Carly Simon
Carly Simon was born in The Bronx, New York City, New York, United States on June 25th, 1945 and is the Pop Singer. At the age of 79, Carly Simon biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, movies, and networth are available.
At 79 years old, Carly Simon has this physical status:
Carly Elisabeth Simon (born June 25, 1945) is an American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and children's author.
With a string of hit songs in the 1970s, she came to prominence in the 1970s; her 13 Top 40 U.S. hits include "Anticipation" (No. 2).
(No. 13) "You Belong To Me" (No.
6), "Coming Around Again" (No.
"Jesse," one of her four Gold-certified singles (No. 18), No. 18).
(No. 11) "Mockingbird" - "Mockingbird" (No.
"You're So Vain," James Taylor, a duet), "You're So Vain" (No. 5)
1) No. 1; and "Nobody Does It Better" (No.
2). The Spy Who Loved Me, a 1977 James Bond film. With her 1971 self-titled debut album Carly Simon, which earned her the Grammy Award for Best New Artist and spawned her first Top Ten songs "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," she found a lot of success as a solo artist.
She rose to international prominence with her third album, No Secrets, which sat firmly at No. 1. "You're So Vain" was a hit on the Billboard 200 for five weeks, earning three Grammy nominations, including Year of the Year and Song of the Year.
Simon was the first artist to win a Grammy Award, an Academy Award, and a Golden Globe Award for a song written and performed entirely by a single artist over the course of her career, as well as two Grammy Awards, ranging from 14 nominations to 28 Billboard Adult Contemporary charting singles.
"She was one of the early 1970s' most influential singer-songwriters," AllMusic dubbed her "one of the quintessential singer-songwriters of the 1970s."
She has a contralto vocal range, and has cited Odetta as a source of significant authority.
In 1994, she was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
She received the Boston Music Awards Lifetime Achievement Award and a Berklee College of Music Honorary Doctor of Music Degree in 1995 and 1998, respectively.
She was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for "You're So Vain" in 2004 and was given the ASCAP Founders Award in 2012. Simon was previously married to singer-songwriter James Taylor.
Sally Taylor and Ben Taylor, both musicians, have two children together.
Early life
Simon was born in New York City, either 1943 or 1945. Richard L. Simon, her father, was co-founder of Simon & Schuster, and a classical pianist who performed Chopin and Beethoven at home. Andrea (née Heinemann), a civil rights campaigner and singer, is her mother. Her father was from a German-Jewish family, but her mother was Catholic. Friedrich Heinemann, her maternal grandmother, was of German descent, and her maternal grandmother, Ofelia Oliete, was born in Cuba and was a freed slave descendant of Pardo. Ofelia was primarily raised in England by nuns until the age of 16. Simon's DNA was tested on a 2017 episode of PBS' Finding Your Roots, which was most likely from her maternal grandmother.
Simon was born in the Riverdale neighborhood of the Bronx and had two older sisters, Joanna and Lucy, as well as a younger brother, Peter, who died of cancer. According to a book of photography Peter published in the late 1990s, they were raised as nominal Roman Catholics. Simon has admitted that a family friend in his teens sexually assaulted her when she was seven years old. "It was heinous," she proclaimed, adding, "It changed my view of sex for a long time." When Simon was eight years old, she began stuttering heavily. A psychiatrist attempted unsuccessfully to resolve her stuttering. Simon, on the other hand, went back to singing and songwriting. "I was so tense discussing that I did the right thing, which is to write songs, because I could sing without stammering as well as stammerers." Simon attended Riverdale Country School and spent at least four semesters at Sarah Lawrence College. She also attended Juilliard School of Music.
Personal life
Simon was briefly introduced to British writer William Donaldson in the 1960s. Donaldson described her as "the answer to any sane man's prayers"; she was funny, swift, erotic, and extravagantly gifted."
On November 3, 1972, Simon married fellow singer-songwriter James Taylor. They had two children, Sarah "Sally" Maria Taylor (born January 7, 1974) and Benjamin "Ben" Simon Taylor (born January 22, 1977), both of whom are musicians and political activists. In 1983, Simon and Taylor divorced. Simon revealed in June 2004 that she no longer talks to her ex-husband. "Our friendship is non-existent," I would say. It's not the way I like it." In an interview, Simon reiterated that she and Taylor had not spoken in decades, adding, "I still want to heal him, but I also want to make him all right." "I love him so much."
Russ Kunkel, an American singer, was engaged to her from 1985 to 1986. During Simon's album Spoiled Girl, the two became intimately involved.
On December 23, 1987, Simon married James Hart, a writer, poet, and businessman. In 2007, the couple divorced.
Between 1997 and 1998, Simon underwent breast cancer mastectomy, chemotherapy, and reconstructive surgery for breast cancer. A lump had existed in her breast for many years, but her doctors had advised against surgery. "You know what, I'd rather see it in a jar than in your breast," Simon later explained. She also expressed her dissatisfaction with herself" that she did not insist on getting it out sooner. Simon's surgery occurred at the same time as the death of her long-time friend Linda McCartney, who had also battled with breast cancer. McCartney's death was described by Simon as having "crushed" her. In addition, Simon has suffered osteopenia since the age of 61, which has resulted in her avoidance of high-heeled shoes in order to avoid discomfort.
