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Sara S
08-13-2012, 06:26 AM
from delancyplace.com:

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In today's excerpt - New York City high schoolers Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel -
later among the most successful recording artists in history - get their start
as the singing duo Tom and Jerry:

"They'd been friends and competitors as long as anyone could recall. One day in
the fall of 1957, when they were both sixteen, they'd gone shopping together for
sweaters. Even though they were mere Queens high-school students, they'd actually
placed a song on the charts, 'Hey, Schoolgirl,' and needed to spruce up their wardrobes.
In the store, they began argu*ing: Simon wanted one type of sweater, Garfunkel another.
In the end, they couldn't agree on what to wear and wound up leaving with nothing.
A few hours later, they laughed about it, and the cycle began again.

"As children, they'd lived within three blocks of each other, in the mid*dle-class
section of Queens, New York, and went to the same elementary school, P.S. 164 in
Flushing. Simon had migrated from nearby Newark, New Jersey, where his father,
a bass player and bandleader named Louis Simon, had been born. The family - which
also included Louis' wife Belle, who taught school, and a younger son, Eddie - moved
to Kew Gardens Hills, a largely Jewish section of the borough. Garfunkel was al*ready
living there with his parents, Jack and Rose, and his two brothers, Jules and Jerry.
Simon had taken note of Garfunkel's singing during a school talent show. 'I saw
you on that stage and I thought, "That's how you get popular,"' Simon told him after
they'd become friends. Gar*funkel took note of Simon's sense of humor, and they
finally met during a sixth-grade production of Alice in Wonderland.

"From the start, rock and roll drew them together. Inheriting his fa*ther's love
of music, Simon began learning guitar and playing his own type of music. At a ninth-grade
dance, he and Garfunkel joined up to sing Big Joe Turner's recent hit 'Flip, Flop
and Fly' - 'I'm a Mississippi bullfrog, sittin' on a hollow stump,' went part of
its rollicking lyrics. By the time they were attending Forest Hills High School,
they were singing songs by the Crew Cuts and their heroes, the Everly Brothers.
Once, when they were trying to learn the Everlys' 'Hey Doll Baby' from memory, they
inadvertently came up with a song of their own, 'Hey, Schoolgirl,' in half an hour.

"While they were putting it on tape in a Manhattan studio, Sid Prosen, owner of
a local indie label with the presumptuous name of Big Records, overheard them. In
the immediate way in which the early rock and roll business worked, he offered to
make a record out of it on the spot. Prosen spoke with their parents, cut a deal,
and, two days later, shipped fifty thousand copies of 'Hey, Schoolgirl' to record
stores and jukeboxes. One obstacle remained to assimilating themselves into the
culture: their names. They rechristened themselves Tom and Jerry: Garfunkel was
now Tom Graph, a nod to his love of math and charting pop hits on graphs, while
Simon rechristened himself Jerry Landis.

"With its 'who-bop-alook-chi-bop' hook and its tale of a smitten teen who eventually
lands the girl, 'Hey, Schoolgirl' recalled the Everlys enough to peak at a respectable
number 49 on the charts. Before they knew it, Tom and Jerry were wearing white bucks
and singing the song on Dick Clark's American Bandstand around Thanksgiving 1956.
They were rock stars - but, it turned out, only for a moment. Tom and Jerry's second
single, the less confident 'Our Song,' recycled the 'Hey, School*girl' chords and
died quickly. A third single, 'That's My Story,' amounted to banal white doo-wop
and also withered. By the time they graduated from Forest Hills High School, their
career was finished."

Author: David Browne
Title: Fire and Rain
Publisher: Da Capo
Date: Copyright 2011 by David Brown
Pages: 31-32
Fire and Rain: The Beatles, Simon and Garfunkel, James Taylor, CSNY, and the Lost
Story of 1970
by David Browne by Da Capo Press