In 1943, a future music icon was born in New York City. More than eight decades later, Carly Simon remains one of the defining singer-songwriters of her generation.
Simon turns 83 on June 25, capping a career that has produced some of the most enduring songs of the last half-century, including “Anticipation,” “You’re So Vain,” “Mockingbird,” “You Belong to Me” and the James Bond classic “Nobody Does It Better.”
Long before “influencer” became part of the cultural vocabulary, Simon embodied a free-spirited artistic style that earned her the nickname “Boho Queen.” In a 2005 profile, The Independent described Simon as the “Boho Queen,” a fitting title for an artist whose flowing style, confessional songwriting and effortless cool helped define the singer-songwriter movement of the 1970s.
Her breakthrough came in 1971 when her self-titled debut album earned her the Grammy Award for Best New Artist and introduced audiences to “That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard It Should Be.” But it was 1972’s No Secrets that transformed Simon into a superstar.
The album spent five weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and featured “You’re So Vain,” one of the decade’s most memorable hits. The song topped the Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks and sparked one of pop music’s longest-running mysteries as listeners debated the identity of its subject. More than 50 years later, the song remains Simon’s signature recording and was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2004.
Yet another of Simon’s best-known songs came from an unlikely place: a James Bond movie.
In 1977, Simon recorded “Nobody Does It Better” for The Spy Who Loved Me starring Roger Moore. The song became a worldwide hit, reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and spent seven consecutive weeks atop the Adult Contemporary chart.
Its reputation has only grown with time. In 2021, USA Today ranked “Nobody Does It Better” the greatest James Bond theme song ever recorded, while Rolling Stone placed it among the franchise’s top three themes. The song was also a commercial powerhouse. In a 2012 analysis of the highest-charting Bond themes in history, Billboard ranked “Nobody Does It Better” as the second most successful James Bond theme ever on the Hot 100, trailing only Duran Duran’s 1985 hit “A View to a Kill.”
The accolades didn’t stop there.
In 1988, Simon made history with “Let the River Run” from the film Working Girl. The song earned her an Academy Award, a Golden Globe and a Grammy Award, making her the first artist to win all three honors for a song she wrote, composed and performed entirely by herself.
Over the years, Simon has also been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame and, in 2022, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. When she learned she would finally be inducted after decades of eligibility, she told Rolling Stone she was “dumbfounded.”
Even after more than 60 years in music, Simon isn’t finished.
On June 11, 2026, she released “Howl,” the lead single from her upcoming album Comes in Waves. Scheduled for release on Aug. 14, the project marks Simon’s first album of original material since 2008’s This Kind of Love.
Simon says that “Howl” “lives in that space between betrayal and forgiveness, where anger has to be voiced before it can be released.”
“It’s about letting the frustration out so it doesn’t sit and simmer. The song begins in anger, but it moves toward forgiveness, and speaks to any situation where trust has been broken,” writes Simon.
For an artist whose career has already included chart-topping hits, movie classics, major literary success and Rock Hall recognition, it would be understandable if she spent her 80s celebrating her legacy.
Instead, the “Boho Queen” is still adding to it.
Related: One of Rock’s Most Powerful Voices Turns 76 Today

