Stranger to Stranger
Stranger to Stranger is the thirteenth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Paul Simon, released on June 3, 2016, by Concord Records.[1] Produced by Simon alongside longtime collaborator Roy Halee, the record draws on experimental production techniques, including custom-built instruments and unconventional rhythms derived from global musical traditions such as flamenco and Afro-house.[2][3] The album's creation spanned several years, during which Simon refined its material to explore themes of impermanence, love, mortality, and societal disconnection through lyrical introspection and melodic invention.[4] Featuring contributions from diverse collaborators like an Italian techno producer and a flamenco ensemble, Stranger to Stranger showcases Simon's penchant for rhythmic complexity and sonic innovation, evoking comparisons to his landmark world-music fusion on Graceland.[3] Its tracks, such as the percussion-heavy "Wristband" and the meditative title song, blend folk-rock roots with avant-garde elements, resulting in a work praised for revitalizing Simon's artistry in his later years.[5] Upon release, Stranger to Stranger achieved commercial success, debuting at number three on the Billboard 200 with 68,000 equivalent album units in its first week—Simon's highest chart entry in over two decades—and topping the UK Albums Chart, his first number-one studio album there since 1990.[6][7] Critics lauded its ambition and freshness, with an aggregate score of 85 out of 100 on Metacritic, highlighting it as one of Simon's strongest post-Graceland efforts for its audacious textures and emotional depth.[8][5]Development
Background
Stranger to Stranger emerged from Paul Simon's determination to explore uncharted sonic territories following the 2011 release of So Beautiful or So What, an album praised for revitalizing his career through eclectic global rhythms and spiritual introspection after decades of established success.[9][10] At 74 years old during the album's production and June 3, 2016, launch, Simon articulated a compulsion to innovate amid advancing age, viewing music as a vital conduit for grappling with existential limits rather than succumbing to conventional late-career retrospection.[11][2] A pivotal personal episode in April 2014 involved a domestic altercation at home with wife Edie Brickell, resulting in mutual disorderly conduct charges after Simon's 911 call; the case was dropped in June 2014 following counseling, with the couple swiftly reconciling via a joint recording of the track "Like to Get to Know You Well."[12][13] This episode, amid broader contemplations of transience, underscored an intensified artistic resolve, as Simon later reflected on mortality's role in sharpening creative focus without dominating his output.[14] In the industry landscape, Simon opted for independent distributor Concord Records, diverging from prior major-label ties like Warner Bros., to afford greater autonomy in pursuing experimental visions.[15] Anchoring this shift was his renewed collaboration with veteran engineer Roy Halee, a partnership originating in the early 1960s Simon & Garfunkel audition demos and spanning over five decades of production alchemy.[16][17] Halee's archival expertise facilitated seamless integration of novel elements, bolstering Simon's late-period quest for reinvention.[2]Songwriting
Paul Simon approached songwriting for Stranger to Stranger through a methodical process of trial and error, generating and discarding hundreds of ideas over several years before settling on the final tracks. This iterative method, which he detailed in a 2016 interview, emphasized persistent experimentation without preconceived outcomes, allowing rhythms and sounds to guide lyrical development rather than vice versa.[18] Early pre-production involved rhythmic experiments drawn from non-Western traditions, such as a March 2013 session with Spanish flamenco musicians featuring hand-clapping, heel strikes on wood floors, and frame drums, which formed the foundational grooves for tracks including "The Werewolf" and "Wristband." Simon incorporated elements like the gopichand, a one-string Indian instrument whose twang—evoking a howl when processed—directly inspired the opening and title of "The Werewolf," demonstrating how sonic motifs preceded melodic and lyrical construction.[19][2] This phase avoided full production setups, focusing instead on raw demos to test melodic viability and rhythmic interplay, as seen in the slowed-down flamenco patterns adapted for "The Werewolf" using talking drums. Simon's process prioritized discarding non-cohesive fragments, refining viable elements through repeated playback and adjustment until they coalesced into complete songs.[19]Production
Recording
