '95", a benefit for the Martha's Vineyard Agricultural Society. Over 10,000 fans attended. She also did a duet with
Mindy Jostyn on the song "Time, Be On My Side" on Jostyn's 1995 album
Five Miles From Hope. She wrote the theme songs to several movies, including "Two Little Sisters" from the
1996 movie
Marvin's Room and "In Two Straight Lines" from the
1998 movie
Madeline.
1997 saw the release of Simon's third standards album,
Film Noir, as well as her fifth children's book, "Midnight Farm". In 1998, Simon was diagnosed with
breast cancer and received chemotherapy. In
1999 Nobody Does It Better, her third greatest hits album, was released in the United Kingdom first and eventually in the USA. That year Simon also was the featured vocalist for the song "Your Silver Key" on the album
Cosmopoly by Andreas Vollenweider.
2000s
In
2000 she recorded
The Bedroom Tapes, her first album since her illness and her first album of original songs in almost six years. In
2001, Simon performed on "
Son of a Gun" with
Janet Jackson on Jackson's album
All For You. She also contributed back-up vocals on two songs, "Don't Turn Away" and "East Of Eden", on Mindy Jostyn's 2001 album
Blue Stories. In
2002, Simon recorded a Christmas album,
Christmas Is Almost Here, for
Rhino Records while in Los Angeles lending support to her son,
Ben Taylor, and his band. That same year, Simon personally chose all the songs for a two disc anthology album titled
Anthology, also for Rhino Records.
2003 saw a re-release of her 2002 Christmas album but with two extra tracks and called
Christmas Is Almost Here Again, also on Rhino Records. The two extra tracks, "White Christmas" and "Forgive" were also released as a single. Simon also performed several concerts during the 2004 Holiday Season at Harlem's famous Apollo Theatre along with BeBe Winans, her son and daugter, Rob Thomas, Livingston Taylor, Mindy Jostyn, and Kate Taylor along with other members of the Taylor and Simon family. Among Simon's recent work were songs for the
Disney Winnie the Pooh films
Piglet's Big Movie in
2003 and
Pooh's Heffalump Movie in 2005. Her songs were also prominently featured in the
2004 movie
Little Black Book starring
Brittany Murphy and
Holly Hunter. 2004 also saw the release of her fourth greatest hits album,
Carly Simon's Greatest Hits, which eventually peaked at number 22 on the Billboard charts that year. In
2005 she released another album of standards, her fifth, titled
Moonlight Serenade.
Moonlight Serenade debuted at number 7 on the Billboard charts, her highest debut since
Hotcakes in 1973. To promote
Moonlight Serenade, Simon performed two concerts onboard the
Queen Mary II which were recorded and released on DVD on
November 22,
2005. She also announced a concert tour in the United States, her first tour in 10 years. Simon also sang a duet, "Angel Of The Darkest Night" with Mindy Jostyn on Jostyn's 2005 album
Coming Home which was released several months after Jostyn's death which occurred on March 10, 2005. Besides being one of Simon's closest friends and appearing onstage with her for the Apollo Theatre concerts (12/2004), Jostyn was married to
Jacob Brackman, Simon's long-time friend and musical collaborator. Also in 2005, she became involved in the legal defense of fellow musician and family friend
John Forté with his struggle against a federal incarceration.
In November 2001, "Let the River Run" was used in a public service ad for the United States Postal Service. Entitled "Pride", it was produced to boost public confidence and postal worker morale in the wake of the September 11, 2001 and 2001 Anthrax attacks. As the song played, images of postal workers were shown, as overlay text reminded viewers of the unofficial United States Postal Service creed and history.
Simon currently lives on Martha's Vineyard and co-owns a store in Vineyard Haven named Midnight Farm, which is also the title of one of the series of children's books she wrote in the late 1980s and 1990s. As of May 2006, she was recording an new album of "soothing songs and lullabies" for Columbia Records. That album, Into White, will be released in late October 2006 and features covers of Cat Stevens, Judy Garland, the Beatles and the Everly Brothers as well as two new songs.
