Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme is the third studio album by the American folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel, produced by Bob Johnston and released on October 10, 1966, by Columbia Records.[1][2] The album's title is drawn from the refrain of the traditional English ballad "Scarborough Fair," which the duo adapted into the track "Scarborough Fair/Canticle."[2]Featuring twelve tracks, the album showcases Simon & Garfunkel's signature close vocal harmonies, intricate guitar arrangements, and Paul Simon's literate songwriting on themes of introspection, relationships, and social commentary.[3] Key songs include "Homeward Bound," written during Simon's time in England, and the experimental "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," which overlays ABC News reports on the Vietnam War and civil rights over a rendition of the Christmas carol, highlighting mid-1960s cultural tensions.[4][2] "Scarborough Fair/Canticle" became a signature hit, blending folk tradition with counterpoint vocals and harpsichord, while tracks like "The Dangling Conversation" and "For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her" exemplify their poetic lyricism and melodic subtlety.[4]The album achieved commercial success, peaking at number 4 on the Billboard 200 chart and later certified 3× Platinum by the RIAA for shipments of three million units in the United States.[1][5] It received critical acclaim for its production innovations and artistic maturity, solidifying Simon & Garfunkel's transition from earlier folk influences to a more sophisticated sound that influenced subsequent folk rock developments.[4][3]
Background
Album inception and context
Following the surprise commercial breakthrough of the overdubbed single "The Sound of Silence," released on January 17, 1966, and topping the Billboard Hot 100 chart, Simon & Garfunkel reunited after Paul Simon's extended stay in England, where he had pursued solo folk performances since the failure of their 1964 debut album Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M..[6][7] This rapid ascent from obscurity imposed immediate touring demands, including a rigorous schedule of college campus shows across the United States and into Europe, often backed by a live band to meet audience expectations for amplified performances.[8] The pressures of this newfound visibility, coupled with Columbia Records' push for swift follow-up material, contrasted with the duo's prior acoustic folk roots, prompting a deliberate pivot toward more experimental songcraft amid escalating creative expectations.[9]Simon’s immersion in the British folk scene during 1964–1965 directly shaped early material for the album; while based in Essex, he penned "Homeward Bound" in late 1965, reportedly scribbling lyrics on a station platform during a delayed train ride from a northern England gig, capturing themes of exile and yearning amid professional instability.[7][10] He also absorbed traditional ballads, learning the melody and verses of "Scarborough Fair" from English folk guitarist Martin Carthy during a 1965 London session, which Simon later adapted into a counterpointed arrangement blending archaic folk with modern counter-melody.[11] These influences reflected Simon's strategic absorption of transatlantic folk traditions, yielding initial demos that preserved acoustic intimacy while anticipating studio enhancements.[12]The album emerged within the broader 1960sfolk revival's shift toward electrification, as artists like Bob Dylan and the Byrds fused acoustic storytelling with rock instrumentation starting in 1965, a trend Simon & Garfunkel navigated by retaining narrative depth from folk sources—such as herbal symbolism in medieval ballads—while responding to commercial demands for broader appeal.[13] This evolution allowed the duo greater artistic autonomy compared to prior efforts, enabling extended development post-Sounds of Silence to integrate layered harmonies and thematic introspection drawn from personal and cultural dislocations.[9][14]
Pre-recording preparations
Following the success of the overdubbed single "The Sound of Silence" under Tom Wilson, Columbia Records assigned Bob Johnston as producer for Simon & Garfunkel's subsequent work, marking a shift toward a collaborator experienced with Bob Dylan and capable of enhancing the duo's folk-oriented sound with fuller arrangements.[15] Johnston's involvement began with the Sounds of Silence album and extended to Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, where he facilitated greater creative control for Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel in personnel and production decisions.[4]Preparations included plans to refine sparse acoustic demos and initial tracks recorded as early as December 1965 and through mid-1966, primarily featuring basic guitar and vocal elements, by incorporating overdubs, additional instrumentation, and rehearsals to achieve layered harmonies and textures.[4] These early takes, captured before the main sessions, required extensive reworking to align with the duo's evolving vision, emphasizing meticulous arrangement without rushing into full production.[15]Paul Simon's extended stay in England during 1965 significantly shaped song selection, as he immersed himself in the British folk scene, learning traditional tunes like "Scarborough Fair" from Martin Carthy and composing originals such as "Homeward Bound" amid homesickness and cultural influences.[16] This period yielded material recycled for the album, prioritizing introspective and folk-derived pieces over prior pop-leaning efforts, with selections vetted through informal duo discussions to balance new compositions and adaptations.[16]