Recording for Stranger to Stranger primarily took place at Paul Simon's home studio in Connecticut, spanning several years with sessions beginning as early as 2011.[20][20] Simon collaborated closely with longtime engineer Roy Halee during these sessions, prioritizing live, organic rhythm sections captured in the room to foster natural interplay among musicians, rather than relying heavily on digital overdubs.[20] This approach shaped the album's foundational grooves, drawing from influences like flamenco hand-clapping and heel rhythms.[19] Key early sessions included a February 2013 recording of the guitar foundation for "Insomniac’s Lullaby" at Montclair State University in New Jersey, incorporating experimental microtonal instruments such as cloud chamber bowls and sonic canons originally designed by composer Harry Partch.[19] In March 2013, a dedicated flamenco ensemble session in New York City laid down percussion and rhythms—including cajón, frame drums, hand-clapping, and dancing heels on wood floors—for tracks like "The Riverbank," "The Werewolf," "Wristband," and the title song, establishing rhythmic premises that blended global traditions.[19] Simon also traveled to the Mississippi Delta to record with a fife-and-drum band, integrating raw, acoustic wind and percussion elements rooted in African American fife traditions.[20] Experimental demos during the process featured modular synthesizers for unconventional textures and African woodwinds to explore genre fusion, setting the sonic groundwork before fuller band integrations.[20] Additional location work involved meetings in Milan, Italy, with producer Clap! Clap! (Dario Zanotti), who contributed electronic rhythms remotely from Sardinia for songs including "The Werewolf," "Wristband," and "Street Angel."[19] "In a Parade" marked the final track recorded, completing the album's core captures by mid-decade.[19]Engineering and collaborators
Roy Halee, Paul Simon's longtime collaborator since the Simon & Garfunkel era, served as co-producer and lead mixer, shaping the album's intricate sonic layers through meticulous overdubbing and rhythmic enhancements that emphasized percussive depth and spatial echoes.[17][21] Halee's engineering expertise contributed to the record's "immaculately produced" quality, blending avant-garde experimentation with accessible clarity, as evidenced by the polished integration of unconventional elements like custom Harry Partch instruments and electronic beats.[22] Additional engineering support came from Andy Smith, who handled core tracking and refinements at studios including MSR and Looking Glass, ensuring fidelity in the album's global textures derived from sessions with Flamenco percussionists and Italian producer Clap! Clap! (Digi G'Alessio), whose electronic drum patterns added rhythmic propulsion to tracks like "The Werewolf."[21][23] These contributions differentiated the final mixes from raw recordings by prioritizing causal sonic balance—foregrounding percussion and harmonics to evoke a sense of otherworldly immersion without sacrificing listenability.[22] Mastering by Greg Calbi at Sterling Sound finalized the album's dynamic range in early 2016, preserving the avant-garde edges while achieving commercial polish for its June 3 release.[24] Halee's oversight in mixing unified these elements, drawing on decades of empirical refinement to counterbalance experimental risks with structural coherence.[17]Musical Style
Genre fusion and experimentation
Stranger to Stranger represents a bold synthesis of Paul Simon's folk-rock foundations with electronic percussion, African rhythmic traditions, and avant-garde sound design, yielding a soundscape that defies conventional categorization. Drawing on South African vocal harmonies reminiscent of Simon's Graceland era, the album integrates polyrhythmic patterns from funk, samba, flamenco, and salsa, layered over jittery electronic beats as heard in tracks like "The Werewolf."[20][5] This fusion extends to experimental timbres derived from Harry Partch's microtonal instruments, such as the chromelodeon and zoomoozophone, which introduce tonal ambiguities and "strange rhythmic kinks" that disrupt expected resolutions.[5] The album's rhythms eschew steady pulses for "unsettled" propulsion, achieved through unconventional tools like the diddly bow—a single-stringed instrument providing raw twang—and woodwinds including clarinet and bass clarinet, which drive percussive motifs rather than melodic lines.[20][25] Ambient found sounds and processed vocal samples further contribute to a "junkyard’s worth of barely identifiable sounds," evoking a sense of perpetual motion amid disorientation.[5] Structurally, songs depart from linear progression toward fragmented, non-narrative forms, unfolding in "shards and mumbled asides" with "oddly unsettling repeated phrases" that prioritize rhythmic tension over resolution.[26] This opacity mirrors West African folksong influences in tracks like "Cool Papa Bell," where improvisational energy and raw arrangements foster an open-ended, exploratory ethos.[5]Instrumentation and production techniques
