THE EVERLY BROTHERS…Paul Simon

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The roots of the Everly Brothers are  very, very deep in the soil of American culture. First of all, you should know  that the Everly Brothers were child stars. They had a radio show with their  family, and their father, Ike, was an influential country guitar player, so he  attracted other significant musicians to the Everlys’ world — among them Merle  Travis and Chet Atkins, who was instrumental in getting the Everlys on the Grand  Ole Opry. Perhaps even more powerfully than Elvis Presley, the Everly Brothers  melded country with the emerging sound of Fifties rock & roll. They were  exposed to extraordinary country-roots music, and so they brought with them the  legacy of the great brother groups like the Delmore Brothers and the Blue Sky  Boys into the Fifties, where they mingled with the other early rock pioneers and  made history in the process.

The Everly Brothers’ impact exceeds even their fame. They were a big  influence on John Lennon and Paul McCartney — who called themselves the  Foreverly Brothers early on — and, of course, on Simon and Garfunkel. When we  were kids, Artie and I got our rock & roll chops from the Everlys. Later, as  Simon and Garfunkel, we put “Bye Bye Love” on Bridge Over Troubled  Water, and much later, Phil and Don both sang on the song “Graceland.”

Before the Everly Brothers joined Artie and me on the road in 2003, Phil and  Don had actually quietly retired three years earlier. They basically came out of  retirement for us. I said, “Phil, look, if you’re going to retire, you might as  well come out one more time and take a bow and let me at least say what it is  that you meant to us and to the culture.”

You know, the Everlys have a long history of knocking each other down, as  brothers can do. So in a certain sense, it was hilarious that the four of us  were doing this tour, given our collective histories of squabbling. And it’s  amazing, because they hadn’t seen each other in about three years. They met in  the parking lot before the first gig. They unpacked their guitars — those famous  black guitars — and they opened their mouths and started to sing. And after all  those years, it was still that sound I fell in love with as a kid. It was still  perfect.

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