Simon has been close to James Taylor's younger brother, Livingston Taylor, for more than 40 years. "I love Carly and Carly loves me," Livingston said. "She's a zealous advocate and promoter of my music." They've performed as a group on certain songs, such as "Best of Friends," which was released in Livingston's 2006 album "They Are The Beginning of Friends," and others earlier in their careers.
Simon revealed in May 2010 that she had been one of the many celebrities to have fallen victim to financial advisor Kenneth I. Starr, whose Ponzi scheme lured her into "investing" millions of dollars with him, which she lost.
Simon was reportedly dating Richard Koehler, a surgeon who specialized in minimally invasive laparoscopy, in 2008. Both were reported to have been dating as early as 2006. According to Martha's Vineyard, the two were seen together in 2015.
Simon gave the rights to "You're So Vain" in October 2016 for use in an anti-Donald Trump political attack. Simon had long wanted to keep her political convictions private, and he had never intended that "You're So Vain" be used for political purposes. As a reason for changing Simon, he cited the recently released, now famous, Access Hollywood tape, in which Trump can be heard raving on a hot mic about his sexual harassment against married women, which commentators and attorneys have described as sexual assault. Simon also voiced opposition to Trump's candidacy in the forthcoming 2016 presidential election. Simon cited the tape as the reason for her first attempt in her career to take a public stand.
Simon lost both of her sisters to cancer within a day of each other in October 2022. Joanna Simon died of thyroid cancer on October 19, 2022, and Lucy Simon died the following day from metastatic breast cancer. Peter Simon, her brother, died of lung cancer on November 18, 2018.
Career
Simon began singing soprano and Carly contralto with her sister Lucy Simon as the Simon Sisters. They made their television debut on Hootenanny on April 27, 1963, signing to Kapp Records. They released two albums; the first being Meet the Simon Sisters (1964), which resulted in a minor hit for the duo with the single "Winkin', Blinkin' and Nod," a children's poem that Lucy had set to music. Cuddlebug (1966), their second album, was released shortly after. Winkin', Blinkin', and Nod: The Kapp Recordings, a remastered limited edition single-disc set-up, was released on CD in 2006. The Simon Sisters Sing the Lobster Quadrille and Other Songs for Children, 1969 (which was released on CD in 2008 under the heading Carly & Lucy Simon Sing Songs for Children). Simon began collaborating with experimental New York rockers Elephant's Memory for about six months.
In 1970, Jac Holzman was signed to Elektra Records, a record that was not recognized. On February 9, 1971, she unveiled her self-titled debut album, and it peaked at No. 59. On the Billboard 200, 30 people were ranked 30. The album's breakout hit, "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be," debuted at No. 1 on the charts, topping out at No. 6: "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" by the artist. Simon was no. ten on the Billboard Pop 100 (Hot 100) chart, and she received a nomination for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance at the 14th Annual Grammy Awards, where she also received Best New Artist. Timothy Crouse's review of Rolling Stone's album "Carly's voice perfectly matches her content" and her "...superbly controlled voice is complemented by deft arrangements."
Anticipation, her second album, came in November of the same year. The album debuted at No. 1 in comparison to its predecessor. At the 15th Annual Grammy Awards, Simon was recognized for his Best Female Pop Vocal Performance. Stephen Davis wrote a glowing review of the album, calling the title track "a spirited analysis of the dynamics involved in a burgeoning love affair in which no one has any idea what's going to happen or what's going to happen." He also singled out "Our First Day Together"; calling it "a quiet song, lovely and enigmatic with a hint of Joni Mitchell's minor chord influence.
The album's lead single, also titled "Anticipation," became a big success, peaking at No. 1 on the charts. No. 3 at Easy Listening Radio and No. 13 on Billboard's Pop singles chart. It later became a hit in popular culture for its use in a variety of industries, as well as supplying the H. J. Heinz Company's ketchup. While Simon waited for Cat Stevens to pick her up for a date, the single was written in 15 minutes. Soon after Simon opened for Stevens at Troubadour in Los Angeles, the pair became intimate shortly after. The next single release, "Legend in Your Own Time," had a less popular hit on the pop singles chart, peaking at No. 58. 50. It was a huge success on the Easy Listening chart, barely cracking the top ten at No. 10. 11. In 1972, Kris Kristofferson's closing song, "I've Got to Have You," was released as a single in Australia and climbed to the top of the Australian charts.
Simon appeared in Milo's Forman film Taking Off, performing "Long Term Physical Effects," which was also included on the film's soundtrack album.
Simon had the best success of her career (1972–73) with "You're So Vain." The single debuted at No. 1. 1 on the United States. Pop and Adult Contemporary charts, as well as an entire million copies in the United States alone, have sold over a million copies in the United States. It was one of the decade's biggest hits and propelled Simon's debut album, No Secrets, to No. 1. It remained at number 1 on the Billboard 200 chart for five weeks in a row. The album earned Gold status that year, and by the album's 25th anniversary in 1997, it had been designated Platinum. At the 16th Annual Grammy Awards, "You're So Vain" received awards for Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Female Vocal Performance, Female, where No Secrets also received a nomination for Best Engineered Recording. In addition, it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2004 and was ranked No. 58. On the Billboard Hot 100's list of the top 100 hits from the first 50 years, from August 1958 to July 2008, 72 performers were listed as 72 in 2008. The UK Official Charts Company honoured it on August 23, 2014, as the UK Official Charts Company named it the 'ultimate song of the 1970s.'