The album's rhythmic foundation relies heavily on layered percussion, including flamenco hand-claps, frame drums, and cajón, which generate propulsive, danceable grooves by mimicking organic ensemble interplay rather than quantized digital programming. In "Wristband," these elements—combined with reused drum tracks for continuity—create a looping, insistent pulse that underscores the track's thematic urgency, while avoiding synthetic uniformity through live session captures.[19] Echo effects, achieved via overtones from bells, percussion strikes, and sampled resonances, further amplify spatial depth and forward momentum, as in "The Werewolf," where they evoke a haunting, elastic quality tied to the instrument's timbral choices.[2][20] Non-Western instruments like the gopichand—a single-string Indian drone device producing twangy, modulated tones—are fused with electronic components, such as synth loops and stuttering beats programmed via custom apps, to yield hybrid textures that resist polished pop aesthetics.[19][20] This integration, via remote overdubs from collaborators like Clap! Clap!, layers frame drums' resonant slaps with digital delays and oscillators, preserving raw acoustic edges while enabling microtonal deviations from standard tuning.[19] Tuned percussion akin to Italian "singing idols" in "Wristband" adds idiomatic vibrancy, contributing to an unsettled sonority through deliberate timbral clashes.[20] Simon's production, alongside engineer Roy Halee, favors analog-recorded warmth from live flamenco ensembles and acoustic sources to ground digital innovations, such as precise splicing unavailable in tape-era workflows, fostering a "jokey and unsettled" character via exploratory imbalances.[2] Microtonal instruments from Harry Partch's arsenal, including the chromelodeon, introduce just-intonation scales that disrupt conventional harmony, their metallic overtones captured in studio sessions to evoke philosophical disorientation without digital smoothing.[19] This causal interplay of organic resonance and electronic intervention yields the album's distinctive, non-linear auditory profile.[27]Themes and Lyrics
Philosophical and personal motifs
The lyrics of Stranger to Stranger recurrently explore mortality through a lens of quiet acceptance rather than overt dread, most explicitly in the closing track "Insomniac's Lullaby," where Simon depicts the persistence of wakefulness amid nocturnal sounds and fleeting thoughts, culminating in the realization that "we'll eventually all fall asleep."[2] This portrayal draws from observations of insomnia's mundane disruptions—such as distant traffic or internal rumination—offering a form of hopeful realism grounded in the inevitability of rest as a metaphor for life's end.[2] Simon has described mortality as a peripheral rather than dominant subject, noting its subtle emergence only at the album's conclusion to signify a "big sleep" without emphasizing fear.[2][14] Personal motifs surface in reflections on relational estrangement and renewal, as in the title track, which contemplates encounters with a former partner as "stranger to stranger," questioning whether mutual rediscovery could reignite affection through "words and melody."[28] This draws from Simon's broader inquiries into love's contingencies, presented as observational rather than confessional autobiography, avoiding idealization of past bonds.[4] Similarly, tracks like "Werewolf" evoke personal restlessness and the psychological toll of habitual behaviors, using metaphor to convey the "cost of acting the way we've been acting," interpreted by Simon as a reckoning with environmental or existential consequences rather than literal monstrosity.[2] Critiques of modern alienation appear through grounded depictions of societal fractures, such as economic inequality in "Wristband," where a performer's exclusion from his own venue symbolizes broader barriers between privileged insiders and outsiders lacking access symbols like the titular band.[4] Simon frames this as derived from real-life disparities observed in concert logistics and class dynamics, extending to meditations on brain chemistry as a mechanistic explanation for human disconnection amid technological and social shifts.[4][14] These elements prioritize empirical patterns of isolation—rooted in personal encounters—over ideological prescriptions, emphasizing causal links between individual habits and collective malaise.[2]Lyrical structure and influences
