<Table> <Tr> <Td> "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" (1975) </Td> <Td> "Still Crazy After All These Years" (1976) </Td> <Td> "Slip Slidin' Away" (1977) </Td> </Tr> </Table> <Tr> <Td> "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover" (1975) </Td> <Td> "Still Crazy After All These Years" (1976) </Td> <Td> "Slip Slidin' Away" (1977) </Td> </Tr> <P> "Still Crazy After All These Years" is a song by the American singer - songwriter Paul Simon . It was the third and final single from his fifth studio album of the same name (1975), released on Columbia Records . Though the song briefly reached the top 40 of the Billboard Hot 100 in the U.S., it was a bigger hit on the magazine's Easy Listening chart, where it peaked at number four . </P> <P> "Still Crazy After All These Years" begins with the singer singing that "I met my old lover on the street last night ." The "old lover" has been variously interpreted to be either Simon's ex-wife Peggy Harper, from whom he was recently divorced, his former girlfriend from the 1960s Kathy Chitty, or even Simon's former musical partner Art Garfunkel, who appears on the song that follows' Still Crazy After All These Years" on the album . After sharing a few beers, the singer and the old lover part ways again . The singer notes that he is "not the kind of man who tends to socialize" but rather leans "on old familiar ways" and is "still crazy after all these years ." The lyrics acknowledge a nostalgia for the past, but also subtly suggest that once the sweet nostalgia is gone, it is replaced by loneliness and even bitterness . </P>

Who sang still crazy after all these years