With the lyric "You're so vain/I bet this song is about you," the subject of the "You're So Vain" song itself became one of the most popular music, with the lyric "You're so vain/I bet this song is about you." Simon hasn't revealed the name of the subject for more than 40 years. With most media coverage, Mick Jagger, who sings backup vocals on the album, and Warren Beatty, she hinted that it might be a blend of several people. Simon speculated on a number of talk shows and publications over the years, but auctioned the details to the winner of a charity function worth US$50,000 on August 5, 2003, with the caveat that the winner, television executive Dick Ebersol, did not disclose it. "I have announced that Warren is the second verse is about him," Simon, who is promoting her about-to-be-published book, said in November 2015, he said, "Warren thinks the whole thing is about him."
"The Right Thing to Do" (a love song starring Simon's then husband James Taylor) was another big hit in 1973, peaking at No. 2nd. Adult Contemporary chart number 4 and No. On the Pop Chart, 17th on the Pop chart. "We Have No Secrets" on the single's B-side made the subject "difficulty of being happy"; Rolling Stone writer Stephen Holden characterized "We Have No Secrets" as exemplifying the No Secrets' theme "difficulty of being happy" by "painfully" expressing "the awareness that emotion and rationalization are often irreconcilable." "Life Be My New Horizon" and "Pretty Woman" were two of Lee Clayton's albums on Lee Clayton's album "New York Suite 409" and on brother-in-law Livingston Taylor's album Over the Rainbow.
Simon followed the hugely popular No Secrets album with Hotcakes in 1974, which became a instant hit. It reached No. 134. Billboard 200 stayed on the chart for nearly eight months before going Gold. Two top-ten singles were released: "Mockingbird," a duet with James Taylor that peaked at No. 4 in the Top ten; "Mockingbird" was the highest ten singles. "Haven't Got Time for the Pain," which debuts at No. 5 on Billboard's Pop Singles chart, and "Haven't Got Time for the Pain." 2 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart. Simon sang of Tom Rush's album Ladies Love Outlaws and co-sang with Rush on "No Regrets" and as a back-up on "Claim on Me" in the same year. Elektra's first greatest-hits album, The Best of Carly Simon, became Simon's all-time best-selling album and eventually reached Triple-Platinum status in the United States in 1975; this was later on Simon's first greatest-selling album, The Best of Carly Simon.
Simon's Playing Possum (1975) and Another Passenger (1976) continued her string of high-profile and generally well-received album launches. Playing Possum debuted on the Billboard 200 and released "Attitude Dancing," as well as two other charting singles, but Simon's racy album cover, which shows him wearing only black negligee and knee-high black boots, sparked controversy. At the 18th Annual Grammy Awards, it was nominated for Best Album Package. Rolling Stone ranked it No. 1 in 1991. On their list of the 100 greatest album covers, 20th on the list. On the Billboard Pop singles chart, another Passenger produced only one charting single; "It Keeps You Runnin'," wrote by Michael McDonald of the Doobie Brothers, which peaked at No. 42. 46. The second single, "Half A Chance," was only charted on the Adult Contemporary chart, peaking at No. 22. 39. Despite the lukewarm commercial reception, the album was, and remains one of Simon's best reviewed works; Rolling Stone referred to it as "Carly Simon's best record." Several of Simon's followers became a fan of the album. Simon appeared on Saturday Night Live on May 8, 1976, promoting the album. It was a pre-taped performance, a rare occurrence on the show, because she had a traumatic bout of stage fright. She performed two songs on the show: "Half A Chance" and her signature song, "You're So Vain." On Peter Ivers' album Peter Ivers' album "Peter" in the same year.
Simon had a global success with the Gold single "Nobody Does It Better," the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me. After "You're So Vain," the album's second biggest U.S. hit after "You're Vain," was 1977's biggest Adult Contemporary Hit, where it debuted at No. 1. For seven weeks in a row, the one has been in possession. On Billboard's Pop Singles chart from October 22 to November 5, 1977, the album came one step behind Debby Boone's hugely popular hit "You Light Up My Life" and received awards for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female at the 20th Annual Grammy Awards. Rolling Stone ranked it as the third-greatest James Bond theme song in 2012, when Billboard ranked it as the second-most popular. The United States Today named it the best James Bond Theme Song of 2021 in 2021. Simon co-produced Libby Titus' album in 1977 and performed backup on two songs: "Can This Be Our Love Affair?" The late song "Darkness 'Til Dawn," was Simon's version of "Average."
Simon's career took another leap in 1978 with the Top ten album Boys in the Trees. Two Top 40 singles appeared; the jazzy and sensuous "You Belong to Me" (written with Michael McDonald) debuted on both the Pop and Adult Contemporary charts; and "Devoted to You," a duet with James Taylor that debuted at No. ; 2 on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart. Boys in the Trees was a huge success, and Simon was named in the United States as "You Belong to Me" later this year, earning Simon yet another award for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female at the 21st Annual Grammy Awards, where the album also received Best Album Package honors. That year, she appeared on the front pages of People and Rolling Stone magazines. Simon and Taylor performed backing vocals on two songs for Taylor's sister Kate Taylor's album "Jason & Ida" in 1978. "The Fault," "Good Enough" and "Voyagers" were three songs on John Hall's debut solo album. They also perform backup on "Power," a Hall's forthcoming album that also called Power (1979).