Recording and Production
Studio sessions and locations
Recording sessions for Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme took place primarily from June to August 1966 at Columbia Records' Studio A in New York City.[1]Producer Bob Johnston oversaw the process, with engineer Roy Halee handling the technical aspects, marking the start of a significant collaboration that emphasized detailed refinement.[1] The sessions spanned approximately three months, during which the duo and musicians captured initial rhythm tracks before expanding them through iterative overdubs to create dense, textured folk-rock soundscapes.[1]Base tracks for several songs, including "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," were established early in June 1966, with subsequent dates in July and August dedicated to layering vocals and instruments onto these foundations.[9] This approach involved painstaking assembly, often requiring multiple takes per section to refine harmonies and instrumentation, though specific counts of discarded attempts remain undocumented in primary accounts. The process was constrained by Simon and Garfunkel's extensive touring schedule, including European dates earlier in 1966, which necessitated efficient studio time management despite the album's escalating production costs from prolonged refinement.[1]Two tracks originated from prior December 1965 sessions for Sounds of Silence but were revisited and integrated during the 1966 work, allowing the album to incorporate established material amid the new recordings.[17] Overall, the sessions highlighted a shift toward producer-like involvement from the duo, particularly evident in the overdub-heavy construction of counterpoint elements in pieces like "Scarborough Fair/Canticle."[9]
Engineering techniques and innovations
The album marked Simon & Garfunkel's first use of eight-track recording technology, which they advocated for to Columbia Records to accommodate layered vocal and instrumental elements.[18] This multi-tracking enabled precise overdubbing of harmonies, as demonstrated in tracks like "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," where multiple vocal takes were superimposed to blend traditional folk melodies with contrapuntal anti-war counterpoint.[9]Engineer Roy Halee collaborated closely with the duo to integrate unconventional instruments such as harpsichord and dulcimer through overdubs, adding textural depth without live ensemble overcrowding.[15] These techniques facilitated an intimate vocal presence alongside expansive instrumental arrangements, achieved by isolating and balancing acoustic guitars, percussion, and orchestral accents across tracks.Producer Bob Johnston adopted a hands-off method, refraining from dictating song selections or arrangements, which permitted Paul Simon to directly supervise mixing decisions and refine the sonic clarity.[19][9] This autonomy, combined with Halee's engineering precision, resulted in a production that emphasized dynamic range and spatial imaging, distinguishing the album's folk-rock hybrid from prior duo efforts.[20]
Composition
Musical styles and arrangements
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme showcases a fusion of acoustic folk traditions with folk rock innovations, emphasizing intricate guitar work and layered vocal harmonies that distinguish it within mid-1960s popular music. The album's arrangements prioritize unamplified instruments, such as acoustic guitars, to maintain an intimate, organic texture, while incorporating subtle studio layering to enhance depth without overpowering the core folk aesthetic. This approach reflects a transitional phase in folk rock's development, where acoustic foundations intersect with emerging production techniques to create a cohesive yet experimental soundscape.[21][22]Key tracks demonstrate varied arrangements built around fingerpicking patterns and contrapuntal elements. In "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)," Paul Simon employs alternating thumb bass and finger-picked melody lines on acoustic guitar, supporting the song's upbeat 3/4 meter and evoking a light, rhythmic propulsion typical of the duo's playful folk stylings. "Scarborough Fair/Canticle" features harpsichord alongside guitar to underscore its modalfolk structure, with the instruments providing a Renaissance-like contrapuntal backdrop for interwoven vocal lines. These choices highlight the album's reliance on traditional timbres adapted for modern recording, fostering a sound that balances historical allusion with contemporary clarity.[23][24]The closing track, "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," exemplifies arrangement through collage, layering multi-tracked a cappella vocals of the Christmas carol—achieved via overdubs for choral effect—with a superimposed news broadcast, creating auditory dissonance via precise synchronization rather than instrumental complexity. Such techniques underscore the album's sonic variety, from sparse acoustic setups to conceptual overlays, unified by the duo's hallmark close harmonies and restraint in orchestration. Overall, the arrangements favor empirical structural elements like modal progressions and rhythmic interplay over dense orchestration, contributing to the record's enduring acoustic purity.[3][25]
