If you don't know Paul Simon's Surprise, listen to Outrageous before proceeding. You have to read this blog as it was posted, earliest first. Start with "Cracked 2 More" (lower right) and then work your way up the list. The fully cracked explanations are in the comments, not in the blogs (for those who want to do their own cracking). |
In the comments I'll elaborate on my previous post re "Everything About It Is a Love Song." This is far tighter than I previously realized. There is still that puzzling coda, from which the title springs. Hmmm.
First, I've been convinced of the following for a while, but have been reluctant to blog about it. Reaching more or less absolute judgments in public can make you feel like a fool if you later change your mind. On the other hand, there is an implied demand here for intellectual honesty.
I have cracked ALL of these tracks. (Calling them "songs" would require stretching the former definition of that term - a discussion I'll leave for another day.) There is nothing left in the "random" bin. I still have individual puzzles, such as the coda to "Everything About It ...", but all these make fundamental sense.
And all them are on different facets of a single, larger topic. Let me repeat that. The whole album is about one topic. The second comment here (don't read it if you're doing your own cracking!) identifies that topic. I previously stated that if that were true, I'd have to stop calling this album a monster and call it The Monster. So be it. It is The Monster.
I now listen to this album the same way I listen to Bach's "Prelude and Fugue in D Minor" or Beethoven's "Fifth Symphony." It is a transcendant masterpiece, one of those extraordinary works of the human imagination that happens rarely, that makes you humble and proud to be a human when it happens.
Mr. Simon, I salute you. You've joined the ranks of mankind's greatest artists.