"Bridge over Troubled Water" is a song by the American folk duo
Simon & Garfunkel, released in January 1970 as the second single from their fifth studio album, Bridge over Troubled Water (1970). It was composed by
Paul Simon and produced by Simon & Garfunkel and
Roy Halee.
"Bridge over Troubled Water" features lead vocals by
Art Garfunkel and a piano accompaniment influenced by
gospel music, with a "
Wall of Sound"-style production.[4][5] It was the last song recorded for the album, but the first completed.[6] The instrumentation, provided by the
Wrecking Crew, was recorded in California, while Simon and Garfunkel's vocals were recorded in New York.[6][7][8][9] Simon felt Garfunkel should sing solo, an invitation Garfunkel initially declined.[10] Session musician
Larry Knechtel performs piano, with
Joe Osborn playing
bass guitar and
Hal Blaine on drums.
"Bridge over Troubled Water" was composed by
Paul Simon in early 1969; the song came to him very quickly, so much so that he asked himself: "Where did that come from? It doesn't seem like me."[10][11][12] The title concept was inspired by
Claude Jeter's line "I'll be your bridge over deep water if you trust in my name," which Jeter sang with his group, the
Swan Silvertones, in the 1959 song "
Mary Don't You Weep."[13][14] According to gospel producer and historian
Anthony Heilbut, Simon acknowledged his debt to Jeter in person, and handed Jeter a check.[15] Simon named
Johann Sebastian Bach's "
O Sacred Head, Now Wounded" as inspiration for parts of the melody.[16] Simon wrote the song initially on guitar but transposed it to the piano to reflect the
gospel influence and suit Garfunkel's voice.[6]
Simon told his partner,
Art Garfunkel, that Garfunkel should sing it alone, the "white choirboy way", though Simon adds harmony on the final verse.[10] Garfunkel felt it was not right for him;[6] he liked Simon's
falsetto on the demo and suggested that Simon sing. At the suggestion of Garfunkel and producer Roy Halee, Simon wrote an extra verse and a "bigger" ending, though he felt it was less cohesive with the earlier verses.[17] The final verse was written about Simon's then-wife Peggy Harper, who had noticed her first gray hairs ("Sail on, silvergirl").[18][19] It does not refer to a drug abuser's hypodermic needle, as is sometimes claimed.[20] The verse was Garfunkel's idea, but Simon reportedly did not like it.[21]
"Bridge over Troubled Water" was the final track recorded for the album but the first completed, with an additional two weeks of post-production.[6] Simon initially composed the song in
G major, but arranger and composer
Jimmie Haskell transposed the song to
E-flat major to suit Garfunkel's voice.[22] The song's instrumental parts were recorded in August 1969 in California, to make it easier for Garfunkel to go to Mexico to film Catch-22.[9][12] Simon wanted a
gospel piano sound, and hired session musician
Larry Knechtel.
Joe Osborn played two separate bass tracks, one high and the other low. A string section entering in the third verse completed the arrangement. The
drums were played by
Hal Blaine in an
echo chamber to achieve a hall effect and Los Angeles session percussionist Gary Coleman played the
Vibraphone. The arranger Ernie Freeman labelled his string arrangement as "Like a Pitcher of Water".[23]
Simon and Garfunkel returned to New York in November 1969 to record the vocals.[24][7][6][12] The vocal style in "Bridge over Troubled Water" was inspired by
Phil Spector's technique in "
Old Man River" by
The Righteous Brothers.[25] Simon said it sounded like
the Beatles' "
Let It Be", stating in a Rolling Stone interview: "They are very similar songs, certainly in instrumentation."[26]
As their relations frayed preceding their 1970 breakup, Simon began to experience regret for allowing Garfunkel to sing it solo:
He felt I should have done it, and many times on a stage, though, when I'd be sitting off to the side and Larry Knechtel would be playing the piano and Artie would be singing "Bridge", people would stomp and cheer when it was over, and I would think, "That's my song, man..."[10]
Despite the song's five-minute length, Columbia decided to release "Bridge over Troubled Water" for play on pop radio. AM radio had previously played
Bob Dylan's "
Like a Rolling Stone" in 1965, despite its running over the conventional three-minute playtime limit. This figured in Columbia's decision to release the five minute version of "Bridge over Troubled Water" as a single.[27] It reached number one on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart on February 28, 1970, and stayed at the top of the chart for six weeks. "Bridge over Troubled Water" also topped the
adult contemporary chart in the US for six weeks.[28]Billboard ranked it as the
No. 1 song for 1970.[29]
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
US chart performance
"Bridge over Troubled Water" entered the Billboard Hot 100 top 40 at no.13 on February 9, 1970. It jumped to no.3 the following week before climbing to no.1.
