"Leaves That Are Green" | |
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SongbySimon and Garfunkel | |
from the album Sounds of Silence | |
A-side | "Homeward Bound" |
Genre | Folk pop, folk rock[1] |
Length | 2:20 |
Label | Columbia Records |
Songwriter(s) | Paul Simon |
"Leaves That Are Green" is a song written and originally recorded by Paul Simon for his 1965 album The Paul Simon Songbook.[2][3] It was later re-recorded with Art Garfunkel for the 1966 album Sounds of Silence, adding an electric harpsichord, rhythm guitar, and bass.[4] It was also the B-side to the hit song "Homeward Bound".
Cash Box described the song as a "melodic ballad about the ever-constant aging process."[5] Allmusic critic Matthew Greenwald described the music as having a "sprightly folk-pop tempo and feel" with "inventive percussion and harpsichord," and described the lyrics as using "changing seasons to convey the feelings at the disintegration of a romance."[6] Simon biographer Laura Jackson described the song as "peaceful number" in which Simon uses the changing seasons to illustrate that time goes on, and all things come and go.[7] Simon biographer Cornel Bonca criticizes the "cliched nature imagery" but notes that the "delightful" harpsichord opening "belies the lyrics' winsome gloom."[8] On the other hand, music critic Paul Williams used a line from "Leaves That Are Green" to demonstrate Simon's skill as a phrasemaker with a gift for words: "She faded in the night like a poem I meant to write...and the leaves that are green turn to brown."[9]
Music journalist David Browne considered the theme of the song to be "premature nostalgia."[10] Music journalist Chris Charlesworth considers "Leaves That Are Green" to be Simon's first and possibly prettiest of many of Simon's songs that deal with the passage of time.[11] Charlesworth praised the "intricate guitar picking" but criticizes a "failure of the imagination" in the 3rd verse, where the lyrics just say hello and goodbye.[11]
Simon played "Leaves That Are Green" at a live concert at his alma mater Queens College in 1964, where he also played "The Sound of Silence."[3] Simon & Garfunkel performed the song live on their 2004 tour.[3]
The opening lines were quoted by Billy Bragg's song "A New England".[12]
Dorris Henderson covered "Leaves That Are Green" as a single in 1965.[13] Ronnie Hawkins covered it in 1971 on his album The Hawk.[14] J.D. Crowe covered it on his 1973 album Bluegrass Evolution.[15]
Paul Simon songs
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The Paul Simon Songbook |
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Paul Simon |
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There Goes Rhymin' Simon |
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Paul Simon in Concert: Live Rhymin' |
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Still Crazy After All These Years |
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Greatest Hits, Etc. |
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One-Trick Pony |
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Hearts and Bones |
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Graceland |
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The Rhythm of the Saints |
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You're the One |
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Surprise |
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So Beautiful or So What |
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Stranger to Stranger |
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Featured singles |
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Other songs |
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Sounds of Silence |
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Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme |
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Bookends |
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Bridge over Troubled Water |
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Other singles |
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Other songs |
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