Situated on the hills above the Stanford campus in Palo Alto, the Frost Amphitheater is surrounded by the kind of California evening air that softly arrives as the sun sets. The air is warm, slightly dry, and smells of cut grass and eucalyptus. This stage, which has been used for concerts for many years, is tucked away on university property in a way that both makes performances feel ceremonial and intimate. Paul Simon performed two nights of music on that stage on June 3 and 4, 2026, which shouldn’t have been conceivable by any logical accounting.
He had declared his retirement to everyone. He had informed them that he had lost his hearing. And here he was, at eighty-three, performing songs from his 2023 album “Seven Psalms” alongside the classics that generations of people had come to associate with specific moments in their own lives, surrounded by monitors designed specifically to compensate for the near-total loss of hearing in his left ear.

It’s simple to present the comeback story as a triumph-over-adversity tale, and it’s tempting to keep it that way. However, the complete image is more intriguing and bizarre. During the “Seven Psalms” sessions, Simon unexpectedly lost the majority of his hearing in his left ear. There was no explanation or diagnosis. At the time, he expressed his belief that it would pass, but when it didn’t, he acknowledged that his career as a live performer was probably over. Stanford was one of the things that changed.
Nearly 100 scientists are working on some of the most difficult issues in auditory medicine as part of the Stanford Initiative to Cure Hearing Loss, or SICHL. These issues include how to stop the loss of inner ear hair cells, how to fix damage that has already happened, and how to possibly replace structures that medicine has traditionally regarded as irreplaceable. Simon went to the Palo Alto facility. He got to know the researchers. And the cooperation that resulted influenced not just the choice to go on another tour but also the technical details of how the tour could be organized at all.
In order to create a stage arrangement that surrounds Simon with moving monitors that are adjusted to his unique hearing profile, the production crew collaborated with SICHL experts. Smaller spaces provide better acoustic control, and the announcement materials’ statement that “the acoustics are optional” in these settings is both a practical fact and a slightly wry way of describing what hearing loss does to a performer who has spent sixty years depending on the ability to hear himself precisely.
The research team was also consulted when choosing small, intimate venues for the entire “A Quiet Celebration” tour. A stadium is not what the Frost Amphitheater is. The point is that. Beyond his personal situation, Simon’s collaboration with SICHL has a significance that merits careful consideration. According to the World Health Organization, over a billion people worldwide suffer from hearing loss, which is one of the most prevalent and undertreated illnesses in the world.
Research on inner ear regeneration is still significantly underfunded in comparison to its potential benefits. Grant applications and scientific publications do not provide Stanford’s work the same level of public prominence that Simon’s engagement does.
In order to reach audiences who might not otherwise come across this topic at all, he has visited the facility, met with the researchers, and utilized his concerts and public appearances to share the personal truth of sudden, inexplicable hearing loss. This advocacy may ultimately have a significant impact on how the study is funded. It’s too soon to tell.
The spectacle of a great musician making a comeback to the stage is not the detail that appears worth clinging to when watching Paul Simon at Frost Amphitheater. It is the truth that in order to continue playing at all, the return needed the assistance of a group of scientists, a rearranged stage, and a conscious decision to play in smaller venues.
That is subtly amazing—an 83-year-old adjusting to a loss that would have terminated most careers by building around it with assistance, research, and whatever hearing he still has, rather than by pretending the loss doesn’t exist.
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