We all know that our parents largely affect how our adult lives develop. In this case, both Simon and Garfunkel got lucky. Garfunkel’s family was Jewish and enjoyed listening to him sing in the synagogue so much that they wanted him to continue. He sang for four hours at his own bar mitzvah. Simon too prospered. His father, a musician himself, was extremely supportive of his son’s musical aspirations.
Since his father was part of the music business, Simon was greatly inspired and took his father’s words to heart, leading to the creative drive that would continue throughout his life.
How They Met
You may think that these two discovered a mutual interest in music and the rest was history, but you'd be wrong. It was a grade-school play that first brought them together. Their shared interest in music soon became common knowledge and they started their careers. The play was "Alice in Wonderland" – Simon played the White Rabbit, and Garfunkel played the Cheshire Cat.
It's possible that the play was a musical, which would have made sense since the two both loved music. Simon as the White Rabbit and Garfunkel as the Cheshire Cat both make a lot of sense though.
Not Just Music
Other than music, the boys had plenty of other interests. For example, Paul Simon was one of the stars of his high school baseball team. Garfunkel, after a lung infection, sidelined his singing when he was in his early teens, found a love of basketball, which he could play without tiring himself out too much.
Garfunkel was also a member of the tennis, skiing, fencing, and bowling teams while he was at college, and often assisted his roommate with homework after said roommate went blind. Simon was part of the Alpha Epsilon Phi fraternity while in college.
The First Name They Took
Simon and Garfunkel had been together since the sixth grade. Even at that tender young age, they were singing and playing together, and conducting radio shows. All the way back in 1957 they signed to the independent record company Big Records under the name...Tom & Jerry.
Their first single, “Hey Schoolgirl,” did relatively well for first-timers; getting all the way to number forty-nine on the Billboard Top 100 chart, and selling over a hundred thousand copies. Since the two were only teenagers, this was quite a success. They each earned about two thousand dollars, or about $18,000 today.
Musical Inspiration
Simon and Garfunkel certainly won't be the last folk-rock duo (thanks mostly to their own influence), and they weren't even the first. The inspiration they used to build their brand was the Everly Brothers. Don and Phil Everly were a huge inspiration for the friends, and “Hey Schoolgirl” was directly based on their musical style.
Just like the famous duo they went on to inspire, the brothers had a contentious relationship, with breakups, reunions, solo albums, and fights. They quit in 1973 after more than twenty years together but would come back together in 1983 until their retirement in 2005.