Simon appeared on "I Live in the Woods" at a live, four-hour concert at Burt Bacharach and the Houston Symphony Orchestra on November 2, 1978. All of the songs on that night became Bacharach's album Woman, which was released in 1979. A number of concerts were held at Madison Square Garden in New York City and sponsored by Musicians United for Safe Energy (MUSE), a group of musicians against nuclear power co-founded by John Hall. Simon and James Taylor, who later became a documentary and concert film; No Nukes (1980), as well as a live album of the same name (1979).
Simon released Spy, her last album for Elektra in 1979. The album's sales were disappointing, with peaking at just No. 2. The Billboard 200 was 45 on the chart, but "Vengeance," a hard-edged single from the album, became a minor hit and received airplay on US album rock stations, and peaked at No. 59. On the Billboard Pop singles chart, 48 are ranked 48. "Simon's vocals are...sharp and bold," cash box said, with ominous guitar chording and hints of syndrums. At the 21st Annual Grammy Awards, Simon "Vengeance" received a nomination for Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female, the first ceremony to include the new category. The album also includes songs "Never Been Gone" and "We're So Close," which have become fan favorites and standouts in Simon's personal favorites of her own songs. "We're So Close" is Rolling Stone's word, "the record's gem" is also listed on the album. Simon released Never Been Gone in 2009, an album that also includes a newly released version of "Never Been Gone" as a result of her previous hits.
Simon performed backup vocals on the following James Taylor songs and studio albums: "One Man Parade" from 1972; "Rock 'n' Roll Is Music Now," "Me and My Guitar," "Me and My Guitar," "Me and My Child") "Without Music" (1976); "How Sweet It Is" from Walking Man (1974); "Where Women" from JT (1977); and "B.S.U.R." Flag (1979) - Flag (1979).
Simon joined Elektra's sibling company Warner Bros. Records in 1980 and released her ninth studio album, Come Upstairs. Simon collapsed onstage in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, during a show to promote the album. She appeared much less in the 1980s. Simon earned another million-selling U.S. Gold single with the hit "Jesse," which peaked at No. 1. On the Billboard Pop singles chart, 11 on the chart, and six months on the charts. William Ruhlmann, an AllMusic reviewer, titled the song "Simon's best-written pop/rock song since 'You're Vain' and a Top Ten hit to boot." "The melody is simple yet effective, the words are complicated, and Simon's voice has never been clearer," Billboard says.
Simon's solos became generally less popular in the mid-1980s, after the success of "Jesse," but the majority of them did well on Adult Contemporary radio formats. Simon contributed "Be With Me" to the 1980 album In Harmony: A Sesame Street Record, which was produced by Lucy and Lucy's husband, David Levine. Simon and other Simon/Taylor families can also be heard on the album "In Harmony." "Maryanne" by Carly and Lucy was a Simon Sisters song that was also produced by Lucy and her husband in 1982. Both albums received the Grammy Award for Children in 1981 and 1983, respectively.
Torch (1981), Simon's 10th album, was an album of melancholy jazz standards, long before rock stars were encouraged to dig into the "great American songbook." It peaked outside the top 40 on Billboard 200 (at No. 58). (50), but it was on the charts for nearly six months and then became one of her best-selling catalog albums. The album was well-received critically; Stephen Holden, a writer for Rolling Stone, called the album "a stunning throwback," implying that Simon's "magnificent alto" with its rough-and-tumble lows and soaring highs never sounded better." "From the Heart" by Simon Torch, as well as Stephen Sondheim's "Not a Day Goes By" from his then-new musical Merrily We Roll Along, "From the Heart." Simon was the second female solo artist to be featured on MTV's first day of the air in her film "Vengeance" (Pat Benatar was the first female solo artist to appear on MTV, and Juice Newton was the third).
From the soundtrack album to the film Soup for One, she performed the Nile Rodgers & Bernard Edwards-produced single "Why." It was a Top ten hit in the United Kingdom and a hit in Europe and a hit throughout Europe. However, "Why" stalled at No. 1. The song, which was 74 in the United States, became a mellow classic in the aftermath of being picked up and sampled by various artists from 1989 to 2005. She had another success in the United Kingdom (No. 3) 17) with the single "Kissing with Confidence," a song from Will Powers' 1983 album Dancing for Mental Health (a pseudonym for photographer Lynn Goldsmith). Simon was the uncredited singer of the song co-written and mixed by Todd Rundgren.