Lyrics, themes, and song analyses
The lyrics of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme recurrently probe the irreconcilable demands of human longing and emotional detachment, often framing relationships as quixotic pursuits undermined by personal or societal impossibilities. Paul Simon's songwriting, informed by his 1965 travels in England and Europe, infuses tracks with a sense of displacement and introspection, as evident in "Homeward Bound," where the narrator's ache for "the Mississippi River and bright light city" captures the causal pull of familiarity against transient ambition.[26] This motif of nostalgia as a counterforce to modernity recurs, grounding abstract reflections in biographical realism rather than idealized romance."Scarborough Fair/Canticle," an adaptation of the traditional English ballad learned by Simon from folk singer Martin Carthy during his UK stay, exemplifies futile quests for lost love through a series of impossible tasks—such as stitching a shirt without seams or finding a field sown with seeds reaped in a day—symbolizing the emotional barriers erected after betrayal.[16] The refrain's herbs (parsley for comfort, sage for strength, rosemary for fidelity, thyme for courage) underscore absent virtues in the fractured bond, while the overlaid "Canticle" counter-melody shifts to war's dehumanizing logic ("war bellows blazing in scarlet battalions"), juxtaposing medieval courtship rituals against 20th-century alienation.[27] This duality highlights causal realism in human conflict: personal grudges mirror broader estrangements, with no resolution beyond stoic endurance.[28]In "Patterns," Simon dissects life's rigid structures as confining geometries—"the patterns of my life form a maze / Where the paths are marked with the same refrain"—evoking how habitual expectations trap individuals in repetitive dissatisfaction, akin to the inescapable cycles of duty and desire. "The Dangling Conversation" extends this to relational entropy, portraying a couple's exchanges as "a phrase that doesn't reach the ear" amid "the hotel lobby's dimming chandelier," where intellectual posturing fails to bridge emotional voids.[29]The album's closing track, "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," employs a stark sound collage: Garfunkel's rendition of the 1818 carol's serene invocation of "all is calm, all is bright" clashes with a radio bulletin reciting August 1966 headlines, including Vietnam escalations (e.g., U.S. troop commitments nearing 400,000), anti-war protests, and urban unrest like the Cleveland riots. This ironic overlay illustrates media's relentless intrusion—delivering empirical chaos from B-52 strikes to political assassinations—against the carol's timeless appeal to peace, revealing how modern information overload erodes contemplative space without prescribing solutions.[30] Such constructions prioritize observational dissonance over didacticism, aligning with Simon's preference for layered ambiguity in evoking human disconnection.[26]
Songwriting Controversies
Credit disputes for adaptations
The principal credit dispute surrounding adaptations on Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme centered on "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," an arrangement of the traditional English ballad dating to at least the 17th century. Paul Simon learned a specific guitar fingerpicking pattern and lyrical variant of the song from British folk musician Martin Carthy during a May 1965 visit to London, where Carthy performed it at the Kingston Folk Club. Simon subsequently adapted the tune by overlaying it with "Canticle," an original anti-war counterpoint composed by Simon and Art Garfunkel, and copyrighted his arrangement without initial credit to Carthy's influence.[31][32]Upon hearing the October 10, 1966, album release, Carthy accused Simon of plagiarism, arguing that the duo's version replicated his distinctive arrangement—a rare modaltuning and picking style derived from earlier folk sources—while claiming authorship credits that obscured its communal origins. Carthy's publisher filed a lawsuit against Simon in the late 1960s, asserting unauthorized use of the arrangement. The case highlighted tensions between folk traditions of open sharing and U.S. copyright practices, where arrangements of public-domain works can be protected, allowing Simon to register it via ASCAP without royalties owed to unattributable traditional sources.[33][34]The dispute resolved via an out-of-court settlement in which Simon and Garfunkel paid Carthy an undisclosed but substantial sum, estimated in music industry reports as compensation for the uncredited borrowing. Album liner notes credited the song as "Traditional, arranged by Paul Simon," but critics in folk circles, including Carthy initially, decried the commercialization of shared repertoire without fuller disclosure of modern influences, viewing it as ethical overreach despite legal validity. By the 2020s, Carthy publicly retracted his plagiarism charge, acknowledging in interviews that the ballad's evolutionary nature in folk music absolved Simon of theft, though he noted the incident strained relations temporarily.[35][32][34]No formal disputes arose over other adaptations on the album, such as incidental folk elements in tracks like "Patterns," which drew from traditional motifs without credited arrangements. The episode underscored broader debates in 1960s folk-rock on profiting from public-domain material, with BMI and ASCAP records confirming Simon's publishing control yielded royalties solely to the duo's arrangement, bypassing historical origins.[31]
