Hearts And Bones by Paul Simon - Songfacts

Hearts And Bones

Album: Hearts And Bones (1983)
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Songfacts®:

  • Simon wrote this about his relationship with the actress Carrie Fisher, whom he married a few months before the album was released. The nuptials were clearly on his mind:

    Two people were married
    The act was outrageous
    The bride was contagious


    Simon and Fisher each became wildly famous in their early 20s, he in the mid-'60s with Simon & Garfunkel, and she in the late '70s as Princess Leia (Fisher was born into stardom: she was but the daughter of Hollywood stars Debbie Reynolds and Eddie Fisher). Their union was passionate and tumultuous, as both were very strong-willed creative types. "Hearts And Bones" finds Simon putting this crazy love affair into song:

    Their hearts and their bones
    And they won't come undone


    The couple did come undone in 1984, but they later reconciled even after their divorce, and spent a few more years together. Other songs Simon wrote dealing with his relationship with Fisher include "Allergies" and "She Moves On." >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Mike - Swansea, MA
  • Paul Simon is Jewish, Carrie is half Jewish, hence the line, "One and a half wandering Jews." When asked if he made a conscious effort to put religious overtones in the song, Simon replied: "No, it wasn't conscious. In fact, I thought it was actually funny. One and one-half anything is funny." >>
    Suggestion credit:
    Neil - London, England
  • Simon holds this song in high esteem. Speaking with Bruce Pollock, in 1986, he compared it to one of his more famous compositions. "I wrote 'The Sound of Silence' when I was 21 and 'Hearts and Bones' is, I think, a better song. But 'Sounds of Silence' was a big hit and it's in the culture. When you talk about a popular art, as the writing gets more complex and more layered, it's harder to have a lot of people who really like it. It is easier to have a smaller group of people who are more intensely devoted to you. It's natural that this should happen in my development. I was a rock star at one point. I had many years of being a rock star. I don't want to be a rock star anymore."
  • For the Hearts And Bones album, Simon took a different approach to his songwriting. He explained in a 1990 interview with SongTalk magazine: "The language starts to get more interesting in Hearts and Bones. The imagery started to get a little interesting. What I was trying to learn to do was to be able to write vernacular speech and then intersperse it with enriched language. And then go back to vernacular. So the thing would go along smoothly and then some image would come out that was interesting and then it would go back to this very smooth, conversational thing. By the time I got to Graceland, I was trying to let that kind of enriched language flow naturally, so that you wouldn't really notice it as much. I think in Hearts and Bones you could feel it, that it was coming."
  • When Simon sings about how they "returned to their natural coasts," it's a reference to how he is from New York and Fisher from California.
  • Art Garfunkel sings on this track - you can hear him backing Simon in the middle of the song.

    The Hearts And Bones album started out as a Simon & Garfunkel project called Think Too Much, marking a reunion for the duo, who hadn't recorded an album since the immensely successful Bridge over Troubled Water in 1970. It ended up being a Simon solo album, and it was a disappointment, reaching just #35 in the US. Simon changed course for his next album, traveling to South Africa to gather material for Graceland (1986), which became one of the top albums of the decade. Simon & Garfunkel never did make another album.
  • The musicians on this track are:

    Simon - acoustic guitar
    Anthony Jackson - bass
    Steve Gadd - drums
    Richard Tee - Fender Rhodes piano
    Dean Parks - guitar
    Airto Moreira - percussion
    Michael Mainieri - vibraphone, marimba
  • Not long before her death in 2016, Carrie Fisher said of Simon in Rolling Stone, "I do like the songs he wrote about our relationship. Even when he's insulting me, I like it very much."

Comments: 6

  • Rick from Toronto, OnCarrie Fisher says in her one-woman show that this song is about the two of them along with "She Moves On" from Rhythm Of The Saints
  • Mikeymouse from New York, NyMaybe the best song ever !!! :)
    so much honesty and pain coursing through it, and so much awe and respect for love's awesome power.
  • Ron from Denver, CoSome great songs about a marriage and breakup (from his male view) are Tunnel of Love, Two Faces, and Brilliant Disguise from Bruce Springsteen's Tunnel of Love Album. He must have felt some intense guilt when he wrote these songs.
  • Scott from Columbus, OhNewsflash Clive! This song is certainly about marriage. If your a fan of Paul Simons music, I challenge you to describe what he did mean.
    Thier divorce was FINAL in 1984. The judicial system is by far a McDonalds drive thru (as it almost should be here in America).

    In reference to the song "Landslide" Written by Stevie Nicks, she had a vision of where her and Lindsey Buckinham's relationship was moving and wrote a song pretty much describing the downfall of that... and she did it well before they had actually broken ties (or the chains, as it were)

    This song describes more than just the initiation and loss of Carrie Fishers love, but also what he had hoped for.

    Toward the end of the divorce:
    "One and one-half wandering Jews
    Return to their natural courses
    To resume old acquaintances
    Step out occasionally
    And speculate who had been damaged the most
    Easy time will determine if these consolations
    Will be their reward
    The arc of a love affair
    WAITING TO BE RESTORED"

    This a beautiful song, as most of his Paul's songs are.



  • Clive from Llandudno, WalesAs this song was written in 1982 and released in 1983 - it can hardly be about Paul Simon's DIVORCE from Carrie Fisher as they didn't divorce until 1984. It is about their relationship at the point the song was written. It is not a marital song.
  • Sarah from Pensacola, FlThis is the best song ever about the hardships of marriage. "You take two bodies and you twirl them into one/ their hearts and their bones/ and they won't come undone." Even though this song is about divorce, I find something very reassuring in this line.
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