The Dangling Conversation

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"The Dangling Conversation" is a song written by Paul Simon, first released in September 1966 as a Simon and Garfunkel single The Dangling Conversation/The Big Bright Green Pleasure Machine. The song only climbed to 25 on the US charts and never made it onto the UK charts. Paul Simon was amazed it was not a big hit. He put it down to the song's heaviness.[1] It was released a month later as a recording on the Simon and Garfunkel album Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme.

The theme is failed communication between lovers. The song starts in a room washed by shadows from the sun slanting through the lace curtains and ends with the room "softly faded". They are as different as the poems they read: Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost.

[edit] Cover Versions

Joan Baez recorded a version of the song which is one of her greatest hits, originally released in 1967 on the Joan album.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jackson, L: Paul Simon: Definitive Biography, Citadel Press, 2004