During a six-week run at the top – the most for any single that year – Simon and Garfunkel held off strong competition from
Creedence Clearwater Revival ("
Travelin' Band") and
The Jaggerz ("
The Rapper"). Then, on April 11, the song fell to no.5 – replaced by
The Beatles' "
Let It Be". "Bridge over Troubled Water" concluded a 13-week run in the US top 40 on 9 May as their follow-up hit "Cecilia" began its rise to no.4.
UK chart performance
As in the US, "Bridge over Troubled Water" made its UK top 40 bow at no.13, on February 28, 1970. The song climbed steadily over the next four weeks before claiming no.1 on March 28. During a three-week stay at the top, it held off strong competition from
Mary Hopkin with "
Knock, Knock Who's There?" and "
Can't Help Falling in Love" by
Andy Williams.
Then, on April 18, the song fell to no.2 – replaced by "
All Kinds of Everything" by
Dana.
In total, "Bridge over Troubled Water" spent seventeen weeks in the UK top 40 (concluding on June 27).
Aretha Franklin's gospel-infused
cover version was recorded in the summer of 1970, during the sessions for what would become her 1972 album Young, Gifted and Black. Franklin debuted her version on March 5, 1971, during her landmark three-night stint at San Francisco's
Fillmore West, which was later released as Aretha Live at Fillmore West. Eleven days later, she performed the song on television for the first time at the
13th Annual Grammy Awards, at which an already-disbanded Simon & Garfunkel picked up five Grammy Awards for the song. Franklin's Grammy performance was released decades later on the 1994 compilation Grammy's Greatest Moments Volume III.
Franklin's studio recording of the song was released as a single just three days after her 1971 Grammy performance,[63] and was one of three new recordings included on September 1971's Aretha's Greatest Hits. Franklin's rendition reached number one on the US
R&B chart and number six on the pop chart.[64] The single was certified gold by the RIAA and sold two million copies. In 1972, Franklin picked up her own Grammy for the song, the
Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance.
Elvis Presley
Elvis Presley recorded it in Nashville on June 5, 1970, and it was released on the 1970 album That's the Way It Is (with a false audience fade-out). He included it in his set list for his next engagement in Las Vegas, which included the filming of the 1970 documentary Elvis: That's the Way It Is,[65] and the song was included in the original theatrical release (included version is from the August 11 dinner show). During that summer season in Vegas, Paul Simon attended one of the shows, and, after seeing Elvis perform the song, he was reported to have said, "That's it, we might as well all give up now."[10] Presley continued to use this song throughout his live performances, including his final live appearance in Indianapolis on June 26, 1977. Another live performance was seen in the
Golden Globe-winning documentary Elvis on Tour, filmed at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, North Carolina, on April 14, 1972. Elvis even sang it at one of his Madison Square Garden Shows back in June 1972.
On the studio version, Robert Matthew Watson wrote in his book Heartbreak Hotel: "Presley's outstanding singing is not disguised. This is a fabulous version, burning with sincerity and power, and finding depths not revealed by the composers."