Simon released Hello Big Man, her 12th album, in 1983. Despite suffering from disappointing sales, the album has received widespread critical acclaim. "You Know What to Do" the lead single, despite the fact that it peaked at No. 10. On the Billboard Hot 100 chart, 83 is the highest on the list, with No. 83 at No. 83, and No. 83 is No. 1. On the Adult Contemporary chart, 36 figures appear. Simon produced a music video for the song at Martha's Vineyard, which gained limited airplay on MTV in the fall of 1983. Simon performed on two albums: "The Perfect Stranger" by Jesse Colin Young (singing on Young's track "Fight For It) and "Wanderland" by Nils Lofgren), as well as Wonderland by Nils Lofgren (singing on the track "Lonesome Ranger" with Lofgren). Warner Bros.'s deal was ended by this time. Spoiled Girl, her third album, was released by Epic Records in 1985. "Loved of Being Blonde" and "My New Boyfriend" were two singles on the album, with only the former charting. The album was a commercial failure, peaking only at No. 301. Epic's contract with Epic was terminated at 88 on the Billboard 200, and she was fired from her position. Within Simon's back catalogue, the album became a cult favorite. Hot Shot Records re-released the album in July 2012 as a deluxe edition with four bonus tracks.
Simon started working with Arista Records in 1986 and recovered quickly from her career slump. With the title song (which was written for and featured in the 1986 Mike Nichols film Heartburn), Simon's first album, Coming Around Again (1987), has her second international success, bringing her to the top 20 and the UK top ten. "Give Me All Night," "The Stuff That Dreams Are Made Of," "All I Want Is You" (which featured Roberta Flack on backing vocals), and the classic "As Time Goes By" (featuring Stevie Wonder on harmonica). The general reception was generally positive; some people wrote, "Simon remains perhaps the most interesting of female pop singers." This album reveals that she is also captivating." "The new and one of the finest chapters in a growing catalog," it "embodies everything" that the 41-year-old singer-songwriter does best.
Simon's first Gold release in nine years was in 1988, and the album went platinum. The award was given to her by the Grammy Award for Best Female Vocal Performance that same year. Hot Shot Records released a two-disc 30th Anniversary Deluxe Edition of the album in October 2017. These and older songs were included in a spectacular HBO concert special named Live from Martha's Vineyard, where Simon and her band performed on a specially constructed stage in Gay Head in early June 1987. The majority of these songs were created for her 1988 album, Greatest Hits Live. Simon's first live album; Greatest Hits Live continued her meteoric rise, quickly going Gold, before being named Platinum by the RIAA in 1996. A single in the United Kingdom was released as a single on Simon's evergreen "You're So Vain."
Simon appeared on many film and television shows, as well as the songs:
Simon is the first artist to win all three major awards (Oscar, Golden Globe, and Grammy) for a song that is written and written, as well as performed entirely by a single artist (the only other notable artist being Bruce Springsteen for "Streets of Philadelphia", from the 1993 film Philadelphia). Simon's first BAFTA Award nomination for Best Film Music in 1990 earned him his first BAFTA Award nomination for Best Film Music. In August 1989, the Working Girl soundtrack album was released, with Simon's music as the lead. Amy the Dancing Bear, Simon's first children's book, was published the same year.
Simon wrote and recorded a song titled "You're Where I Go" in honor of Christa McAuliffe, who was supposed to be the first teacher in space and who died in the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. McAuliffe was a Simon fan and had brought a cassette of her music on board the ship. Simon co-wrote and recorded the title song to the 1987 Broadway play Slight of Hand. The song was later released on B-side of the single "Give Me All Night" from the Coming Around Again album. Simon also performed "The Turn of the Tide" for a Marlo Thomas television special Free to Be... A Family the same year as 1988. The song was later included on A&M Records' 1988 soundtrack collection.
Simon released My Romance, her second standards album, and an album of original content titled Have You Seen Me Lately in 1990. My Romance was immediately followed by a BBC special titled Carly in Concert: My Romance and starring guest actor Harry Connick, Jr.; however, a significant portion of Simon's underscore compositions and thematic interludes remain in the film, earning Simon her second BAFTA Award nomination for Best Film Score in 1991. The album was a critical and commercial success, with eight months on the Billboard 200, as Stephen Holden, a columnist in The New York Times, called the album "superb" and "the album's most stunning moment" on the album. In addition to the title track, the album had a major (No. 5) on it. 4) Adult Contemporary chart hit "Better Not Tell Her," a 21-week chart staple, becoming Simon's biggest hit of the 1990s. "Holding Me Tonight," a second single, was also a huge Adult Contemporary chart hit, peaking at No. 14. 36. Simon also published The Boy of the Bells, her second children's book, in the same year.
The Fisherman's Song, she wrote in 1991, was based on her 1990 album Have You Seen Me Lately. Simon performed a duet with Plácido Domingo on the album "The Last Night of the World" (from stage musical Miss Saigon) on Domingo's album The Broadway I Love. Simon wrote the music for Nora Ephron's film This Is My Life in 1992, and the soundtrack album was released shortly afterwards. It includes the No. 58 song "Love of My Life" as a No. Adult Contemporary hits. She appeared on "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning" from her 1990 album My Romance to Nora Ephron's Sleepless in Seattle in 1993. It was also on the film's soundtrack album. Simon recorded the same song with Frank Sinatra's "I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry" for his album Duets (1993). Sinatra's health was too ill for him to sing, so the production was achieved by producers releasing an exclusive pre-recorded vocal track from a previous appearance and laying a new background – and Simon – behind it. At the 37th Annual Grammy Awards, the album was named for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance.