Awards and recognition
Grammy Awards:
Academy Award:
Golden Globe Awards:
Other awards:
Discography
Albums
- Carly Simon, 1971
- Anticipation, 1971
- No Secrets, 1972
- Hotcakes, 1974
- Playing Possum, 1975
- The Best of Carly Simon, 1975
- Another Passenger, 1976
- Boys in the Trees, 1978
- Spy, 1979
- Come Upstairs, 1980
- Torch, 1981
- Hello Big Man, 1983
- Spoiled Girl, 1985
- Coming Around Again, 1987
- Greatest Hits Live, 1988
- My Romance, 1990
- Have You Seen Me Lately, 1990
- This Is My Life, 1992
- A Family Opera, 1993
- Letters Never Sent, 1994
- Clouds In My Coffee, 1995 (three-disc career retrospective box set)
- Film Noir, 1997
- Nobody Does It Better, 1999
- The Bedroom Tapes, 2000
- Christmas Is Almost Here, 2002
- Anthology, 2002
- Christmas Is Almost Here Again, 2003
- Carly Simon's Greatest Hits, 2004
- Moonlight Serenade, 2005
- Into White, 2006
Top-20 hit singles
- "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be",1971, US Adult Contemporary, #6; US Pop Singles, #10
- "Anticipation", 1972, US Adult Contemporary, #3; US Pop Singles, #13
- "Legend In Your Own Time", 1972, US Adult Contemporary, #11; US Pop Singles, #50
- "You're So Vain", 1973, US Adult Contemporary, #1; US Pop Singles, #1; UK #3
- "The Right Thing to Do", 1973, US Adult Contemporary, #4; US Pop Singles, #17; UK #17
- "Mockingbird" (with James Taylor), 1974, US Pop Singles, #5
- "Haven't Got Time For the Pain", 1974, US Adult Contemporary, #2; US Pop Singles, #14
- "Attitude Dancing", 1975, US Adult Contemporary, #18; US Pop Singles, #21
- "Nobody Does It Better", 1977, US Adult Contemporary, #1; US Pop Singles, #2; UK #7
- "You Belong to Me", 1978, US Adult Contemporary, #4; US Pop Singles, #6
- "Devoted to You" (with James Taylor), 1978, US Adult Contemporary, #2; US Country Singles, #33; US Pop Singles, #36
- "Jesse", 1980, US Adult Contemporary, #8; US Pop Singles, #11
- "Why", 1982, UK Pop Singles #10; US Pop Singles, #74
- "Kissing With Confidence", 1983, UK #17
- "Coming Around Again", 1986, US Adult Contemporary, #5; US Billboard Hot 100, #18; UK #10
- "Give Me All Night", 1987, US Adult Contemporary #5; US Pop Singles, #61
- "The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of", 1987, US Adult Contemporary, #8
- "All I Want Is You", 1987, US Adult Contemporary, #7; US Pop Singles, #54
- "Let the River Run", 1989, US Adult Contemporary, #11; US Pop Singles, #49
- "Better Not Tell Her", 1990, US Adult Contemporary, #4
- "Love of My Life", 1992, US Adult Contemporary, #16
- "Let It Snow", 2005, US Adult Contemporary, #6
Videography
- Live from Martha's Vineyard, 1987
- Carly in Concert — My Romance, 1990
- Live at Grand Central, 1995
- A Moonlight Serenade on the Queen Mary 2, 2005
Bibliography
- Amy the Dancing Bear, 1989
- The Boy of the Bells, 1990
- The Fisherman's Song, 1991
- The Nighttime Chauffeur, 1993
- Midnight Farm, 1997
Trivia
- Simon is one of the artists mentioned in the lyrics of Reunion's 1974 song "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)".
- Simon can be heard as the voice of "Maria" in a 1995 episode of Frasier entitled "Roz in the Doghouse".
- Simon appeared in a 1989 episode of thirtysomething as herself.
- In an effort to make Simon more comfortable while performing, an entire 1988 episode of Late Night With David Letterman was broadcast from a hotel room at the Milford Plaza in New York.
- During the 1990s the New York press reported on a supposed incident between Simon and the Pretenders' lead singer, Chrissie Hynde, at a Joni Mitchell concert at New York's Fez Club. The verbal confrontation between the two led to Simon's exit from the concert after a noisy Hynde insulted Simon. Some reports have Hynde grabbing Simon around the neck and punching her although a publicist for Hynde has said that Hynde was just hugging Simon.
Management
Management: KB Management
Responsible Manager: Kerri Brusca
Direct Phone: 212-979-1032
E-Mail: kerribrusca@hotmail.com
Address: 137 Fifth Avenue 8th Floor
New York, NY 10010 United States
Phone: 212-979-1032
Fax: 212-202-4591
Business Management: Starr & Company
Responsible Manager: Arlene Graff
Direct Phone: 212-759-6556
E-Mail: a--graff@starrllc.com
Address: 350 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10022 United States
Phone: 212-759-6556
Fax: 212-371-5806
Attorney: Manatt, Phelps & Phillips LLP
Responsible Manager: L. Lee Phillips
Direct Phone: 310-312-4111
E-Mail: lphillips@manatt.com
Address: 11355 West Olypmpic Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90064 United States
Phone: 310-312-4000
Fax: 310-312-4224
External links
1945 births | Living people | Best Song Academy Award winning songwriters | American female singers | American pop singers | American singer-songwriters | Arista Records musicians | Greenwich Village scene | Jewish-American singers | People from the Bronx | People with glossophobia | Breast cancer patients | Saturday Night Live musical guests
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