Paul Simon's lyrics on Stranger to Stranger eschew traditional linear narratives in favor of fragmented, metaphorical structures that blend personal introspection with broader philosophical inquiries, reflecting an experimental evolution from his folk-rock roots. Rather than declarative storytelling, Simon employs witty wordplay and symbolic shards—such as surreal imagery in "The Werewolf," where ecological and political metaphors converge non-sequentially to evoke human folly—to create layered, associative meanings that prioritize ambiguity over resolution. This approach draws from his early influences in New York doo-wop and folk traditions but twists them into disjointed vignettes, as Simon described writing initial tracks to uncover organic directions rather than imposing preconceived arcs.[2] Influences on the album's lyricism span intellectual and cultural domains, including baseball lore, neuroscience, and spirituality, which Simon integrated as oblique references rather than central theses. In "Cool Papa Bell," he invokes pre-integration Negro Leagues figures like the titular speedster, inspired by a decades-old museum visit and painting, using the metaphor to probe endurance and obscurity without chronological fidelity. Neuroscience appears through explorations of brain chemistry and the "thin line between visionary and madness," as in "Insomniac’s Lullaby," where schizophrenia motifs intersect with personal insomnia, underscoring Simon's interest in cognitive fragmentation over empirical exposition. Spirituality emerges in contemplative shards pondering death and transcendence, informed by Simon's sound-led process where lyrical motifs arise post-musical experimentation, yielding a mosaic of economic inequality, love, and existential humor rather than unified doctrine.[4][2]Release and Promotion
Announcement and marketing
Paul Simon announced Stranger to Stranger, his thirteenth solo studio album, on April 7, 2016, through a detailed feature in Rolling Stone that detailed its five-year development and experimental approach.[20] The announcement coincided with the online premiere of the lead single "Wristband", which showcased Simon's signature blend of rhythmic complexity and introspective lyrics, reinforcing his reputation for musical restlessness and innovation across genres.[20][29] Pre-orders opened immediately via digital platforms like iTunes and Amazon, offering formats including the standard 11-track edition, a 16-track deluxe version with bonus material, and a 180-gram vinyl pressing aimed at collectors valuing high-fidelity playback.[29][30] To generate buzz, a second track, "Cool Papa Bell", was released for streaming on April 28, 2016, allowing early exposure to the album's percussive and improvisational elements.[31] These previews targeted Simon's core audience of mature listeners drawn to substantive, boundary-pushing songcraft rather than mainstream pop trends.[29] The rollout emphasized the album's vital textures and collaborations—such as with electronic producer Clap! Clap! and microtonal instruments from Harry Partch—positioning it as a culmination of Simon's lifelong pursuit of sonic novelty without compromising lyrical depth.[29] This strategy leveraged Simon's established legacy to cultivate anticipation among fans appreciative of his refusal to repeat past formulas.[20]Singles and media appearances
"Wristband" served as the lead single from Stranger to Stranger, released digitally on April 7, 2016, coinciding with the album's official announcement.[32] [20] The track featured a promotional static image video that underscored its percussive and rhythmic drive, drawing from Simon's experimental approach with unconventional beats.[33] No additional commercial singles were issued prior to the album's June 3 release, with promotion emphasizing digital streaming and album previews over standalone physical releases, consistent with the project's focus on artistic depth for dedicated listeners.[34] Simon engaged in several media interviews to generate pre-release interest, including a May 19, 2016, appearance on NPR's All Songs Considered, where he described the album's development as involving extensive trial and error in rhythm and production.[35] [18] A June 2 Vox interview further detailed the record's unpredictable structures, such as the opener "The Werewolf," amplifying anticipation among fans of Simon's genre explorations.[2] These outlets, known for in-depth music coverage, helped sustain buzz without relying on mainstream television spots, aligning with the album's niche rather than pop-oriented rollout.[36]Touring
Live performances