Chet Atkins and Jerry Reed
Chet Atkins and
Jerry Reed recorded an instrumental version of the song and released it on their 1970 album "
Me & Jerry". The song appears as the second song on the album's first side and features both Reed and Atkins playing guitar trading lines back and forth with each other.[66] The album and their rendition of the song received generally positive reviews with the former going on to win the 1971
Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance.[67][68]
Linda Clifford,
Curtis Mayfield's protegée signed on his Curtom label, released an up-tempo
disco version of "Bridge over Troubled Water" on her album Let Me Be Your Woman in March 1979. This epic version (10:20 in length) was produced by
Gil Askey (jazz trumpet player and musical director for many
Motown acts) and mixed by Jimmy Simpson, brother of
Valerie Simpson from
Ashford and Simpson. The song has two originalities, the first one being a 132 bpm
tempo (considered the ideal tempo for disco dancing) when the Simon and Garfunkel original is 82 bpm and Aretha Franklin's cover is 76 bpm. It was the first time that this song was covered with a fast tempo. It also has a highly original "Brazilian
cuica on a disco beat" break. It became a US disco number 11, pop number 41, R&B number 49 and UK number 28.[69]
In 1991, P.J.B. featuring Hannah and Her Sisters, a UK group assembled by British songwriter, record producer and author
Pete Bellotte and fronted by British singer
Hannah Jones, released a dance cover of "Bridge over Troubled Water" which reached number 21 on the UK Singles Chart.[70] The group appeared on Top of the Pops as the opening act on the 26 September 1991 episode.
In 2003, American Idolseason two runner-up
Clay Aiken performed "Bridge over Troubled Water" during the competition. After the final results were announced,
RCA Records released the song as a
double A-side single with "This Is the Night" in Canada in New Zealand; in the US, "This Is the Night" was credited as a solo release since it received a higher cumulative airplay audience.[73][74] The double A-side charted at number one in both Canada and New Zealand, earning a sextuple-platinum sales certification in the former country and a platinum disc in the latter.[75][76] On New Zealand's year-end chart for 2003, the single was ranked at number 38.[77]
Dami Im covered this song during the Family Heroes-themed sixth live show of the fifth season of Australian X Factor on September 29, 2013.[82] Im's performance of the song debuted at number 15 on the
Australian Singles Chart. Im later released a version of the song on her
self-titled album,[83] which debuted at number 1 in Australia, and was certified Platinum.[84]
On December 9, 2013,
Tessanne Chin covered the song on
season 5 of
NBC's singing competition The Voice for the semifinal round. The song went to the number one spot on iTunes within 12 hours, with her becoming the first contestant to achieve the top chart position at the end of an applicable voting window that season.[102]
"
A Bridge over You", a charity single recorded and released independently by the Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Choir, the choir of the Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust located in south-east London, was a mashup of "Bridge over Troubled Water" and
Coldplay's 2005 single "
Fix You", with additional arrangement by the choir's conductor, Peter Mitchell. It reached number one on the UK Singles Chart at Christmas 2015.
In August 2019,
Kodi Lee covered the song on America's Got Talent in the quarter-finals of the competition. Simon Cowell revealed that Paul Simon personally signed off to allow him to sing the song within thirty minutes of the show producers asking for permission.[103]
Irish musician
Hozier performed the song for the
RTÉ fundraising special RTÉDoes Comic Relief in
Croke Park. The performance was dedicated to those who died during the
COVID-19 pandemic.[104]
Matt Bellamy from
Muse released a cover on September 8, 2020, noting it is one of his "favorite songs of all time...We should all reach out and be there for our friends right now!" [105]
^Hung, Steffen.
"Discography Dami Im". Australian Charts Portal. Hung Medien. Archived from
the original on November 6, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
Charlesworth, Chris (1997). "Bridge Over Troubled Water". The Complete Guide to the Music of Paul Simon and Simon & Garfunkel. Omnibus Press.
ISBN0-7119-5597-2.