Carly Simon was one of the most popular of the confessional
singer/songwriters who emerged in the early '70s. The youngest daughter
in an upper-class New York family (her father, Richard Simon, co-founded
the Simon & Schuster publishing company), Simon got her start in
music as part of a duo with her sister Lucy (who later wrote the music
for the Broadway show The Secret Garden). The Simon Sisters had a chart
single with "Winkin' Blinkin' and Nod" in April 1964. But Simon's solo
debut did not come until the release of her self-titled first album in
February 1971. It contained her first solo hit, "That's the Way I've
Always Heard It Should Be," an anti-marriage song co-written with Jacob
Brackman that reached the Top Ten...
CD1 - Carly Simon (February 1971)
CD2 - Anticipation (November 1971)
CD3 - No Secrets (1972)
CD4 - Hotcakes (1974)
CD5 - Playing Possum (1975)
CD6 - Another Passenger (1976)
CD7 - Boys in the Trees (1978)
CD8 - Spy (1979)
CD9 - Come Upstairs (1980)
CD10 - Torch (1981)
CD11 - Hello Big Man (1983)