Paul Simon debuted tracks from Stranger to Stranger during the initial dates of the supporting tour, which launched on April 29, 2016, at the New Orleans Jazz Fest, followed by festival and theater appearances including the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on May 14.[30] These early shows, in venues ranging from festivals to mid-sized auditoriums, allowed testing of the album's experimental rhythms and instrumentation before larger arenas. The album's complex production, featuring looped percussion, mbira, and unconventional elements like clock samples, presented adaptation challenges for live execution, often simplified through the touring band's real-time acoustic-electric arrangements to maintain rhythmic drive without full studio layering.[2] Reviews noted the band's effective translation of these hybrids, though some studio intricacies yielded to live immediacy.[37] At 74 years old, Simon modified his vocal approach in these performances, employing altered phrasing and controlled dynamics to navigate age-related range limitations, particularly on higher notes, prioritizing interpretive depth over youthful agility.[38] This adjustment preserved the songs' emotional resonance amid the tour's demanding schedule.[8]Setlist integration
Tracks from Stranger to Stranger, notably "The Werewolf" and "Wristband", integrated seamlessly into Paul Simon's live setlists during the 2016 tour of the same name, typically appearing mid-set after classics like "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" and before encores featuring "You Can Call Me Al", allowing the album's rhythmic experimentation to bridge older material with fresh compositions.[39] This placement emphasized the tracks' percussive drive, with "The Werewolf" performed in over 90% of the tour's 61 dates, evolving from studio oddity to a high-energy staple that maintained audience momentum.[40] Through 2017-2018 tours, such as the European leg and North American dates, these songs retained prominence, comprising up to five album cuts per show and blending with Simon & Garfunkel-era hits to showcase late-career innovation without alienating fans accustomed to hits; for instance, "Stranger to Stranger" often followed "Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes", highlighting lyrical introspection amid groove-heavy arrangements.[41] By his 2023 retirement concerts at the Beacon Theatre, selections like "The Werewolf" reemerged selectively, underscoring the album's sustained vitality in a repertoire dominated by career-spanning fare, with performances drawing on the tracks' intricate rhythms to energize smaller-venue intimacy.[42] Live recordings and fan-documented audio from these periods reveal strong audience reception to the rhythmic elements, particularly in "The Werewolf"'s syncopated beats and "Wristband"'s urgent pulse, which elicited sustained applause and sing-alongs despite the material's novelty, as evidenced by bootleg captures from 2016 Boston and 2018 shows where crowd energy peaked during these segments.[43] This integration affirmed the album's adaptability, sustaining its role in setlists through Simon's touring cessation announcement in June 2023.[41]Reception
Critical acclaim
Stranger to Stranger garnered widespread critical praise upon its release on June 3, 2016, with reviewers highlighting its innovative production, rhythmic complexity, and Simon's enduring melodic craft. Aggregated review scores reflected this enthusiasm; on Metacritic, the album earned an 85 out of 100 based on 28 reviews, denoting "universal acclaim."[44] Critics frequently commended the album's experimental fusion of electronic elements, African influences, and percussive grooves, which avoided nostalgic retreads in favor of fresh sonic territory. Pitchfork's Mike Powell described it as "arguably the best album of Paul Simon's uneven post-Graceland solo career," praising how its "reliably melodic songwriting is buoyed by his most inventive production in years."[5] Publications emphasized the record's adventurous spirit and intellectual wit. The Guardian's Alexis Petridis awarded five stars, calling it "as rewarding as anything he's done" for its creaky slide guitars, distant train whistles, and street-corner harmonies that propelled tracks like "Wristband" into uncharted rhythmic landscapes.[45] Similarly, Rolling Stone contributor Will Hermes lauded its "inviting, immaculately produced, jokey and unsettled" qualities, positioning it among Simon's most dynamically realized works through eccentric fusions of Afropop, doo-wop, and modern electronica. These elements underscored a consensus on the album's rhythmic potency and philosophical undertones, with Drowned in Sound noting its peak impact in blending "complex, danceable groove" with "salient philosophical offering."[46]Criticisms and dissenting views