Internal duo tensions
During the preparation and recording of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme in mid-1966, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel navigated an inherent imbalance in their creative responsibilities that strained their collaboration. Simon dominated songwriting, authoring lyrics and melodies for most tracks, while Garfunkel concentrated on vocal performances, harmonies, and interpretive contributions during sessions at Columbia's studios in New York and Los Angeles.[1] This specialization enabled the duo's breakthrough in layered folk-rock production but sowed early discord, as Simon increasingly viewed Garfunkel's role as secondary to compositional demands, a sentiment rooted in their dynamic since the early 1960s.[36]Tensions surfaced in debates over crediting arrangements, with Garfunkel advocating recognition for his harmonic innovations and session inputs against Simon's primacy in textual and structural elements. Biographies recount how these frictions, though not yet fracturing their output, drove refinements in vocal blending and counterpoint—evident in the album's experimental tracks—but mirrored the causal inequities that Simon later described as eroding mutual respect and foreshadowing their dissolution after Bridge Over Troubled Water.[37][38]
Artwork and Title
Cover design and photography
The cover art for Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme features a color photograph credited to Bob Cato, showing Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel seated casually in a flower garden with botanical elements in the foreground.[39] The image centers the duo against a natural backdrop, with the artists' names and album title rendered in elegant script lettering overlaid on the composition.[2]
This photographic approach adopted a straightforward, unadorned style characteristic of 1960s folk album packaging, prioritizing the subjects and environmental context over elaborate graphics or effects.[20] The Columbia Records release as stereo LP CS 9363 included variations in label designs across pressings, such as early "two-eye" stereo indicators and later iterations from plants like Terre Haute, reflecting standard manufacturing adaptations during the album's production run starting October 1966.[40][41]
Herbal symbolism and origins
The album title originates from the refrain of the traditional English ballad "Scarborough Fair," adapted by Simon & Garfunkel as the opening track "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," where the herbs serve as a rhythmic incantation in the folk narrative of impossible tasks for lost love.[42] This ballad, documented as Child Ballad No. 2 ("The Elfin Knight") in the 19th-century collection The English and Scottish Popular Ballads by Francis James Child, incorporates the herbal litany by at least the early 19th century, though its roots trace to medieval English folk traditions.[43]In medieval and early modern European herbals, parsley (Petroselinum crispum), sage (Salvia officinalis), rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis), and thyme (Thymus vulgaris) were primarily esteemed for verifiable medicinal applications, with symbolic associations emerging secondarily from their empirical effects rather than inherent mystical properties. Parsley functioned as a diuretic and digestive aid, historically used to treat urinary issues and bloating, leading to folk interpretations of it removing "bitterness" or providing comfort amid affliction.[44]Sage, noted in Roman texts for its preservative and antiseptic qualities—evident in its use against infections and digestive disorders—was linked to longevity and wisdom, reflecting observed health benefits over supernatural claims.[45]Rosemary served as a circulatory stimulant and headache remedy, with its volatile oils supporting cognitive function, which grounded traditions of it symbolizing remembrance or fidelity; ancient Greeks and Romans burned it for mental clarity, not ritual magic.[44] Thyme, valued for its antimicrobial properties in treating respiratory ailments and as a lung strengthener, was associated with courage and melancholy relief, deriving from its thymol content's invigorating physiological impact, as described in herbals predating romanticized pagan lore.[45]Nicholas Culpeper's The Complete Herbal (1653), a seminal astrological-phytomedical text drawing on Galenic traditions, details these herbs' causal mechanisms—parsley for expelling "wind" and urinary gravel, sage for staunching blood and easing sore throats, rosemary for comforting the brain, and thyme for purging lungs—prioritizing humoral balance and observable outcomes over charms, though he incorporated astrological correspondences common to the era.[44]Folkloric symbolism, such as parsley for death and rebirth (from its tomb garland use in antiquity) or the quartet as a protective bouquet, often amplified practical virtues into talismanic narratives, but evidence favors utilitarian origins in agrarian medicine, debunking overstated esoteric or pagan primacy in pre-modern sources.[46] The duo's title invokes this refrain nominally, aligning with the song's folk authenticity without documented intent to endorse symbolic esoterica beyond lyrical tradition.[28]