Simon was commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera Association and the Kennedy Center in 1993 to produce a contemporary opera that would appeal to younger audiences. Romulus Hunt (named after its 12-year-old protagonist) was the product, which was announced in November of this year. The Nashville Opera Association premiered a new performance version of the opera in December 2014. Simon released her fourth children's book, The Nighttime Chauffeur, in 1993, and she appeared on singer Andreas Vollenweider's album "Private Fires" with Vollenweider; she co-wrote the song "Private Fires" with Vollenweider; she was also a featured vocalist on the album.
She covered Ken Burns' film "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" in 1994, as well as a video of "I've Got a Crush on You" for Larry Adler's tribute album The Glory of Gershwin. Simon released Letters Never Sent, her 16th album, in the same year. Simon found an old box of letters she'd written but never mailed, and she turned a few of them into music, and she put them into play. "The findings are funky, informative, and sumptuous," Entertainment Weekly said. It's a daring move that pays off." Simon wrote "Like A River" in honor of her mother, Andrea Simon, and "Touched by the Sun" for her dear friend, Jackie Onassis, both of whom died of cancer in 1994. The song "The Night Before Christmas," written for Nora Ephron's 1992 film This Is My Life and included on the soundtrack album, was also included in Ephron's 1994 film Mixed Nuts, as well as its soundtrack album. Bells, Bears, and Fishermen was Simon's first three children's books, as well as sound effects and original music.
Simon stunned thousands of commuters at Grand Central Terminal in New York in 1995 with an unannounced appearance that was part of a Lifetime television special called Live at Grand Central. In December of that year, it was also released on home video. Simon was also included in an episode of Lifetime's original series Intimate Portrait, which was also broadcast on the same night. She appeared on an American concert tour with Hall & Oates in 1995. Simon made a rare joint appearance with her ex-husband, James Taylor, on Martha's Vineyard on August 30, 1995. It was dubbed "Livestock '95" by the Martha's Vineyard Agricultural Society, with over 10,000 people in attendance. Simon performed a duet with Mindy Jostyn on the song "Time, Be on My Side," which appeared on Jostyn's 1995 album Five Miles from Hope about her latest battle with colon cancer. Jostyn died of the disease at the age of 43. In My Coffee's three-disc boxed set Clouds was released on November 7, 1995. The box set includes 58 songs from 1964 to 1995, with a complete career retrospective at the time of its introduction. Nine tracks were previously unveiled on any of Simon's albums, and the booklet includes numerous photos and extensive liner notes by Simon. Simon and her sister Lucy performed on Peter, Paul and Mary's album LifeLines' "The Great Mandala (The Wheel of Life)" that same year.
The American press announced an incident involving Simon and the Pretenders' vocalist Chrissie Hynde at a Joni Mitchell concert at Fez Club in New York in November 1995. According to several reports, a drunken and disorderly Hynde grabbed Simon around the neck and punched her, but Simon tried to put these allegations into shame by posting, "Chrissie was a bit inebriated and screaming out during Joni's appearance, which needsless to say, everybody wanted to hear." Chrissie was sitting right next to me and I begged her to be a little quieter. You're too cute Carly, get up there, you're good too, you're fine.' That's all there was about. I must confess that her choking me in 'fun intoxication' seemed to a large audience like a contest. It wasn't. I couldn't believe that no one was interceding and saying anything to her. I adore her music and regard her as an artist. It was just one of those things. "Go figure."
Simon continued to write and record music for films, as well as producing the theme songs for several more films, including "Two Little Sisters" from Marvin's Room (1996) and "In Two Straight Lines" from the family comedy Madeline (1998). Midnight Farm, her fifth children's book, was published on August 1, 1997. Film Noir, Simon's third standards album, was released on September 16, 1997. The album was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance the following year, and was recorded in collaboration with Jimmy Webb (who appears on Simon's track "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year). On the track "Two Sleepy People," John Travolta duets with Simon, and Martin Scorsese wrote the liner notes that were included in the album's booklet. Songs in Shadow: Carly Simon's Film Noir was released as a special presentation on AMC. In addition, this documentary features videos of Webb, Arif Mardin, and Van Dyke Parks in the studio recording the album with Simon.
Simon was diagnosed with breast cancer in October 1997 and underwent surgery as well as chemotherapy; "I was in the hospital for one night," Simon said. "Because they had everything during the procedure and the prognosis was positive," my doctor gave me the option of having chemo. "I decided to play it safe." The Very Best of Carly Simon, a single-disc UK import, was released in the following year, and it became a Top 25 Albums Chart hit, peaking at No. 59. 22. Simon performed with Andreas Vollenweider in 1999 and was the featured vocalist on Vollenweider's album Cosmopoly. Simon and her daughter Sally Taylor contributed the song "Amity" to the film Anywhere but Here's soundtrack album from the same year.
Simon released The Bedroom Tapes, her 18th studio album, on May 16, 2000. It was Simon's first album of original songs since Letters Never Sent, which was mainly written and recorded in her bedroom as she was recovering from her health issues of the previous two years. At the time, the Bedroom Tapes reached their high of only No. 139. On the Billboard 200, 90 on the Billboard 200, but received significant flak on the back. Simon was "as raw as she was on 1975's Playing Possum and just as sweet as 1987's Coming Around Again," AllMusic reported. Despite being in her mid-fifties, she is also a charmer." Steve Baltin, a journalist for Billboard Magazine, wrote about the album as "A feast for fans of thoughtful, well-crafted pop music," while others said the album "unfolds like a one-woman performance," referring to it as a "Boffo show." Richard Perry remixed the opening track, "Our Affair," starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Ben Affleck, on the soundtrack album of the 2000 film Bounce.
