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Subject Topic: Paul Simon - "American Tune" Post ReplyPost New Topic
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Paul C
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Posted: 27 May 2009 at 1:35pm | IP Logged Quote Paul C

On my U.S. commercial 45, there is, in addition to the accoustic guitar, another instrument heard before Simon starts to sing. (I can't quite make out what the instrument is.) I purchased a download of the song from the Essential Paul Simon CD, and it does not have this additional instrument. I don't know if this is the version from the There Goes Rhymin' Simon LP.
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Hykker
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Posted: 27 May 2009 at 5:34pm | IP Logged Quote Hykker

I compared my commercial copy with my promo copy and there is what sounds like some sort of additional stringed instrument in the intro that's missing from the promo copy. The commercial 45 also sounds much more compressed.
The promo has a non-standard catalog # (AE7-1105) which is what Columbia often did when they'd release an album-only track for radio. Listed time on the promo is 3:40 vs 3:44 on the commercial copy. Matrix # on the promo is ZSS 161953-1B on the stereo side & ZSS 161952-1B on the mono side. I don't have the album to compare.

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Todd Ireland
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Posted: 28 May 2009 at 4:40pm | IP Logged Quote Todd Ireland

I just listened to "American Tune" on my copy of the Paul Simon 1964/1993 box set (Warner Brothers 45394) and I don't hear the additional stringed instrument reported to be on the commercial 45. Has this 45 version appeared anywhere on CD?
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Pat Downey
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Posted: 31 May 2009 at 10:40am | IP Logged Quote Pat Downey

The 45 version has not appeared anywhere in the U.S. on cd.
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Todd Ireland
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Posted: 31 May 2009 at 5:10pm | IP Logged Quote Todd Ireland

Thanks, Pat.
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eriejwg
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Posted: 07 June 2009 at 11:34am | IP Logged Quote eriejwg

Purchased a commercial 45 and ran off a dub last night. I think the instrument at the beginning is a steel guitar. Even the vocal sounds a bit different, as in another vocal take?

The 45 version is definitely superior to the LP.
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Yah Shure
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Posted: 07 June 2009 at 9:25pm | IP Logged Quote Yah Shure

Hykker wrote:
The promo has a non-standard catalog # (AE7-1105) which is what Columbia often did when they'd release an album-only track for radio.


The AE7-1105 promo-only 45 is actually a reissue that was timed to coincide with the American Bicentennial observance in 1976. One wouldn't know that by looking at the label, however, which only lists a (P)1973 date on it. The accompanying white-and-red picture sleeve featured a portion of the U.S. flag on the front side, and the song's lyrics on the back. At the bottom left corner on the back side is a "©1976 CBS,Inc. / (P)1973 CBS, Inc...." notation.

My copy is a vinyl Terre Haute CBS pressing. The Terre Haute plant was still pressing styrene-only 45s in 1973, and did not begin pressing DJ 45s on vinyl until about 1975.

The AE7 promo 45 series was also used for some more general, non-commercial purposes. We played "Where You Think You're Going," the 1972 Robert Lamm anti-dope public service announcement (AE7-1054) into the ground at my college station. It clocked in at a very awkward (for a PSA) seventy-three seconds.
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