Release
Formats, dates, and marketing
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme was released in the United States on October 10, 1966, by Columbia Records in both monaural (catalog number CL 2563) and stereophonic (CS 9363) long-playing vinyl formats.[47][2] The initial pressings featured black vinyl discs housed in gatefold sleeves with the album's distinctive cover artwork.[48]Marketing for the album leveraged prior single releases to generate radio airplay and public interest, notably "Homeward Bound," issued on January 19, 1966, which reached audiences ahead of the full LP.[49] Promotion also tied into Simon & Garfunkel's ongoing folk-rock concert tours, including college circuit performances resumed shortly after the U.S. launch.[50] In subsequent decades, the album appeared in additional formats such as cassette tapes and compact discs through Columbia's reissue programs.[50]Internationally, the album saw distribution variants, including a UK edition released on October 10, 1966, via Decca Records with aligned track listings to the U.S. version.[4]
Commercial performance and charts
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme peaked at number 4 on the US Billboard 200 chart, where it remained for 145 weeks.[51] The album's chart success was bolstered by the rising popularity of folk rock on AM radio during the mid-1960s, amid a shift toward album-oriented sales following the success of singles like "The Sound of Silence." In the United Kingdom, it reached number 13 on the Official Charts Company's Albums Chart, charting for 59 weeks.[52]The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the album gold in 1967 for sales exceeding 500,000 units, later awarding platinum status and ultimately 3× platinum in November 1986 for over 3 million copies shipped in the United States. Worldwide sales estimates exceed 5 million units, driven by sustained demand through the late 1960s and reissues.[53]Key singles from the album contributed to its commercial momentum. "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," released in early 1968, peaked at number 11 on the BillboardHot 100. "Homeward Bound," recorded during the album's sessions and issued as a single in January 1966 prior to the full release, reached number 5 on the same chart, helping propel initial album interest.[54]
Chart (1966–1968)
Peak Position
US Billboard 200
4
UK Albums (OCC)
13
US Billboard Hot 100 ("Scarborough Fair/Canticle")
11
Reception
Initial critical responses
Critics upon the album's October 1966 release lauded Simon & Garfunkel's vocal harmonies for their sophistication and intricacy, particularly in tracks like "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," where the duo's layered interplay and innovative arrangements were highlighted as elevating folk-rock to new artistic heights.[4] The production techniques, including multi-tracking and non-traditional instrumentation, were also noted for fusing genres effectively and showcasing technical maturity beyond their prior work.[4]However, lyrical content drew mixed reactions, with "The Dangling Conversation"—released as a single on July 18, 1966, and peaking at number 25 on the Billboard Hot 100—frequently cited as overly pretentious and literarily self-indulgent, evoking a sense of strained intellectualism in depicting relational ennui.[56]Art Garfunkel himself expressed reservations about the track's affected tone during recording. [18]The closing track "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," overlaying actual August 1966 news broadcasts of Vietnam War updates, racial unrest, and assassinations atop the duo's rendition of the Christmas carol, elicited divided opinions: some viewed it as a bold, innovative commentary on contemporary chaos, while others dismissed it as a gimmicky and pretentious stunt that prioritized shock over substance.[57] Overall, outlets like Billboard acknowledged the album's artistic ambition amid its chart trajectory, though detailed print critiques from the era emphasized this balance of harmonic excellence against occasional overwrought elements.[58]
Achievements, accolades, and sales certifications
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme was certified 3× Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on November 21, 1986, denoting shipments of three million copies in the United States.[59] It also received a Gold certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for sales exceeding 100,000 units in the United Kingdom.[60]In 1999, the album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, recognizing its enduring historical, artistic, or significant value.[61]Simon & Garfunkel, the recording artists, were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1990, encompassing honors for their catalog including this release.[62]
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.[60]
Legacy and Influence
Cultural and musical impact