On Jackson's album All for You, Simon performed on "Son of a Gun" with Janet Jackson in 2001. Jackson called Simon to ask for permission to use samples from "You're So Vain," but Simon wanted to re-record her vocals, according to Jackson. She agreed, though Simon wanted to write new lines. Jimmy Jam, Jackson's mother, sent her the songs she was still working on and she went into a Martha's Vineyard studio to record some songs. She rapped, initially fearing that Jackson and the producers would not use it, but the singers decided to marry both songs as it "worked flawlessly," and it became a duet. Jackson "may not have been sweeter or more appreciative," Simon said. The album was released as a single and peaked at No. 8 in the United States. On the Billboard Hot 100, 28 is 28. For Mindy Jostyn's 2001 album Blue Stories, Simon appeared back-up vocals on two songs, "Don't Turn Away" and "East of Eden." In a public service advertisement for the United States Postal Service, Simon's Oscar-winning song "Let the River Run" was used in a public service ad from November 2001. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, attacks and the 2001 anthrax attacks, it was named "pride" and was designed to raise public confidence and postal worker morale.
While in Los Angeles to help her son Ben Taylor and his band, Simon released a Christmas album titled Christmas Is Almost Here. Simon selected all of the songs for a new two-disc anthology collection in the same year, simply titled Anthology. Every one of her studio albums (up to this point) was represented in this collection, with at least one song remastered and also available on Rhino Records. "White Christmas" (with Burt Bacharach) and "Forgive" were two extra tracks on her Christmas album, "Forgive" (with Andreas Vollenweider), which followed. Both of these songs were released as a CD single. During the 2004 holiday season at Harlem's Apollo Theater, she appeared alongside Bebe Winans, Rob Thomas, son Ben and daughter Sally, Livingston Taylor, Mindy Jostyn, and Kate Taylor, as well as other Taylor and Simon family members.
Simon wrote and recorded songs for Piglet's Big Movie in 2003 and Pooh's Heffalump Movie in 2005, as well as the direct-to-video A Very Merry Pooh Year in 2002. Several of her songs were also included in the 2004 film Little Black Book, which starred Brittany Murphy and Holly Hunter, with Simon appearing as herself in a cameo role at the end of the film. Simon's fourth greatest hits album, Reflections: Carly Simon's Greatest Hits, was released in the spring of 2004. The album was a huge commercial success, peaking at No. 114. On the Billboard 200, 22 people were on the billboard 200, with 19 weeks remaining on the chart for 19 weeks. The album was named Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America on March 2, 2007 (RIAA). An international version of the album was also released; it debuted at No. 1; The UK charts have ranked 25 on the UK charts, with Gold ranked there as well. Simon performed a duet version of "The Right Thing to Do" with Megan Mullally for the TV version. Will & Grace: Let the Music Out!
Simon's fourth album of standards, Moonlight Serenade, was released on Columbia Records in the summer of 2005. It was a critical and commercial success that culminated in No. No. She was nominated for the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album on the following year, placing her first Top ten albums on this chart since Boys in the Trees in 1978. Simon performed two concerts on board the RMS Queen Mary 2 in September, 2005, which were recorded and released on DVD as A Moonlight Serenade on the Queen Mary 2nd. Sally and Ben Simon, the first time she and her children were accompanied by her children, embarked on a concert tour around the United States, her first tour in ten years, "The Serenade Tour." "Angel of the Darkest Night" was also performed on Jostyn's 2005 album Coming Home. The album was released several months after Jostyn's death on March 10, 2005. Jostyn, one of Simon Brackman's long-time acquaintance and musical collaborator, was married to Jacob Brackman, Simon's long-time associate and musical collaborator. Simon became involved in the federal defense of musician and family friend John Forté in 2005, who fought for a federal prisoner.
Simon teamed up with Andreas Vollenweider on his 2006 holiday record, Midnight Clear. "Midnight Clear," "Suspended Note," "Hymn to the Secret Heart," and "Forgive" were three songs from Simon's 2003 re-release of her own holiday album "Christ Is Almost Here." Simon appeared on his album There You Are Again in 2006, as the first song "Best of Friends" debuted, becoming a Top 40 Adult Contemporary hit.
Simon released Into White, her fifth album of covers, a collection of "soothing songs and lullabies." "Independence of My Life" featured illustrations of Cat Stevens, the Beatles, Judy Garland, and the Everly Brothers, as well as two new original songs, "Quiet Evening" and "I'll Just Remember You," as well as a re-recording of Simon's own "Love of My Life." On the track "You Can Close Your Eyes," author Sheila Weller's description of her 2008 book Girls Like Us as "slow, spectral" and "achingly beautiful," the album also includes vocal collaborations with her children; Ben and Sally, who perform a trio with Simon; and "You Can Close Your Eyes." People also praised the album, calling it "dreamy" and saying it "the best moment on the record." Simon's recently relaunched high chart fame and became Billboard's Hot Shot Debut, debuted on the chart at No. 2 in the U.S. The 15-year-old is the most popular of the fifteen nations. The following week, the 13th of the week will be out of place, with the ten weeks of the chart remaining unchanged for ten weeks.
