Linda Ronstadt Diagnosed With Parkinson’s – Beautiful Uncredited Duets With Art Garfunkel & Paul Simon

Linda Ronstadt, 1970s.

A couple of weeks ago Linda Ronstadt (67) announced to the music world she can no longer sing a single note as result of Parkinson’s disease. Diagnosed late last year, the sad news has only just been made public. In thinking about it all, I realised there is a case to be made that due to album sales, top 40 hits, concert attendances and total earnings that Linda Ronstadt was arguably the biggest female solo artist in the world in the 1970s.

Perhaps Donna Summer would’ve challenged that title, but regardless, you can’t discount six Rolling Stone magazine covers, not to mention covers of both Time and Newsweek and the fact that in 1978 alone she was reported to have earned US $12 million – more than $40 million in today’s money. Beyond the 70s she continued to have hits and recorded two of the finest duets of the 80s with Don’t Know Much and All My Life, both with Aaron Neville.

Speaking of which, there are plenty of hit songs I could choose to draw attention to Ronstadt’s artistry (All My Life is a particular favourite), but I thought I’d take the less travelled path and focus on two songs that not only aren’t solo songs of hers’, but aren’t even official duets.

The first song is one of the saddest songs I know, Art Garfunkel’s Jimmy Webb-written Scissors Cut from 1981. Ronstadt’s subtle background vocals add an extra emotional element to a song about finding (and rescuing) an old love who you no longer speak to “somewhere in the flames”.

The second song was five years later and is more of a vocal duet, Paul Simon’s Under African Skies from his much heralded Graceland LP. The song has flawless harmonies between the two and even features a reference to Ronstadt and her hometown with the lyric “take this child Lord, from Tucson, Arizona.” Under African Skies, like most of Graceland, combines Americana with South African music and themes and after more than 25 years still sounds as a vital as it first did in 1986.

Believe it or not, it was completely unintentional to feature both Simon and Garfunkel, or in this case, Garfunkel and Simon. But it does show that even in their solo careers they had a certain musical sensibility in common.

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