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme played a pivotal role in establishing the folk-rock canon by fusing intricate vocal harmonies, acoustic instrumentation, and electric elements with literate, narrative-driven lyrics, setting a standard for the genre's sophistication. Released amid the mid-1960s folk revival, the album's production techniques, including multi-tracked vocals and subtle orchestration, advanced the sound pioneered in earlier works like The Sounds of Silence, influencing the harmonic complexity seen in subsequent folk-rock ensembles.[14] Paul Simon's emphasis on poetic precision and emotional depth provided a blueprint for singer-songwriters, prioritizing storytelling over simplistic protest anthems and enabling deeper causal explorations of personal and societal tensions.[21]The album's harmonic innovations, particularly in tracks like "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," where traditional melody interweaves with counterpoint anti-war commentary, inspired later acts emphasizing vocal layering, such as Crosby, Stills & Nash, whose debut drew from similar folk-rock precedents to craft lush, multi-part harmonies.[63] This approach preserved folk roots—evident in the adaptation of the centuries-old "Scarborough Fair" ballad—while adapting them to contemporary contexts, fostering a causal lineage where empirical folk authenticity grounded rock experimentation, though occasional overt social integrations risked diluting universal themes with era-specific idealism. Covers of "Scarborough Fair" by artists ranging from Celtic Woman to Vicky Leandros extended its cultural reach, embedding the herbs' symbolic refrain in broader media. [64]Culturally, the album's footprint amplified through media placements, notably "Scarborough Fair/Canticle" on the The Graduate soundtrack in 1968, which juxtaposed its ethereal folk with 1960s alienation, reinforcing Simon & Garfunkel's countercultural resonance without fully endorsing the decade's transient optimism.[65] Tracks like "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night" innovatively overlaid news broadcasts of social ills—Vietnam escalations and civil rights clashes—against "Silent Night," critiquing media detachment but highlighting how such didactic contrasts, while causally tied to 1966's upheavals, sometimes prioritized messaging over musical timelessness, contrasting purer folk traditions' enduring appeal. This duality underscores the album's legacy: advancing genre evolution through empirical innovation while occasionally reflecting idealism's limits.[21]
Reissues, remasters, and modern assessments
The album was first issued on compact disc in 1987 by Columbia Records, marking the transition to digital formats with standard audio quality derived from the original analog masters.[66] A remastered CD edition followed in 2001, incorporating enhanced equalization and noise reduction to improve clarity over the initial digital transfer, though it retained the core stereo mix without significant alterations.[67]In the 2010s, audiophile label Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab released specialized editions emphasizing fidelity to the 1966 production. Their numbered-edition 180g vinylLP, pressed at 33 RPM and mastered using half-speed techniques, expands dynamic range and reduces surface noise, allowing greater detail in vocal harmonies and acoustic elements like fingerpicked guitars.[68] A hybrid SACD variant, issued around 2018, employs DSD encoding for superior resolution, highlighting the album's layered arrangements—such as the contrapuntal vocals in "Scarborough Fair/Canticle"—with minimal compression artifacts compared to standard CDs.[69] These reissues prioritize the original Bob Johnston-produced mixes, avoiding heavy digital processing that could alter the intimate, folk-rock timbre.[70]Contemporary evaluations, including Pitchfork's 2017 ranking of 1960s albums, commend the record's studio-crafted pop accessibility and harmonic sophistication, positioning it as a precursor to the duo's more expansive works. Audiophile reviewers note that Mobile Fidelity's restorations empirically preserve the master tapes' spectral balance, with frequency response extending to 20 kHz and low distortion levels, though some observe the era's production limitations—like tape hiss in quieter passages—remain evident despite enhancements.[71] Digital streaming on platforms like Spotify has sustained catalog plays, contributing to ongoing revenue from remastered versions, though precise metrics for this title are aggregated within Simon & Garfunkel's broader discography exceeding 100 million units sold historically.[72]
Criticisms and reevaluations
Paul Simon later reflected on his early songwriting, including contributions to Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, as often "naive and pretentious," attributing it to an youthful attitude he would not endorse in later years.[73] This self-critique aligns with contemporary detractors who targeted specific tracks, such as "The Dangling Conversation," for perceived overwrought intellectualism and literary allusions that strained accessibility, with Art Garfunkel reportedly disliking the song for its pretentious tone.[74] Such elements contributed to views of the album as lyrically ambitious but uneven, blending polished originals with filler material amid rushed production timelines.[75]Reevaluations in later decades have tempered the album's countercultural reputation, portraying it more as refined commercial folk craft than a revolutionary statement amid 1960s upheaval. Critics note its heavy reliance on traditional adaptations, exemplified by the English ballad "Scarborough Fair" interwoven with Simon's original "Canticle" counterpoint, as prioritizing melodic heritage and studio polish over radical innovation or psychedelic experimentation.[21] This perspective highlights the duo's adherence to harmonious, acoustic structures—rooted in pre-1960sfolk traditions—as a conservative counterpoint to contemporaries' embrace of dissonance and social confrontation, underscoring craft over depth in an era favoring disruption.[76]