Simon had signed with Hear Music, a Starbucks brand. In the spring of 2008, she and them released a new album titled This Kind of Love. The album was Simon's first collection of all original songs since 2000's The Bedroom Tapes, and it became another commercial and critical success, peaking at No. 1. By 2009, 15 of the Billboard 200 was selling nearly 150,000 copies. Simon and her son Ben performed "You're So Vain" on Sirius Satellite radio on June 19, 2008. Simon was suing Starbucks on October 13, 2009, saying that they did not properly advertise This Kind of Love. Starbucks also announced that it was withdrawing from Hear Music only days before the album was released, according to Simon's complaint, who claimed she did not doom the song before it was even announced.
Simon Been Gone, her 23rd album, was released on Iris Records on October 27, 2009. It also includes two new songs, "No Fear" and "Songbird," an album of acoustic reworkings of some of her greatest hits and classic songs. Simon performed an acoustic interpretation of her hit "Let the River Run" on November 26, 2009, on the 83rd Annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, where she appeared on the Care Bears float.
An Evening With Carly Simon, BBC Radio 2's first appearance with her son Ben Taylor to a small audience of about 100 people on March 2, 2010. This coincided with the debut of Simon's album Never Been Gone in the United Kingdom, which was unveiled for the Mother's Day season and hit the top at No. 119. 45, her first studio album to make it to the UK Albums Chart Top 100 after 1987's Coming Around Again. Simon has appeared on various UK television shows to promote his album, including The One Show and BBC Breakfast. Simon also contributed the song "Calls a Soft Voice" to Arif Mardin's album All My Friends Are Here in the same year.
The American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers awarded Simon with the Founders Award on April 18, 2012. At the reception, she performed "Anticipation" and "You're So Vain." Bill Withers presented Simon with an award and praised her with a speech, while Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines performed Simon's 1971 hit "I've Always Heard It Should Be." Simon wrote "Just Like a Woman" on Bob Dylan's tribute album Chimes of Freedom the same year. The proceeds from the album's sale were donated to Amnesty International, a human rights group.
Simon performed "You're So Vain" with Taylor Swift on her Red Tour on July 27, 2013. Swift had previously mentioned Simon as a musical influence, and "You're So Vain" was one of her favorite songs. Simon performed with Jimmy Webb on the track "Easy for You to Say" from his album "Aware Within the Sound of My Voice later this year. Simon appeared alongside Natasha Bedingfield at the Oceana Partners Award Gala in Los Angeles on October 30, 2013.
Boys in the Trees: A Memoir, an autobiographical book focusing on her childhood and her early life, from age five to age 1983, Simon published Boys in the Trees: A Memoir, an autobiographical book focusing on her childhood and early life. The book was widely distributed with skepticism. Songs from the Trees (A Musical Memoir Collection) was released simultaneously with the book. The book includes songs written and/or performed during the period the book covers, as well as two previously unreleased tracks, "Showdown" (originally recorded during Simon's 1978 album Boys in the Woods) and "I Can't Thank You Enough," a brand new song written and performed with her son Ben Taylor.
Simon performed "You're So Vain" at Clive Davis' Pre-Grammy Party on February 14, 2016, drew a "thunderous standing ovation," and appeared in Davis' Grammy Party Class Photo. Simon revealed that she and her son Ben Taylor were collaborating to create EDM remixes of her signature songs later this year. She also stated that she and her two children wanted to record an album together.
Simon appeared on the track "Ticker Tape" on the Gorillaz album Humanz in April 2017. The documentary Carly Simon: No Secrets was released on BBC Four in the United States as part of their Classic Albums collection in the same year. It contains information about the creation of the album No Secrets, as well as interviews with Simon, producer Richard Perry, and many of the key musicians and production staff. Simon came to terms with Universal Music Publishing Group to handle her song collection the following year.
Touched by the Sun: My Friendship with Jackie, Simon's second memoir that chronicles her time with former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Simon also launched a newly mixed live version of "Touched by the Sun" from her 1995 concert special Live at Grand Central as a single as a tie-in to its debut. People Magazine ranked the book as one of the top ten books of 2019.
Simon will be honored at Carnegie Hall on November 27, 2020, titled The Music of Carly Simon. The concert had been postponed until fall due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which was announced on March 12, 2020. It was later postponed to take place on March 23, 2022, before being cancelled entirely due to COVID-19-related difficulties.
Simon was named as one of the 17 performers nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Class of 2022 on February 2, 2022. Simon was inducted into the elite dance category on May 4, 2022, and he was expected to appear on November 5, 2022. "I don't believe it" in a Rolling Stone interview. It must be the House of Pancakes, which I just recently discovered.' I was actually dumbfounded. "They must have been mistaken," I said. When asked about the likelihood of attending the service, Simon replied, "I don't know." I'm not going to put myself on stage or scare the hell out of myself." "Those are the two people who were instrumental in my first solo light," Simon said.