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"Bridge Over Troubled Water" Lyrics

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When you're weary, feeling small
When tears are in your eyes
I will dry them all

Oh, I'm on your side, oh, when times get rough
And friends just can't be found
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down

When you're down and out
When you're on the street
When evening falls so hard
I will comfort you

I'll take your part
Oh, when darkness comes
And pain is all around
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will lay me down

Sail on Silvergirl
Sail on by
Your time has come to shine
All your dreams are on their way

See how they shine
Oh, if you need a friend
I'm sailing right behind
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will ease your mind
Like a bridge over troubled water
I will ease your mind
song info:
Verified yes
LanguageEnglish
Rank
Duration00:04:53
Charts
Copyright ©Universal Music Publishing Group, Capitol CMG Publishing
WriterPaul Simon
Lyrics licensed byLyricFind
AddedNovember 27th, 2005
Last updatedNovember 15th, 2023
About"Bridge over Troubled Water" is a song by the American folk duo Simon & Garfunkel, released in January 1970 as the second single from their fifth studio album, Bridge over Troubled Water (1970). It was composed by Paul Simon and produced by Simon & Garfunkel and Roy Halee.

"Bridge over Troubled Water" features lead vocals by Art Garfunkel and a piano accompaniment influenced by gospel music, with a "Wall of Sound"-style production. It was the last song recorded for the album, but the first completed. The instrumentation, provided by the Wrecking Crew, was recorded in California, while Simon and Garfunkel's vocals were recorded in New York. Simon felt Garfunkel should sing solo, an invitation Garfunkel initially declined. Session musician Larry Knechtel performs piano, with Joe Osborn playing bass guitar and Hal Blaine on drums.

The song won five awards at the 13th Annual Grammy Awards in 1971, including Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. It is Simon & Garfunkel's most successful single, and it is often considered their signature song. It topped the US Billboard Hot 100 chart for six weeks, and was the No. 1 song on the Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1970. It also hit number one in the United Kingdom, Canada, France and New Zealand. It reached the top five in eight other countries, eventually selling over six million copies worldwide. It became one of the most performed songs of the 20th century, covered by over 50 artists, including Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin and Johnny Cash. It is ranked number 66 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.


Paul Simon wrote this about providing comfort to a person in need. It started as a modest gospel hymn but became more dramatic as he put it together. Speaking in the documentary The Making of Bridge Over Troubled Water, Simon said, "I have no idea where it came from. It came all of the sudden. It was one of the most shocking moments in my songwriting career. I remember thinking, 'This is considerably better than I usually write."
Art Garfunkel sang this alone, although he thought Simon should have sung it. Said Simon, "Many times I'm sorry I didn't do it."

Simon often sang it at his solo shows; at the last concert of his 2018 farewell tour, he introduced it by saying, "I'm going to reclaim my lost child."
At first, Simon thought the opening lyrics were too simple: "When you're weary, feeling small. / When tears are in your eyes, I will dry them all." He later realized that it was this simplicity that helped give the song a universal appeal.
Simon wrote this song with just two verses, considering the song "a little hymn." Garfunkel and producer Roy Halee heard it as more epic, and convinced him to write a third verse, which Paul did in the studio (the "Sail on, Silvergirl part"). This was very unusual for Simon, as he usually took a long time writing his lyrics. Simon's "little hymn" got a grand production, and after hearing it, Paul thought it was too long, too slow and too orchestral to be a hit. Clive Davis at Columbia Records is the one who heard the commercial appeal of the song, and insisted they market it like crazy and use it as the album title.
This was one of the few songs to top the US and UK charts at the same time. It was #1 in the US for six weeks, #1 in the UK for three.
In 1971, this won five Grammy Awards: Song of the Year, Record of the Year, Best Contemporary Song, Best Engineered Record, and Best Arrangement Accompanying Vocalists. The album also won Album of the Year.
This is one of the most-covered songs ever. In the '70s, so many people sang a version that it became a bit of a joke, the punch line being that most renditions were terrible, as the song is very hard to sing with any competence. Years later, the Lynyrd Skynyrd song "Free Bird" reached a similar level of musical ubiquity.
Elvis Presley did a version of this song that helped win over many critics who claimed he was not a great vocalist. It appears on his 1970 album That's The Way It Is.

