


A friend of mine comes from Gloucester and he used to talk about what it was like to grow up there.That song was entirely an act of imagination.There's no element of me in there at all." I was thinking about Gloucester, Massachusetts. In an interview with Bill Flanagan for the book "Written In My Soul: Conversations With Great Songwriters," Simon says he was "actually picturing a town. Garfunkel's parents insisted he gain some qualification aside from his singing (he earned a bachelor's degree in art history in 1965, and a master's degree in mathematics in 1967). Somebody happy to get out." Garfunkel has explained that the song was about his own childhood, how he "grew up in an area where a career in music was not seen as either desirable or exciting". Simon has stated that the song is not autobiographical instead he says that it is about "someone who hates the town he grew up in. It seemed like a good concept for him." After playing the song for Garfunkel, the two decided to collaborate again in the studio on this one track. I was gonna write a song for his new album, and I told him it would be a nasty song, because he was singing too many sweet songs. He has been quoted as saying: "It originally was a song I was writing for Artie. In early 1975, Simon had decided to prepare material for a new solo album and the music was a bit more personal, but one song was written in particular with Garfunkel specifically in mind.

During this hiatus, Garfunkel worked as a teacher in Connecticut, a draftsman in New York and a math tutor in Los Angeles, before working on a solo album himself, coincidentally, at the same time as Simon. In June 1972 they were asked to sing at a political benefit concert for United States presidential candidate George McGovern at Madison Square Garden, New York City. In 1970 Simon and Garfunkel decided to part ways and record their own solo material. It was the first single release credited to the duo since the 1972 release of " America", released in conjunction with Simon and Garfunkel's Greatest Hits. It would not appear on any of the duo's albums until the 1997 anthology box set Old Friends and the 1999 compilation album The Best of Simon and Garfunkel. The song was included on the 1975 solo releases from both Simon ( Still Crazy After All These Years) and Garfunkel ( Breakaway). It was written by Paul Simon, who produced the track along with Art Garfunkel and Phil Ramone. " My Little Town" is a 1975 song by the American duo Simon & Garfunkel.