Track Listing
Original US edition
The original US edition of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, issued by Columbia Records as a vinyl LP (mono CL 2563, stereo CS 9363) in October 1966, consists of 12 tracks across two sides with the following order and durations.[2][47]Side one
"Scarborough Fair / Canticle" – 3:13[2]
"Patterns" – 2:45[2]
"Cloudy" – 2:13[2]
"Homeward Bound" – 2:32[2]
"The Big Bright Green Pleasure Machine" – 2:47[2]
"The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)" – 1:49[2]
Side two
"The Dangling Conversation" – 2:41[2]
"Flowers Never Bend With The Rainfall" – 2:15[2]
"A Simple Desultory Philippic (Or How I Was Robert McNamara'd Into Submission)" – 2:15[2]
The United Kingdom edition of Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, released in 1966 by CBS under catalog number SBPG 62860 (stereo), featured a deviation from the standard US track listing on some early pressings. Side A omitted "Homeward Bound" (track 4), resulting in only five tracks: "Scarborough Fair/Canticle," "Patterns," "Cloudy," "The Big Bright Green Pleasure Machine," and "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)."[77][78] This adjustment likely stemmed from "Homeward Bound" having been issued as a standalone single in the UK earlier in 1966, prompting manufacturers to exclude it to avoid redundancy, though later UK pressings reinstated the track to align with the US configuration.[77] Other international releases, such as those in Canada (CS 9363 stereo), Germany (S 62 825 stereo), and Australia (BP 233376 mono), generally adhered to the full 12-track US listing without substitutions.[2]Alternate versions primarily differ in audio mixing rather than content. The original mono edition (US catalog CL 2563, released October 1966) employed a centered mix emphasizing vocal and instrumental cohesion, often preferred by audiophiles for its balance over the stereo counterpart (CS 9363), which featured pronounced panning—such as vocals separated hard left and right—creating a wider but sometimes disjointed soundstage.[79] UK mono pressings (BPG 62860) mirrored this approach, while stereo variants like SBPG 62860 introduced the panned elements.[2] Promotional editions included US mono white-label LPs for radio play and later reissues with gold promo stamps, but these retained the standard tracklist and mixes without unique alterations.[80][81]
Paul Simon provided lead and backing vocals, as well as acoustic guitar, across the album's tracks.[82]Art Garfunkel contributed backing and lead vocals, notably on "For Emily, Whenever I May Find Her" and in layered harmonies for "Scarborough Fair/Canticle".[2]Session recordings drew from Los Angeles' Wrecking Crew and Nashville players. Hal Blaine played drums on multiple tracks, including "The 59th Street Bridge Song (Feelin' Groovy)".[83][84]Joe Osborn handled bass guitar on several selections, such as those requiring intricate lines in folk-rock arrangements.[84][85]Charlie McCoy contributed bass harmonica on "Papa Hobo" and guitar or harmonica on other cuts from Nashville sessions.[82][83]Joe South performed electric guitar specifically on "Flowers Never Bend with the Rainfall".[83]Carol Kaye provided bass guitar on select tracks.[85] These contributions, documented in session logs and later attributions rather than original liner notes, supported the duo's sparse core sound with professional augmentation.[82]
Production credits
Bob Johnston served as the producer for Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, overseeing the album's recording sessions conducted primarily in New York City studios during 1966.[3][1] Johnston, who had previously collaborated with the duo on Sounds of Silence, emphasized meticulous arrangements and acoustic clarity, contributing to the album's polished folk-rock sound through overdubbing and multi-tracking techniques.[2][86]Roy Halee acted as the primary recording engineer, handling the capture of the duo's intricate harmonies and instrumentation during the sessions.[3][20] Halee's work included innovative audio splicing for tracks like "7 O'Clock News/Silent Night," integrating news broadcasts with music, and he is credited with enhancing the album's stereo imaging and natural reverb effects achieved in Columbia's facilities.[87][88]The album's artwork featured cover photography by Bob Cato, depicting Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel amid floral elements, with design handled by Columbia Records staff to evoke the titular herbs' thematic symbolism.[2] Mastering occurred at Columbia's pressing plants, utilizing the label's 360-degree stereo process for the original LP release on October 24, 1966.[89]