Paul Simon said this about the Elvis recording: "It was in his Las Vegas period and done with conventional thinking. He sang it well, but it would have been nice to hear him do it gospel because he did so many gospel albums and was a good white gospel singer. It would have been nice to hear him do it that way, to take it back - as opposed to the big ending; he seemed to end everything with a karate chop and an explosion. So he didn't really add anything to the song. It's not nearly as significant as the Aretha Franklin recording. It's just a pleasure for me that Elvis Presley recorded one of my songs before he died." >>
The production was modeled on Phil Spector's "Old Man River" by The Righteous Brothers. Spector is famous for his "Wall Of Sound" production technique, and when he did "Old Man River," he kept it mostly piano through most of the song but had it end with a flourish of instruments.
Simon wrote this song on guitar, and it took about two days to come up with the piano part, which was played by Larry Knechtel, who later joined the soft rock group Bread. Simon, Garfunkel, Knechtel and the album's producer Roy Halee worked together to transform it into a piano piece. Knechtel, who was best known as a bass player, had a background in gospel music and was able to come up with the gospel piano sound they were looking for.
The line "Sail on, silver girl" is often reputed to refer to a needle (meaning the song is about heroin) but it actually refers to Simon's girlfriend (and later wife) Peggy Harper who found a few gray hairs and was upset. The lyric was meant as a joke - Simon calling her "Silver Girl" because of her hair. >>
Around the time he wrote this, Simon had been listening to a lot of music by the gospel group The Swan Silvertones, which he says subconsciously influenced his decision to put gospel changes in the song. A Swan Silvertones song called "Oh Mary, Don't You Weep" contains the line "bridge over deep water," which may have seeped into Simon's subconscious as well. In 1973, Simon had the group's singer Claude Jeter sing on his UK hit "Take Me To The Mardi Gras."
Simon started writing this In 1969 at a summer house that he and Garfunkel rented on Blue Jay Way in Los Angeles (Garfunkel was in Mexico acting in the film Catch 22 at the time). It was the same house where George Harrison wrote The Beatles song "Blue Jay Way."
The string section was arranged by Ernie Freeman. After listening to Simon's demo, he made up the arrangements for the musicians, and wrote the song title as "Like A Pitcher of Water." Simon got a kick out of how Freeman didn't even bother listening to the words, and made a framed copy of one of the music sheets with Ernie's title.
The song was first broadcast on November 30, 1969 (two months before the album was issued) when it appeared on CBS in a Simon & Garfunkel documentary directed by the actor Charles Grodin, whom Garfunkel met working on the movie Catch-22. The special made a strong political statement, and its sponsor, AT&T, pulled out when they saw a screening. Aired with Alberto V05 as the new sponsor, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" played under scenes of John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. and their funeral footage.
Simon played a stark version of this at the 2001 "Tribute To Heroes" benefit telethon for the victims of the terrorist attacks on America. Other performers included Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Petty, and Mariah Carey. Almost 60 million people watched the show in the US. To put that in perspective, the Super Bowl draws about 80 million viewers.
In2003, this song found a new audience when Clay Aiken performed it on American Idol. The show was in its second season, and was a juggernaut in the ratings. Aiken finished second to Ruben Studdard, but the debut singles from both contestants were released on the same day. Aiken's single was a new song called "This Is The Night," which was released with "Bridge Over Troubled Water" as the flip side. The single debuted at #1 on the Hot 100, making Aiken the first artist to do so. It went on to sell over a million copies, and was the best-selling single of 2003.

On the chart, "This Is The Night" was designated as the A-side even though most fans bought it for the flip. So while Aiken made "Bridge Over Troubled Water" a million-seller, his version doesn't show up on the official chart tally. Studdard's single was similar in that "Flying Without Wings" was the chart single, but most fans bought it for his version of "Superstar," which came along with it. Studdard's single was #2 behind Aiken the debut week.
In 2008 it was reported that Paul Simon sued a musical clock company for using this song without permission. His lawyers claimed that Rhythm Watch Co Ltd and its subsidiary had used its tune on 40,000 clocks, making a profit of around $3.7 million.
American R&B singer Mary J. Blige and Italian opera star Andrea Bocelli performed this song as a duet during the 2010 Grammy telecast. Their performance was dedicated to the people of Haiti in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake that struck the country a month previously.

The duo's version peaked at #75 on the Hot 100 marking the fourth time the song had reached the singles chart. It followed Simon & Garfunkel's original version and covers by Aretha Franklin (#6, 1971) and Linda Clifford (#41 1979). The song charted a fifth time in 2013 after The Voice contestant Tessanne Chin performed it on the reality singing show. Her version peaked at #64 on the Hot 100.
Some of the top Los Angeles session players performed on this track: Joe Osborn on bass and Hal Blaine on drums. Blaine's drums were muted for most of the song, but recorded in an echo chamber for the last part of the song to get the crashing effects. Garfunkel's vocals were added last.
Before this song was released, Simon & Garfunkel performed it on a six-city tour in 1969 they embarked on with the session musicians who played on the album as their band. Art Garfunkel would introduce it as a new song, and by the end of each performance there would be rapturous applause. Recordings from this tour were eventually released on their Live 1969 album.
This was included on the 2001 Columbia Records benefit CD God Bless America. Proceeds from the disc went to the Twin Towers Fund.
Bridge Over Troubled Water was the last album Simon & Garfunkel released before they split up. It is the biggest selling ever for Columbia Records.
In 2010, the Songwriters Hall of Fame honored this song with its Towering Song Award. At the ceremony, Art Garfunkel said: "Well, here we are, years later, I'm still singing it from town to town, and it's completely alive and fresh to me. There is nothing dated, or any feeling of the past - I love doing it. Thank the Lord the feeling - the goose bumps - constantly checks in every time I do it."
In June 2017, a charity version was recorded by Artists For Grenville, a group comprising 50 well-known British vocalists and musicians. They were collected together by Simon Cowell to record a charity single to raise money for the families of the victims of the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017. The song immediately climbed to #1 on the UK singles chart.
The songwriter Dan Wilson wrote: "I might be in the minority, but personally I find Art Garfunkel's voice on 'Bridge' to be disconnected, cool and distant. He sounds so calm and stoned that he's barely touchable, just floating off into the ether. And it's genius. He's not trying to add emotion to the song or compel you to feel anything. He's just soaring on the melody. The song is doing the work. I think that makes the words even more deeply moving." (From the booklet accompanying Wilson's Re-Covered album.)
Aretha Franklin's version, a #1 R&B hit, won the Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. While most of her hits from the era featured Muscle Shoals musicians, this one brought in a different group of noted session players, including Billy Preston (organ), Chuck Rainey (electric bass), Cornell Dupree (guitar), Ray Lucas (drums) and King Curtis (tenor sax).

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