Certain reviewers contended that Stranger to Stranger represented a step down from Paul Simon's peak achievements, primarily due to its perceived opacity and diminished emphasis on infectious hooks. Music Enthusiast's assessment described the record as "not great by Simon standards," highlighting a lack of compelling tracks that would compel repeated listens and an overfamiliarity in its experimentation, where "nothing [was] compelling me to feel that I need to run out and buy it" after multiple plays.[47] This critique attributed the shortfall to Simon's failure to sufficiently innovate beyond prior patterns, resulting in "not enough of ’em [good songs]" to sustain broad engagement.[47] The album's dense production and rhythmic complexity were further faulted for obscuring lyrical and melodic clarity, potentially distancing casual audiences who favor Simon's historically more direct songcraft. One mixed appraisal characterized the effort as "more of a mixed bag," implying uneven cohesion amid its ambitious textures.[44] Similarly, the production was seen as mismatched, with arrangements that "bur the songs" under excessive layering, reducing emotional immediacy and accessibility.[47] Lyrical elements drew specific dissent for instances of glibness and tonal missteps, such as in "Wristband," which a Slate analysis deemed a "mess" for its abrupt pivot from personal anecdote to strained social commentary, evincing a pattern of condescension toward everyday figures.[48] The title track itself was labeled "unfortunately undynamic," underscoring how stylistic risks sometimes yielded diminished impact.[48] Discussions of the album's multicultural fusions revived faint echoes of appropriation critiques tied to Simon's Graceland era, including concerns over uneven credit-sharing in global collaborations; yet, these were empirically vitiated by the project's documented partnerships with diverse contributors—such as flamenco guitarist Vincent Nguini and Indian percussionist tabla player Zakir Hussain—and its uncontested international reception, which evidenced reciprocal artistic exchange rather than exploitation.[48]Accolades
Stranger to Stranger garnered significant critical recognition, earning a Metacritic aggregate score of 85 out of 100 from 32 reviews, denoting "universal acclaim" among professional critics for its innovative production and songcraft.[44] The album ranked No. 12 on Rolling Stone's list of the 50 best albums of 2016, praised for its experimental sound design and thematic depth.[49] It featured prominently in year-end compilations, including The Guardian's aggregation of staff picks for top albums of 2016, reflecting its standing as a highlight in a competitive field of releases.[50]Commercial Performance
Chart achievements
"Stranger to Stranger" debuted at number three on the US Billboard 200 chart in the issue dated June 11, 2016, marking Paul Simon's highest-charting solo studio album since 1986's Graceland and his seventh top-ten entry on the tally as a solo artist.[51] The album spent a total of six weeks on the Billboard 200.[52] In the United Kingdom, it reached number one on the Official UK Albums Chart dated June 10, 2016—Simon's first studio album to top the ranking in 26 years—and accumulated 13 weeks on the chart.[53] The release also performed solidly across Europe, peaking at number two on the Belgian Albums Chart with five weeks charted, and number 14 on Germany's Official German Albums Chart.[54][55] These positions underscored sustained interest from Simon's established audience amid the streaming-influenced chart environment of the mid-2010s, where traditional album sales contributed to initial debuts but longevity reflected broader consumption patterns.[56]| Chart | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 3 | 6 |
| UK Albums Chart | 1 | 13 |
| Belgian Albums Chart | 2 | 5 |
| German Albums Chart | 14 | Unknown |
Sales and certifications
Stranger to Stranger debuted with 68,000 album-equivalent units in the United States, including 67,000 in pure album sales, according to data from Nielsen Music reported by the album's label.[6] This opening week performance represented Paul Simon's strongest debut for a solo studio album, underscoring sustained interest among core fans despite shifts toward streaming consumption.[51] Long-term sales data beyond the initial period are not publicly detailed by major tracking services, reflecting the industry's transition where equivalent units incorporate digital streams and track sales alongside physical copies to gauge overall commercial viability.Track Listing and Personnel
Tracks
The standard edition of Stranger to Stranger comprises 11 tracks with a total runtime of 37 minutes.[57][58] The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Werewolf | 3:25 |
| 2 | Wristband | 3:17 |
| 3 | The Clock | 1:02 |
| 4 | Street Angel | 2:11 |
| 5 | Stranger to Stranger | 4:35 |
| 6 | In a Parade | 2:21 |
| 7 | Proof | 3:42 |
| 8 | Cool Papa Bell | 4:29 |
| 9 | Insane | 4:46 |
| 10 | Wolverine | 3:18 |
| 11 | In the Garden of Edie | 3:14 |